Bill Text: FL S0880 | 2010 | Regular Session | Comm Sub


Bill Title: Campaign Financing [GPSC]

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 3-0)

Status: (Vetoed) 2010-03-24 - Placed on Special Order Calendar; Read 2nd time -SJ 00330; Amendment(s) failed -SJ 00331; Amendment(s) adopted (966272) -SJ 00331; Substituted CS/CS/HB 1207 (Vetoed by Governor) -SJ 00332; Laid on Table, companion bill(s) passed, see CS/CS/HB 131 (Ch. 2010-167) -SJ 00332 [S0880 Detail]

Download: Florida-2010-S0880-Comm_Sub.html
 
       Florida Senate - 2010                              CS for SB 880 
        
       By the Committee on Ethics and Elections; and Senator Alexander 
       582-02704-10                                           2010880c1 
    1                        A bill to be entitled                       
    2         An act relating to campaign financing; amending s. 
    3         103.081, F.S.; permitting the use of a political 
    4         party’s name, abbreviation, or symbol by an affiliated 
    5         party committee under certain circumstances; creating 
    6         s. 103.092, F.S.; providing for the establishment of 
    7         affiliated party committees; providing a definition; 
    8         delineating duties and responsibilities of such 
    9         committees; amending s. 103.121, F.S.; requiring 
   10         certain assessments to be paid to an affiliated party 
   11         committee; amending s. 106.011, F.S.; revising the 
   12         definition of the term “political committee” to remove 
   13         certain reporting requirements included in the 
   14         exclusion of electioneering communications 
   15         organizations from the definition and to allow 
   16         contributions to an affiliated party committee; adding 
   17         an affiliated party committee to the list of entities 
   18         not considered a political committee under ch. 106, 
   19         F.S.; revising the definition of the term “independent 
   20         expenditure” to specify that certain expenditures are 
   21         not considered an independent expenditure; revising 
   22         the definition of the term “person” to include an 
   23         affiliated party committee; revising the definition of 
   24         the term “filing officer” to expand applicability to 
   25         electioneering communications organizations; revising 
   26         the definition of the term “electioneering 
   27         communication” to conform to certain federal 
   28         requirements and to delineate what constitutes such a 
   29         communication; revising the definition of the term 
   30         “electioneering communications organization”; amending 
   31         s. 106.021, F.S.; providing that certain expenditures 
   32         by an affiliated party committee are not considered a 
   33         contribution or expenditure to or for a candidate; 
   34         amending s. 106.025, F.S.; exempting an affiliated 
   35         party committee from certain campaign fund raising 
   36         requirements; amending s. 106.03, F.S.; revising the 
   37         registration requirements for electioneering 
   38         communications organizations; revising the statement 
   39         of organization requirements; revising rule adoption 
   40         requirements relating to dissolution of political 
   41         committees and electioneering communications 
   42         organizations; amending s. 106.04, F.S.; requiring 
   43         that a committee of continuous existence report 
   44         receipts from and transfers to an affiliated party 
   45         committee; amending s. 106.0701, F.S.; exempting an 
   46         affiliated party committee from certain filing 
   47         requirements; amending s. 106.0703, F.S.; 
   48         consolidating reporting requirements in ch. 106, F.S., 
   49         applicable to electioneering communications 
   50         organizations; providing penalties; conforming 
   51         provisions; amending s. 106.0705, F.S., relating to 
   52         electronic filing of campaign treasurer’s reports; 
   53         conforming provisions; requiring an affiliated party 
   54         committee to file certain reports with the Division of 
   55         Elections; providing that a report filed by the leader 
   56         and treasurer of an affiliated party committee is 
   57         considered to be under oath; amending s. 106.071, 
   58         F.S.; increasing the aggregate amount of expenditures 
   59         required for filing certain reports related to 
   60         independent expenditures or electioneering 
   61         communications; amending s. 106.08, F.S.; removing 
   62         certain limitations on contributions received by an 
   63         electioneering communications organization; providing 
   64         that an affiliated party committee is treated like a 
   65         political party regarding limitations on 
   66         contributions; deleting the 28-day restriction on 
   67         acceptance of certain funds preceding a general 
   68         election; placing certain restrictions on solicitation 
   69         for and making of contributions; providing guidelines 
   70         for acceptance of in-kind contributions; adding an 
   71         affiliated party committee to entities subject to 
   72         penalties; creating s. 106.088, F.S.; requiring the 
   73         subscribing to an oath or affirmation prior to receipt 
   74         of certain funds; providing the form of the oath; 
   75         providing penalties; providing that undistributed 
   76         funds shall be deposited into the General Revenue 
   77         Fund; amending s. 106.141, F.S.; adding affiliated 
   78         party committees to the list of entities to which a 
   79         candidate may donate surplus funds; amending s. 
   80         106.143, F.S.; requiring an affiliated party 
   81         committee, like a political party, to obtain advance 
   82         approval by a candidate for political advertisements; 
   83         amending s. 106.1439, F.S.; providing identification 
   84         requirements for certain electioneering 
   85         communications; providing an exception for telephone 
   86         calls; amending s. 106.147, F.S., relating to 
   87         telephone solicitation disclosure requirements; 
   88         removing requirements relating to electioneering 
   89         communication, to conform; revising the definition of 
   90         the term “person” to include an affiliated party 
   91         committee; providing penalties; amending s. 106.165, 
   92         F.S.; adding affiliated party committees to the 
   93         entities that must use closed captioning and 
   94         descriptive narrative in all television broadcasts; 
   95         amending s. 106.17, F.S.; adding affiliated party 
   96         committees to those entities authorized to conduct 
   97         polls and surveys relating to candidacies; amending s. 
   98         106.23, F.S.; providing that an affiliated party 
   99         committee shall be provided an advisory opinion by the 
  100         Division of Elections when requested; amending s. 
  101         106.265, F.S.; authorizing the imposition of civil 
  102         penalties by the Florida Elections Commission for 
  103         certain violations by an affiliated party committee; 
  104         amending s. 106.27, F.S.; adding affiliated party 
  105         committees to those entities subject to certain 
  106         determinations and legal disposition by the Florida 
  107         Elections Commission; amending s. 106.29, F.S.; 
  108         requiring filing of certain reports by an affiliated 
  109         party committee; providing restrictions on certain 
  110         expenditures and contributions; providing penalties; 
  111         amending s. 11.045, F.S., relating to lobbying before 
  112         the Legislature; excluding contributions and 
  113         expenditures by an affiliated party committee from the 
  114         definition of the term “expenditure”; amending s. 
  115         112.312, F.S.; providing that certain activities 
  116         pertaining to an affiliated party committee are 
  117         excluded from the definition of the term “gift”; 
  118         amending s. 112.3215, F.S., relating to lobbying 
  119         before the executive branch or the Constitution 
  120         Revision Commission; excluding contributions and 
  121         expenditures by an affiliated party committee from the 
  122         definition of the term “expenditure”; reenacting ss. 
  123         106.011(1)(b), (3), (4), (18), and (19), 106.022(1), 
  124         106.03(1)(b), 106.04(5), 106.0703, 106.0705(2)(b), 
  125         106.071(1), 106.08(7), 106.1437, 106.1439, and 106.17, 
  126         F.S., relating to definitions, registered office and 
  127         agent requirements, registration requirements, 
  128         prohibited activities for committees of continuous 
  129         existence, additional reporting requirements, 
  130         electronic filing requirements, expenditure reports, 
  131         penalties for violations pertaining to limitations on 
  132         contributions, miscellaneous advertisements, 
  133         electioneering communications disclaimers and 
  134         penalties for failure to include disclaimers, and 
  135         polls and surveys pertaining to candidacies, to cure 
  136         and conform; providing an effective date. 
  137   
  138  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: 
  139   
  140         Section 1. Subsection (4) is added to section 103.081, 
  141  Florida Statutes, to read: 
  142         103.081 Use of party name; political advertising.— 
  143         (4) Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the 
  144  contrary, an affiliated party committee shall be entitled to use 
  145  the name, abbreviation, or symbol of the political party of its 
  146  leader as defined in s. 103.092. 
  147         Section 2. Section 103.092, Florida Statutes, is created to 
  148  read: 
  149         103.092 Affiliated party committees.— 
  150         (1) For purposes of this section, the term “leader” means 
  151  the President of the Senate, the Speaker of the House of 
  152  Representatives, or the minority leader of either house of the 
  153  Legislature, until a person is designated by a political party 
  154  conference of members of either house to succeed to any such 
  155  position, at which time the designee becomes the leader for 
  156  purposes of this section. 
  157         (2) The leader of each political party conference of the 
  158  House of Representatives and the Senate may establish a 
  159  separate, affiliated party committee to support the election of 
  160  candidates of the leader’s political party. The affiliated party 
  161  committee is subject to the same provisions of chapter 106 as a 
  162  political party. 
  163         (3) Each affiliated party committee shall: 
  164         (a) Adopt bylaws to include, at a minimum, the designation 
  165  of a treasurer. 
  166         (b) Conduct campaigns for candidates who are members of the 
  167  leader’s political party. 
  168         (c) Establish an account. 
  169         (d) Raise and expend funds. Such funds may not be expended 
  170  or committed to be expended except when authorized by the leader 
  171  of the affiliated party committee. 
  172         Section 3. Paragraph (b) of subsection (1) of section 
  173  103.121, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 
  174         103.121 Powers and duties of executive committees.— 
  175         (1) 
  176         (b) The county executive committee shall receive payment of 
  177  assessments upon candidates to be voted for in a single county 
  178  except state senators, state and members of the House of 
  179  representatives, and representatives to the Congress of the 
  180  United States; an affiliated party committee controlled by a 
  181  leader of the Senate as defined in s. 103.092 shall receive 
  182  payment of assessments upon candidates for the office of state 
  183  senator and an affiliated party committee controlled by a leader 
  184  of the House of Representatives as defined in s. 103.092 shall 
  185  receive payment of assessments upon candidates for the office of 
  186  state representative; and the state executive committees shall 
  187  receive all other assessments authorized. All party assessments 
  188  shall be 2 percent of the annual salary of the office sought by 
  189  the respective candidate. All such committee assessments shall 
  190  be remitted to the state executive committee of the appropriate 
  191  party and distributed in accordance with subsection (5), except 
  192  that assessments for candidates for the office of state senator 
  193  or state representative shall be remitted to the appropriate 
  194  affiliated party committee. 
  195         Section 4. Paragraph (a) of subsection (1) of section of 
  196  section 106.011, Florida Statutes, is amended, paragraph (b) of 
  197  subsection (1) of that section is reenacted and amended, 
  198  subsections (3) and (4) of that section are reenacted, 
  199  subsections (5), (8), and (14) of that section are amended, and 
  200  subsections (18) and (19) of that section are reenacted and 
  201  amended, to read: 
  202         106.011 Definitions.—As used in this chapter, the following 
  203  terms have the following meanings unless the context clearly 
  204  indicates otherwise: 
  205         (1)(a) “Political committee” means: 
  206         1. A combination of two or more individuals, or a person 
  207  other than an individual, that, in an aggregate amount in excess 
  208  of $500 during a single calendar year: 
  209         a. Accepts contributions for the purpose of making 
  210  contributions to any candidate, political committee, committee 
  211  of continuous existence, affiliated party committee, or 
  212  political party; 
  213         b. Accepts contributions for the purpose of expressly 
  214  advocating the election or defeat of a candidate or the passage 
  215  or defeat of an issue; 
  216         c. Makes expenditures that expressly advocate the election 
  217  or defeat of a candidate or the passage or defeat of an issue; 
  218  or 
  219         d. Makes contributions to a common fund, other than a joint 
  220  checking account between spouses, from which contributions are 
  221  made to any candidate, political committee, committee of 
  222  continuous existence, affiliated party committee, or political 
  223  party; 
  224         2. The sponsor of a proposed constitutional amendment by 
  225  initiative who intends to seek the signatures of registered 
  226  electors. 
  227         (b) Notwithstanding paragraph (a), the following entities 
  228  are not considered political committees for purposes of this 
  229  chapter: 
  230         1. Organizations which are certified by the Department of 
  231  State as committees of continuous existence pursuant to s. 
  232  106.04, national political parties, and the state and county 
  233  executive committees of political parties, and affiliated party 
  234  committees regulated by chapter 103. 
  235         2. Corporations regulated by chapter 607 or chapter 617 or 
  236  other business entities formed for purposes other than to 
  237  support or oppose issues or candidates, if their political 
  238  activities are limited to contributions to candidates, political 
  239  parties, affiliated party committees, or political committees or 
  240  expenditures in support of or opposition to an issue from 
  241  corporate or business funds and if no contributions are received 
  242  by such corporations or business entities. 
  243         3. Electioneering communications organizations as defined 
  244  in subsection (19); however, such organizations shall be 
  245  required to register with and report expenditures and 
  246  contributions, including contributions received from committees 
  247  of continuous existence, to the Division of Elections in the 
  248  same manner, at the same time, and subject to the same penalties 
  249  as a political committee supporting or opposing an issue or a 
  250  legislative candidate, except as otherwise specifically provided 
  251  in this chapter. 
  252         (3) “Contribution” means: 
  253         (a) A gift, subscription, conveyance, deposit, loan, 
  254  payment, or distribution of money or anything of value, 
  255  including contributions in kind having an attributable monetary 
  256  value in any form, made for the purpose of influencing the 
  257  results of an election or making an electioneering 
  258  communication. 
  259         (b) A transfer of funds between political committees, 
  260  between committees of continuous existence, between 
  261  electioneering communications organizations, or between any 
  262  combination of these groups. 
  263         (c) The payment, by any person other than a candidate or 
  264  political committee, of compensation for the personal services 
  265  of another person which are rendered to a candidate or political 
  266  committee without charge to the candidate or committee for such 
  267  services. 
  268         (d) The transfer of funds by a campaign treasurer or deputy 
  269  campaign treasurer between a primary depository and a separate 
  270  interest-bearing account or certificate of deposit, and the term 
  271  includes any interest earned on such account or certificate. 
  272   
  273  Notwithstanding the foregoing meanings of “contribution,” the 
  274  word shall not be construed to include services, including, but 
  275  not limited to, legal and accounting services, provided without 
  276  compensation by individuals volunteering a portion or all of 
  277  their time on behalf of a candidate or political committee. This 
  278  definition shall not be construed to include editorial 
  279  endorsements. 
  280         (4)(a) “Expenditure” means a purchase, payment, 
  281  distribution, loan, advance, transfer of funds by a campaign 
  282  treasurer or deputy campaign treasurer between a primary 
  283  depository and a separate interest-bearing account or 
  284  certificate of deposit, or gift of money or anything of value 
  285  made for the purpose of influencing the results of an election 
  286  or making an electioneering communication. However, 
  287  “expenditure” does not include a purchase, payment, 
  288  distribution, loan, advance, or gift of money or anything of 
  289  value made for the purpose of influencing the results of an 
  290  election when made by an organization, in existence prior to the 
  291  time during which a candidate qualifies or an issue is placed on 
  292  the ballot for that election, for the purpose of printing or 
  293  distributing such organization’s newsletter, containing a 
  294  statement by such organization in support of or opposition to a 
  295  candidate or issue, which newsletter is distributed only to 
  296  members of such organization. 
  297         (b) As used in this chapter, an “expenditure” for an 
  298  electioneering communication is made when the earliest of the 
  299  following occurs: 
  300         1. A person enters into a contract for applicable goods or 
  301  services; 
  302         2. A person makes payment, in whole or in part, for the 
  303  production or public dissemination of applicable goods or 
  304  services; or 
  305         3. The electioneering communication is publicly 
  306  disseminated. 
  307         (5)(a) “Independent expenditure” means an expenditure by a 
  308  person for the purpose of expressly advocating the election or 
  309  defeat of a candidate or the approval or rejection of an issue, 
  310  which expenditure is not controlled by, coordinated with, or 
  311  made upon consultation with, any candidate, political committee, 
  312  or agent of such candidate or committee. An expenditure for such 
  313  purpose by a person having a contract with the candidate, 
  314  political committee, or agent of such candidate or committee in 
  315  a given election period shall not be deemed an independent 
  316  expenditure. 
  317         (b) An expenditure for the purpose of expressly advocating 
  318  the election or defeat of a candidate which is made by the 
  319  national, state, or county executive committee of a political 
  320  party, including any subordinate committee of the a national, 
  321  state, or county committee of a political party, an affiliated 
  322  party committee, a or by any political committee, a or committee 
  323  of continuous existence, or any other person, shall not be 
  324  considered an independent expenditure if the committee or 
  325  person: 
  326         1. Communicates with the candidate, the candidate’s 
  327  campaign, or an agent of the candidate acting on behalf of the 
  328  candidate, including any pollster, media consultant, advertising 
  329  agency, vendor, advisor, or staff member, concerning the 
  330  preparation of, use of, or payment for, the specific expenditure 
  331  or advertising campaign at issue; or 
  332         2. Makes a payment in cooperation, consultation, or concert 
  333  with, at the request or suggestion of, or pursuant to any 
  334  general or particular understanding with the candidate, the 
  335  candidate’s campaign, a political committee supporting the 
  336  candidate, or an agent of the candidate relating to the specific 
  337  expenditure or advertising campaign at issue; or 
  338         3. Makes a payment for the dissemination, distribution, or 
  339  republication, in whole or in part, of any broadcast or any 
  340  written, graphic, or other form of campaign material prepared by 
  341  the candidate, the candidate’s campaign, or an agent of the 
  342  candidate, including any pollster, media consultant, advertising 
  343  agency, vendor, advisor, or staff member; or 
  344         4. Makes a payment based on information about the 
  345  candidate’s plans, projects, or needs communicated to a member 
  346  of the committee or person by the candidate or an agent of the 
  347  candidate, provided the committee or person uses the information 
  348  in any way, in whole or in part, either directly or indirectly, 
  349  to design, prepare, or pay for the specific expenditure or 
  350  advertising campaign at issue; or 
  351         5. After the last day of qualifying for statewide or 
  352  legislative office, consults about the candidate’s plans, 
  353  projects, or needs in connection with the candidate’s pursuit of 
  354  election to office and the information is used in any way to 
  355  plan, create, design, or prepare an independent expenditure or 
  356  advertising campaign, with: 
  357         a. Any officer, director, employee, or agent of a national, 
  358  state, or county executive committee of a political party or an 
  359  affiliated party committee that has made or intends to make 
  360  expenditures in connection with or contributions to the 
  361  candidate; or 
  362         b. Any person whose professional services have been 
  363  retained by a national, state, or county executive committee of 
  364  a political party or an affiliated party committee that has made 
  365  or intends to make expenditures in connection with or 
  366  contributions to the candidate; or 
  367         6. After the last day of qualifying for statewide or 
  368  legislative office, retains the professional services of any 
  369  person also providing those services to the candidate in 
  370  connection with the candidate’s pursuit of election to office; 
  371  or 
  372         7. Arranges, coordinates, or directs the expenditure, in 
  373  any way, with the candidate or an agent of the candidate. 
  374         (8) “Person” means an individual or a corporation, 
  375  association, firm, partnership, joint venture, joint stock 
  376  company, club, organization, estate, trust, business trust, 
  377  syndicate, or other combination of individuals having collective 
  378  capacity. The term includes a political party, affiliated party 
  379  committee, political committee, or committee of continuous 
  380  existence. 
  381         (14) “Filing officer” means the person before whom a 
  382  candidate qualifies, the agency or officer with whom a political 
  383  committee or an electioneering communications organization 
  384  registers, or the agency by whom a committee of continuous 
  385  existence is certified. 
  386         (18)(a) “Electioneering communication” means any 
  387  communication publicly distributed by a television station, 
  388  radio station, cable television system, satellite system, 
  389  newspaper, magazine, direct mail, or telephone a paid expression 
  390  in any communications media prescribed in subsection (13) by 
  391  means other than the spoken word in direct conversation that: 
  392         1. Refers to or depicts a clearly identified candidate for 
  393  office or contains a clear reference indicating that an issue is 
  394  to be voted on at an election, without expressly advocating the 
  395  election or defeat of a candidate but that is susceptible of no 
  396  reasonable interpretation other than an appeal to vote for or 
  397  against a specific candidate; or the passage or defeat of an 
  398  issue. 
  399         2. Is made within 30 days before a primary or special 
  400  primary election or 60 days before any other election for the 
  401  office sought by the candidate; and 
  402         3. Is For communications referring to or depicting a 
  403  clearly identified candidate for office, is targeted to the 
  404  relevant electorate. A communication is considered targeted if 
  405  1,000 or more persons in the geographic area the candidate would 
  406  represent if elected will receive the communication. 
  407         3. For communications containing a clear reference 
  408  indicating that an issue is to be voted on at an election, is 
  409  published after the issue is designated a ballot position or 120 
  410  days before the date of the election on the issue, whichever 
  411  occurs first. 
  412         (b) The term “electioneering communication” does not 
  413  include: 
  414         1. A communication disseminated through a means of 
  415  communication other than a television station, radio station, 
  416  cable television system, satellite system, newspaper, magazine, 
  417  direct mail, telephone, or statement or depiction by an 
  418  organization, in existence prior to the time during which a 
  419  candidate named or depicted qualifies or an issue identified is 
  420  placed on the ballot for that election, made in that 
  421  organization’s newsletter, which newsletter is distributed only 
  422  to members of that organization. 
  423         2. A communication in a news story, commentary, or 
  424  editorial distributed through the facilities of any radio 
  425  station, television station, cable television system, or 
  426  satellite system, unless the facilities are owned or controlled 
  427  by any political party, political committee, or candidate. A 
  428  news story distributed through the facilities owned or 
  429  controlled by any political party, political committee, or 
  430  candidate may nevertheless be exempt if it represents a bona 
  431  fide news account communicated through a licensed broadcasting 
  432  facility and the communication is part of a general pattern of 
  433  campaign-related news accounts that give reasonably equal 
  434  coverage to all opposing candidates in the area An editorial 
  435  endorsement, news story, commentary, or editorial by any 
  436  newspaper, radio, television station, or other recognized news 
  437  medium. 
  438         3. A communication that constitutes a public debate or 
  439  forum that includes at least two opposing candidates for an 
  440  office or one advocate and one opponent of an issue, or that 
  441  solely promotes such a debate or forum and is made by or on 
  442  behalf of the person sponsoring the debate or forum, provided 
  443  that: 
  444         a. The staging organization is either: 
  445         (I) A charitable organization that does not make other 
  446  electioneering communications and does not otherwise support or 
  447  oppose any political candidate or political party; or 
  448         (II) A newspaper, radio station, television station, or 
  449  other recognized news medium; and 
  450         b. The staging organization does not structure the debate 
  451  to promote or advance one candidate or issue position over 
  452  another. 
  453         (c) For purposes of this chapter, an expenditure made for, 
  454  or in furtherance of, an electioneering communication shall not 
  455  be considered a contribution to or on behalf of any candidate. 
  456         (d) For purposes of this chapter, an electioneering 
  457  communication shall not constitute an independent expenditure 
  458  nor be subject to the limitations applicable to independent 
  459  expenditures. 
  460         (19) “Electioneering communications organization” means any 
  461  group, other than a political party, affiliated party committee, 
  462  political committee, or committee of continuous existence, whose 
  463  election-related activities are limited to making expenditures 
  464  for electioneering communications or accepting contributions for 
  465  the purpose of making electioneering communications and whose 
  466  activities would not otherwise require the group to register as 
  467  a political party, political committee, or committee of 
  468  continuous existence under this chapter. 
  469         Section 5. Subsection (3) of section 106.021, Florida 
  470  Statutes, is amended to read: 
  471         106.021 Campaign treasurers; deputies; primary and 
  472  secondary depositories.— 
  473         (3) No contribution or expenditure, including contributions 
  474  or expenditures of a candidate or of the candidate’s family, 
  475  shall be directly or indirectly made or received in furtherance 
  476  of the candidacy of any person for nomination or election to 
  477  political office in the state or on behalf of any political 
  478  committee except through the duly appointed campaign treasurer 
  479  of the candidate or political committee, subject to the 
  480  following exceptions: 
  481         (a) Independent expenditures; 
  482         (b) Reimbursements to a candidate or any other individual 
  483  for expenses incurred in connection with the campaign or 
  484  activities of the political committee by a check drawn upon the 
  485  campaign account and reported pursuant to s. 106.07(4). After 
  486  July 1, 2004, the full name and address of each person to whom 
  487  the candidate or other individual made payment for which 
  488  reimbursement was made by check drawn upon the campaign account 
  489  shall be reported pursuant to s. 106.07(4), together with the 
  490  purpose of such payment; 
  491         (c) Expenditures made indirectly through a treasurer for 
  492  goods or services, such as communications media placement or 
  493  procurement services, campaign signs, insurance, or other 
  494  expenditures that include multiple integral components as part 
  495  of the expenditure and reported pursuant to s. 106.07(4)(a)13.; 
  496  or 
  497         (d) Expenditures made directly by any political committee, 
  498  affiliated party committee, or political party regulated by 
  499  chapter 103 for obtaining time, space, or services in or by any 
  500  communications medium for the purpose of jointly endorsing three 
  501  or more candidates, and any such expenditure shall not be 
  502  considered a contribution or expenditure to or on behalf of any 
  503  such candidates for the purposes of this chapter. 
  504         Section 6. Subsection (1) of section 106.022, Florida 
  505  Statutes, is reenacted to read: 
  506         106.022 Appointment of a registered agent; duties.— 
  507         (1) Each political committee, committee of continuous 
  508  existence, or electioneering communications organization shall 
  509  have and continuously maintain in this state a registered office 
  510  and a registered agent and must file with the division a 
  511  statement of appointment for the registered office and 
  512  registered agent. The statement of appointment must: 
  513         (a) Provide the name of the registered agent and the street 
  514  address and phone number for the registered office; 
  515         (b) Identify the entity for whom the registered agent 
  516  serves; 
  517         (c) Designate the address the registered agent wishes to 
  518  use to receive mail; 
  519         (d) Include the entity’s undertaking to inform the division 
  520  of any change in such designated address; 
  521         (e) Provide for the registered agent’s acceptance of the 
  522  appointment, which must confirm that the registered agent is 
  523  familiar with and accepts the obligations of the position as set 
  524  forth in this section; and 
  525         (f) Contain the signature of the registered agent and the 
  526  entity engaging the registered agent. 
  527         Section 7. Subsection (2) of section 106.025, Florida 
  528  Statutes, is amended to read: 
  529         106.025 Campaign fund raisers.— 
  530         (2) This section shall not apply to any campaign fund 
  531  raiser held on behalf of a political party by the state or 
  532  county executive committee or an affiliated party committee of 
  533  such party, provided that the proceeds of such campaign fund 
  534  raiser are reported pursuant to s. 106.29. 
  535         Section 8. Paragraph (b) of subsection (1) of section 
  536  106.03, Florida Statutes, is reenacted and amended, and 
  537  subsections (2), (4), and (7) of that section are amended, to 
  538  read: 
  539         106.03 Registration of political committees and 
  540  electioneering communications organizations.— 
  541         (1) 
  542         (b)1. Each electioneering communications organization that 
  543  receives anticipates receiving contributions or makes making 
  544  expenditures during a calendar year in an aggregate amount 
  545  exceeding $5,000 shall file a statement of organization as 
  546  provided in subparagraph 2. subsection (3) by expedited delivery 
  547  within 24 hours after its organization or, if later, within 24 
  548  hours after the date on which it receives has information that 
  549  causes the organization to anticipate that it will receive 
  550  contributions or makes make expenditures for an electioneering 
  551  communication in excess of $5,000. 
  552         2.a. In a statewide, legislative, or multicounty election, 
  553  an electioneering communications organization shall file a 
  554  statement of organization with the Division of Elections. 
  555         b. In a countywide election or any election held on less 
  556  than a countywide basis, except as described in sub-subparagraph 
  557  c., an electioneering communications organization shall file a 
  558  statement of organization with the supervisor of elections of 
  559  the county in which the election is being held. 
  560         c. In a municipal election, an electioneering 
  561  communications organization shall file a statement of 
  562  organization with the officer before whom municipal candidates 
  563  qualify. 
  564         d. Any electioneering communications organization that 
  565  would be required to file a statement of organization in two or 
  566  more locations by reason of the organization’s intention to 
  567  support or oppose candidates at state or multicounty and local 
  568  levels of government need only file a statement of organization 
  569  with the Division of Elections. 
  570         (2) The statement of organization shall include: 
  571         (a) The name, mailing address, and street address of the 
  572  committee or electioneering communications organization; 
  573         (b) The names, street addresses, and relationships of 
  574  affiliated or connected organizations; 
  575         (c) The area, scope, or jurisdiction of the committee or 
  576  electioneering communications organization; 
  577         (d) The name, mailing address, street address, and position 
  578  of the custodian of books and accounts; 
  579         (e) The name, mailing address, street address, and position 
  580  of other principal officers, including the treasurer and deputy 
  581  treasurer including officers and members of the finance 
  582  committee, if any; 
  583         (f) The name, address, office sought, and party affiliation 
  584  of: 
  585         1. Each candidate whom the committee is supporting; 
  586         2. Any other individual, if any, whom the committee is 
  587  supporting for nomination for election, or election, to any 
  588  public office whatever; 
  589         (g) Any issue or issues the committee such organization is 
  590  supporting or opposing; 
  591         (h) If the committee is supporting the entire ticket of any 
  592  party, a statement to that effect and the name of the party; 
  593         (i) A statement of whether the committee is a continuing 
  594  one; 
  595         (j) Plans for the disposition of residual funds which will 
  596  be made in the event of dissolution; 
  597         (k) A listing of all banks, safe-deposit boxes, or other 
  598  depositories used for committee or electioneering communications 
  599  organization funds; and 
  600         (l) A statement of the reports required to be filed by the 
  601  committee or the electioneering communications organization with 
  602  federal officials, if any, and the names, addresses, and 
  603  positions of such officials; and 
  604         (m) A statement of whether the electioneering 
  605  communications organization was formed as a newly created 
  606  organization during the current calendar quarter or was formed 
  607  from an organization existing prior to the current calendar 
  608  quarter. For purposes of this subsection, calendar quarters end 
  609  the last day of March, June, September, and December. 
  610         (4) Any change in information previously submitted in a 
  611  statement of organization shall be reported to the agency or 
  612  officer with whom such committee or electioneering 
  613  communications organization is required to register pursuant to 
  614  subsection (3), within 10 days following the change. 
  615         (7) The Division of Elections shall adopt promulgate rules 
  616  to prescribe the manner in which inactive committees and 
  617  electioneering communications organizations may be dissolved and 
  618  have their registration canceled. Such rules shall, at a 
  619  minimum, provide for: 
  620         (a) Notice which shall contain the facts and conduct which 
  621  warrant the intended action, including but not limited to 
  622  failure to file reports and limited activity. 
  623         (b) Adequate opportunity to respond. 
  624         (c) Appeal of the decision to the Florida Elections 
  625  Commission. Such appeals shall be exempt from the 
  626  confidentiality provisions of s. 106.25. 
  627         Section 9. Paragraph (c) of subsection (4) of section 
  628  106.04, Florida Statutes, is amended, and subsection (5) of that 
  629  section is reenacted, to read: 
  630         106.04 Committees of continuous existence.— 
  631         (4) 
  632         (c) All committees of continuous existence shall file their 
  633  reports with the Division of Elections. Reports shall be filed 
  634  in accordance with s. 106.0705 and shall contain the following 
  635  information: 
  636         1. The full name, address, and occupation of each person 
  637  who has made one or more contributions, including contributions 
  638  that represent the payment of membership dues, to the committee 
  639  during the reporting period, together with the amounts and dates 
  640  of such contributions. For corporations, the report must provide 
  641  as clear a description as practicable of the principal type of 
  642  business conducted by the corporation. However, if the 
  643  contribution is $100 or less, the occupation of the contributor 
  644  or principal type of business need not be listed. However, for 
  645  any contributions that represent the payment of dues by members 
  646  in a fixed amount aggregating no more than $250 per calendar 
  647  year, pursuant to the schedule on file with the Division of 
  648  Elections, only the aggregate amount of such contributions need 
  649  be listed, together with the number of members paying such dues 
  650  and the amount of the membership dues. 
  651         2. The name and address of each political committee or 
  652  committee of continuous existence from which the reporting 
  653  committee received, or the name and address of each political 
  654  committee, committee of continuous existence, affiliated party 
  655  committee, or political party to which it made, any transfer of 
  656  funds, together with the amounts and dates of all transfers. 
  657         3. Any other receipt of funds not listed pursuant to 
  658  subparagraph 1. or subparagraph 2., including the sources and 
  659  amounts of all such funds. 
  660         4. The name and address of, and office sought by, each 
  661  candidate to whom the committee has made a contribution during 
  662  the reporting period, together with the amount and date of each 
  663  contribution. 
  664         5. The full name and address of each person to whom 
  665  expenditures have been made by or on behalf of the committee 
  666  within the reporting period; the amount, date, and purpose of 
  667  each such expenditure; and the name and address, and office 
  668  sought by, each candidate on whose behalf such expenditure was 
  669  made. 
  670         6. The full name and address of each person to whom an 
  671  expenditure for personal services, salary, or reimbursement for 
  672  authorized expenses has been made, including the full name and 
  673  address of each entity to whom the person made payment for which 
  674  reimbursement was made by check drawn upon the committee 
  675  account, together with the amount and purpose of such payment. 
  676         7. Transaction information from each credit card statement 
  677  that will be included in the next report following receipt 
  678  thereof by the committee. Receipts for each credit card purchase 
  679  shall be retained by the treasurer with the records for the 
  680  committee account. 
  681         8. The total sum of expenditures made by the committee 
  682  during the reporting period. 
  683         (5) No committee of continuous existence shall make an 
  684  electioneering communication, contribute to any candidate or 
  685  political committee an amount in excess of the limits contained 
  686  in s. 106.08(1), or participate in any activity which is 
  687  prohibited by this chapter. If any violation occurs, it shall be 
  688  punishable as provided in this chapter for the given offense. No 
  689  funds of a committee of continuous existence shall be expended 
  690  on behalf of a candidate, except by means of a contribution made 
  691  through the duly appointed campaign treasurer of a candidate. No 
  692  such committee shall make expenditures in support of, or in 
  693  opposition to, an issue unless such committee first registers as 
  694  a political committee pursuant to this chapter and undertakes 
  695  all the practices and procedures required thereof; provided such 
  696  committee may make contributions in a total amount not to exceed 
  697  25 percent of its aggregate income, as reflected in the annual 
  698  report filed for the previous year, to one or more political 
  699  committees registered pursuant to s. 106.03 and formed to 
  700  support or oppose issues. 
  701         Section 10. Subsection (5) of section 106.0701, Florida 
  702  Statutes, is amended to read: 
  703         106.0701 Solicitation of contributions on behalf of s. 527 
  704  or s. 501(c)(4) organizations; reporting requirements; civil 
  705  penalty; exemption.— 
  706         (5) The filing requirements of subsection (1) do not apply 
  707  to an individual acting on behalf of his or her own campaign, or 
  708  a political party, or an affiliated party committee of which the 
  709  individual is a member. 
  710         Section 11. Section 106.0703, Florida Statutes, is 
  711  reenacted and amended to read: 
  712         106.0703 Electioneering communications organizations; 
  713  additional reporting requirements; certification and filing; 
  714  penalties.— 
  715         (1)(a) Each electioneering communications organization 
  716  shall file regular reports of all contributions received and all 
  717  expenditures made by or on behalf of the organization. Reports 
  718  shall be filed on the 10th day following the end of each 
  719  calendar quarter from the time the organization is registered. 
  720  However, if the 10th day following the end of a calendar quarter 
  721  occurs on a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday, the report shall 
  722  be filed on the next following day that is not a Saturday, 
  723  Sunday, or legal holiday. Quarterly reports shall include all 
  724  contributions received and expenditures made during the calendar 
  725  quarter that have not otherwise been reported pursuant to this 
  726  section. 
  727         (b) Following the last day of candidates qualifying for 
  728  office, the reports shall be filed on the 32nd, 18th, and 4th 
  729  days immediately preceding the primary election and on the 46th, 
  730  32nd, 18th, and 4th days immediately preceding the general 
  731  election. 
  732         (c) When a special election is called to fill a vacancy in 
  733  office, all electioneering communications organizations making 
  734  contributions or expenditures to influence the results of the 
  735  special election shall file reports with the filing officer on 
  736  the dates set by the Department of State pursuant to s. 100.111. 
  737         (d) In addition to the reports required by paragraph (a), 
  738  an electioneering communications organization that is registered 
  739  with the Department of State and that makes a contribution or 
  740  expenditure to influence the results of a county or municipal 
  741  election that is not being held at the same time as a state or 
  742  federal election must file reports with the county or municipal 
  743  filing officer on the same dates as county or municipal 
  744  candidates or committees for that election. The electioneering 
  745  communications organization must also include the expenditure in 
  746  the next report filed with the Division of Elections pursuant to 
  747  this section following the county or municipal election. 
  748         (e) The filing officer shall make available to each 
  749  electioneering communications organization a schedule 
  750  designating the beginning and end of reporting periods as well 
  751  as the corresponding designated due dates. 
  752         (2)(a) Except as provided in s. 106.0705, the reports 
  753  required of an electioneering communications organization shall 
  754  be filed with the filing officer not later than 5 p.m. of the 
  755  day designated. However, any report postmarked by the United 
  756  States Postal Service no later than midnight of the day 
  757  designated shall be deemed to have been filed in a timely 
  758  manner. Any report received by the filing officer within 5 days 
  759  after the designated due date that was delivered by the United 
  760  States Postal Service shall be deemed timely filed unless it has 
  761  a postmark that indicates that the report was mailed after the 
  762  designated due date. A certificate of mailing obtained from and 
  763  dated by the United States Postal Service at the time of 
  764  mailing, or a receipt from an established courier company, which 
  765  bears a date on or before the date on which the report is due, 
  766  shall be proof of mailing in a timely manner. Reports shall 
  767  contain information of all previously unreported contributions 
  768  received and expenditures made as of the preceding Friday, 
  769  except that the report filed on the Friday immediately preceding 
  770  the election shall contain information of all previously 
  771  unreported contributions received and expenditures made as of 
  772  the day preceding the designated due date. All such reports 
  773  shall be open to public inspection. 
  774         (b)1. Any report that is deemed to be incomplete by the 
  775  officer with whom the electioneering communications organization 
  776  files shall be accepted on a conditional basis. The treasurer of 
  777  the electioneering communications organization shall be 
  778  notified, by certified mail or other common carrier that can 
  779  establish proof of delivery for the notice, as to why the report 
  780  is incomplete. Within 7 days after receipt of such notice, the 
  781  treasurer must file an addendum to the report providing all 
  782  information necessary to complete the report in compliance with 
  783  this section. Failure to file a complete report after such 
  784  notice constitutes a violation of this chapter. 
  785         2. Notice is deemed sufficient upon proof of delivery of 
  786  written notice to the mailing or street address of the treasurer 
  787  or registered agent of the electioneering communication 
  788  organization on record with the filing officer. 
  789         (3)(a) Each report required by this section must contain: 
  790         1. The full name, address, and occupation, if any, of each 
  791  person who has made one or more contributions to or for such 
  792  electioneering communications organization within the reporting 
  793  period, together with the amount and date of such contributions. 
  794  For corporations, the report must provide as clear a description 
  795  as practicable of the principal type of business conducted by 
  796  the corporation. However, if the contribution is $100 or less, 
  797  the occupation of the contributor or the principal type of 
  798  business need not be listed. 
  799         2. The name and address of each political committee from 
  800  which or to which the reporting electioneering communications 
  801  organization made any transfer of funds, together with the 
  802  amounts and dates of all transfers. 
  803         3. Each loan for electioneering communication purposes to 
  804  or from any person or political committee within the reporting 
  805  period, together with the full names, addresses, and occupations 
  806  and principal places of business, if any, of the lender and 
  807  endorsers, if any, and the date and amount of such loans. 
  808         4. A statement of each contribution, rebate, refund, or 
  809  other receipt not otherwise listed under subparagraphs 1.-3. 
  810         5. The total sums of all loans, in-kind contributions, and 
  811  other receipts by or for such electioneering communications 
  812  organization during the reporting period. The reporting forms 
  813  shall be designed to elicit separate totals for in-kind 
  814  contributions, loans, and other receipts. 
  815         6. The full name and address of each person to whom 
  816  expenditures have been made by or on behalf of the 
  817  electioneering communications organization within the reporting 
  818  period and the amount, date, and purpose of each expenditure. 
  819         7. The full name and address of each person to whom an 
  820  expenditure for personal services, salary, or reimbursement for 
  821  expenses has been made and that is not otherwise reported, 
  822  including the amount, date, and purpose of the expenditure. 
  823         8. The total sum of expenditures made by the electioneering 
  824  communications organization during the reporting period. 
  825         9. The amount and nature of debts and obligations owed by 
  826  or to the electioneering communications organization that relate 
  827  to the conduct of any electioneering communication. 
  828         10. Transaction information for each credit card purchase. 
  829  Receipts for each credit card purchase shall be retained by the 
  830  electioneering communications organization. 
  831         11. The amount and nature of any separate interest-bearing 
  832  accounts or certificates of deposit and identification of the 
  833  financial institution in which such accounts or certificates of 
  834  deposit are located. 
  835         12. The primary purposes of an expenditure made indirectly 
  836  through an electioneering communications organization for goods 
  837  and services, such as communications media placement or 
  838  procurement services and other expenditures that include 
  839  multiple components as part of the expenditure. The primary 
  840  purpose of an expenditure shall be that purpose, including 
  841  integral and directly related components, that comprises 80 
  842  percent of such expenditure. 
  843         (b) The filing officer shall make available to any 
  844  electioneering communications organization a reporting form 
  845  which the electioneering communications organization may use to 
  846  indicate contributions received by the electioneering 
  847  communications organization but returned to the contributor 
  848  before deposit. 
  849         (4) The treasurer of the electioneering communications 
  850  organization shall certify as to the correctness of each report, 
  851  and each person so certifying shall bear the responsibility for 
  852  the accuracy and veracity of each report. Any treasurer who 
  853  willfully certifies the correctness of any report while knowing 
  854  that such report is incorrect, false, or incomplete commits a 
  855  misdemeanor of the first degree, punishable as provided in s. 
  856  775.082 or s. 775.083. 
  857         (5) The electioneering communications organization 
  858  depository shall provide statements reflecting deposits and 
  859  expenditures from the account to the treasurer, who shall retain 
  860  the records pursuant to s. 106.06. The records maintained by the 
  861  depository with respect to the account shall be subject to 
  862  inspection by an agent of the Division of Elections or the 
  863  Florida Elections Commission at any time during normal banking 
  864  hours, and such depository shall furnish certified copies of any 
  865  such records to the Division of Elections or the Florida 
  866  Elections Commission upon request. 
  867         (6) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this chapter, 
  868  in any reporting period during which an electioneering 
  869  communications organization has not received funds, made any 
  870  contributions, or expended any reportable funds, the treasurer 
  871  shall file a written report with the filing officer by the 
  872  prescribed reporting date that no reportable contributions or 
  873  expenditures were made during the reporting period. 
  874         (7)(a) Any electioneering communications organization 
  875  failing to file a report on the designated due date shall be 
  876  subject to a fine as provided in paragraph (b) for each late 
  877  day. The fine shall be assessed by the filing officer and the 
  878  moneys collected shall be deposited: 
  879         1. In the General Revenue Fund, in the case of an 
  880  electioneering communications organization that registers with 
  881  the Division of Elections; or 
  882         2. In the general revenue fund of the political 
  883  subdivision, in the case of an electioneering communications 
  884  organization that registers with an officer of a political 
  885  subdivision. 
  886   
  887  No separate fine shall be assessed for failure to file a copy of 
  888  any report required by this section. 
  889         (b) Upon determining that a report is late, the filing 
  890  officer shall immediately notify the electioneering 
  891  communications organization as to the failure to file a report 
  892  by the designated due date and that a fine is being assessed for 
  893  each late day. The fine shall be $50 per day for the first 3 
  894  days late and, thereafter, $500 per day for each late day, not 
  895  to exceed 25 percent of the total receipts or expenditures, 
  896  whichever is greater, for the period covered by the late report. 
  897  However, for the reports immediately preceding each primary and 
  898  general election, the fine shall be $500 per day for each late 
  899  day, not to exceed 25 percent of the total receipts or 
  900  expenditures, whichever is greater, for the period covered by 
  901  the late report. Upon receipt of the report, the filing officer 
  902  shall determine the amount of the fine which is due and shall 
  903  notify the electioneering communications organization. The 
  904  filing officer shall determine the amount of the fine due based 
  905  upon the earliest of the following: 
  906         1. When the report is actually received by such officer. 
  907         2. When the report is postmarked. 
  908         3. When the certificate of mailing is dated. 
  909         4. When the receipt from an established courier company is 
  910  dated. 
  911         5. When the electronic receipt issued pursuant to s. 
  912  106.0705 or other electronic filing system authorized in this 
  913  section is dated. 
  914   
  915  Such fine shall be paid to the filing officer within 20 days 
  916  after receipt of the notice of payment due, unless appeal is 
  917  made to the Florida Elections Commission pursuant to paragraph 
  918  (c). Notice is deemed sufficient upon proof of delivery of 
  919  written notice to the mailing or street address on record with 
  920  the filing officer. An officer or member of an electioneering 
  921  communications organization shall not be personally liable for 
  922  such fine. 
  923         (c) The treasurer of an electioneering communications 
  924  organization may appeal or dispute the fine, based upon, but not 
  925  limited to, unusual circumstances surrounding the failure to 
  926  file on the designated due date, and may request and shall be 
  927  entitled to a hearing before the Florida Elections Commission, 
  928  which shall have the authority to waive the fine in whole or in 
  929  part. The Florida Elections Commission must consider the 
  930  mitigating and aggravating circumstances contained in s. 
  931  106.265(1) when determining the amount of a fine, if any, to be 
  932  waived. Any such request shall be made within 20 days after 
  933  receipt of the notice of payment due. In such case, the 
  934  treasurer of the electioneering communications organization 
  935  shall, within the 20-day period, notify the filing officer in 
  936  writing of his or her intention to bring the matter before the 
  937  commission. 
  938         (d) The appropriate filing officer shall notify the Florida 
  939  Elections Commission of the repeated late filing by an 
  940  electioneering communications organization, the failure of an 
  941  electioneering communications organization to file a report 
  942  after notice, or the failure to pay the fine imposed. The 
  943  commission shall investigate only those alleged late filing 
  944  violations specifically identified by the filing officer and as 
  945  set forth in the notification. Any other alleged violations must 
  946  be stated separately and reported by the division to the 
  947  commission under s. 106.25(2). 
  948         (8)In addition to the reporting requirements in s. 106.07, 
  949  An electioneering communications organization shall, within 2 
  950  days after receiving its initial password or secure sign-on from 
  951  the Department of State allowing confidential access to the 
  952  department’s electronic campaign finance filing system, 
  953  electronically file the periodic campaign finance reports that 
  954  would have been required pursuant to this section s. 106.07 for 
  955  reportable activities that occurred since the date of the last 
  956  general election. 
  957         Section 12. Paragraph (b) of subsection (2) of section 
  958  106.0705, Florida Statutes, is reenacted and amended, and 
  959  subsections (3) and (4) of that section are amended, to read: 
  960         106.0705 Electronic filing of campaign treasurer’s 
  961  reports.— 
  962         (2) 
  963         (b) Each political committee, committee of continuous 
  964  existence, electioneering communications organization, 
  965  affiliated party committee, or state executive committee that is 
  966  required to file reports with the division under s. 106.04, s. 
  967  106.07, s. 106.0703, or s. 106.29, as applicable, must file such 
  968  reports with the division by means of the division’s electronic 
  969  filing system. 
  970         (3) Reports filed pursuant to this section shall be 
  971  completed and filed through the electronic filing system not 
  972  later than midnight of the day designated. Reports not filed by 
  973  midnight of the day designated are late filed and are subject to 
  974  the penalties under s. 106.04(8), s. 106.07(8), s. 106.0703(7), 
  975  or s. 106.29(3), as applicable. 
  976         (4) Each report filed pursuant to this section is 
  977  considered to be under oath by the candidate and treasurer, or 
  978  the chair and treasurer, or the leader and treasurer under s. 
  979  103.092, whichever is applicable, and such persons are subject 
  980  to the provisions of s. 106.04(4)(d), s. 106.07(5), s. 
  981  106.0703(4), or s. 106.29(2), as applicable. Persons given a 
  982  secure sign-on to the electronic filing system are responsible 
  983  for protecting such from disclosure and are responsible for all 
  984  filings using such credentials, unless they have notified the 
  985  division that their credentials have been compromised. 
  986         Section 13. Subsection (1) of section 106.071, Florida 
  987  Statutes, is reenacted and amended to read: 
  988         106.071 Independent expenditures; electioneering 
  989  communications; reports; disclaimers.— 
  990         (1) Each person who makes an independent expenditure with 
  991  respect to any candidate or issue, and each individual who makes 
  992  an expenditure for an electioneering communication which is not 
  993  otherwise reported pursuant to this chapter, which expenditure, 
  994  in the aggregate, is in the amount of $5,000 $100 or more, shall 
  995  file periodic reports of such expenditures in the same manner, 
  996  at the same time, subject to the same penalties, and with the 
  997  same officer as a political committee supporting or opposing 
  998  such candidate or issue. The report shall contain the full name 
  999  and address of the person making the expenditure; the full name 
 1000  and address of each person to whom and for whom each such 
 1001  expenditure has been made; the amount, date, and purpose of each 
 1002  such expenditure; a description of the services or goods 
 1003  obtained by each such expenditure; the issue to which the 
 1004  expenditure relates; and the name and address of, and office 
 1005  sought by, each candidate on whose behalf such expenditure was 
 1006  made. 
 1007         Section 14. Subsections (1), (2), (4), (5), and (6) of 
 1008  section 106.08, Florida Statutes, are amended, and subsection 
 1009  (7) of that section is reenacted and amended, to read: 
 1010         106.08 Contributions; limitations on.— 
 1011         (1)(a) Except for political parties or affiliated party 
 1012  committees, no person, political committee, or committee of 
 1013  continuous existence may, in any election, make contributions in 
 1014  excess of $500 to any candidate for election to or retention in 
 1015  office or to any political committee supporting or opposing one 
 1016  or more candidates. Candidates for the offices of Governor and 
 1017  Lieutenant Governor on the same ticket are considered a single 
 1018  candidate for the purpose of this section. 
 1019         (b)1. The contribution limits provided in this subsection 
 1020  do not apply to contributions made by a state or county 
 1021  executive committee of a political party or affiliated party 
 1022  committee regulated by chapter 103 or to amounts contributed by 
 1023  a candidate to his or her own campaign. 
 1024         2. Notwithstanding the limits provided in this subsection, 
 1025  an unemancipated child under the age of 18 years of age may not 
 1026  make a contribution in excess of $100 to any candidate or to any 
 1027  political committee supporting one or more candidates. 
 1028         (c) The contribution limits of this subsection apply to 
 1029  each election. For purposes of this subsection, the primary 
 1030  election and general election are separate elections so long as 
 1031  the candidate is not an unopposed candidate as defined in s. 
 1032  106.011(15). However, for the purpose of contribution limits 
 1033  with respect to candidates for retention as a justice or judge, 
 1034  there is only one election, which is the general election. 
 1035         (2)(a) A candidate may not accept contributions from 
 1036  national, state, or including any subordinate committee of a 
 1037  national, state, or county committee of a political party, and 
 1038  county executive committees of a political party, including any 
 1039  subordinate committee of such political party or affiliated 
 1040  party committees, which contributions in the aggregate exceed 
 1041  $50,000, no more than $25,000 of which may be accepted prior to 
 1042  the 28-day period immediately preceding the date of the general 
 1043  election. 
 1044         (b) A candidate for statewide office may not accept 
 1045  contributions from national, state, or county executive 
 1046  committees of a political party, including any subordinate 
 1047  committee of the a national, state, or county committee of a 
 1048  political party, or affiliated party committees, which 
 1049  contributions in the aggregate exceed $250,000, no more than 
 1050  $125,000 of which may be accepted prior to the 28-day period 
 1051  immediately preceding the date of the general election. Polling 
 1052  services, research services, costs for campaign staff, 
 1053  professional consulting services, and telephone calls are not 
 1054  contributions to be counted toward the contribution limits of 
 1055  paragraph (a) or this paragraph. Any item not expressly 
 1056  identified in this paragraph as nonallocable is a contribution 
 1057  in an amount equal to the fair market value of the item and must 
 1058  be counted as allocable toward the contribution limits of 
 1059  paragraph (a) or this paragraph. Nonallocable, in-kind 
 1060  contributions must be reported by the candidate under s. 106.07 
 1061  and by the political party or affiliated party committee under 
 1062  s. 106.29. 
 1063         (4)(a) Any contribution received by the chair, campaign 
 1064  treasurer, or deputy campaign treasurer of a political committee 
 1065  supporting or opposing a candidate with opposition in an 
 1066  election or supporting or opposing an issue on the ballot in an 
 1067  election on the day of that election or less than 5 days prior 
 1068  to the day of that election may not be obligated or expended by 
 1069  the committee until after the date of the election. 
 1070         (b) Any contribution received by an electioneering 
 1071  communications organization on the day of an election or less 
 1072  than 5 days prior to the day of that election may not be 
 1073  obligated or expended by the organization until after the date 
 1074  of the election and may not be expended to pay for any 
 1075  obligation arising prior to the election. 
 1076         (5)(a) A person may not make any contribution through or in 
 1077  the name of another, directly or indirectly, in any election. 
 1078         (b) Candidates, political committees, affiliated party 
 1079  committees, and political parties may not solicit contributions 
 1080  from any religious, charitable, civic, or other causes or 
 1081  organizations established primarily for the public good. 
 1082         (c) Candidates, political committees, affiliated party 
 1083  committees, and political parties may not make contributions, in 
 1084  exchange for political support, to any religious, charitable, 
 1085  civic, or other cause or organization established primarily for 
 1086  the public good. It is not a violation of this paragraph for: 
 1087         1. A candidate, political committee, affiliated party 
 1088  committee, or political party executive committee to make gifts 
 1089  of money in lieu of flowers in memory of a deceased person; 
 1090         2. A candidate to continue membership in, or make regular 
 1091  donations from personal or business funds to, religious, 
 1092  political party, affiliated party committee, civic, or 
 1093  charitable groups of which the candidate is a member or to which 
 1094  the candidate has been a regular donor for more than 6 months; 
 1095  or 
 1096         3. A candidate to purchase, with campaign funds, tickets, 
 1097  admission to events, or advertisements from religious, civic, 
 1098  political party, affiliated party committee, or charitable 
 1099  groups. 
 1100         (d) An electioneering communications organization may not 
 1101  accept a contribution from an organization exempt from taxation 
 1102  under s. 527 or s. 501(c)(4) of the Internal Revenue Code, other 
 1103  than a political committee, committee of continuous existence, 
 1104  or political party, unless the contributing organization has 
 1105  registered as if the organization were an electioneering 
 1106  communications organization pursuant to s. 106.03 and has filed 
 1107  all campaign finance reports required of electioneering 
 1108  communications organizations pursuant to ss. 106.07 and 
 1109  106.0703. 
 1110         (6)(a) A political party or affiliated party committee may 
 1111  not accept any contribution that has been specifically 
 1112  designated for the partial or exclusive use of a particular 
 1113  candidate. Any contribution so designated must be returned to 
 1114  the contributor and may not be used or expended by or on behalf 
 1115  of the candidate. Funds contributed to an affiliated party 
 1116  committee shall not be deemed as designated for the partial or 
 1117  exclusive use of a leader as defined in s. 103.092. 
 1118         (b)1. A political party or affiliated party committee may 
 1119  not accept any in-kind contribution that fails to provide a 
 1120  direct benefit to the political party or affiliated party 
 1121  committee. A “direct benefit” includes, but is not limited to, 
 1122  fundraising or furthering the objectives of the political party 
 1123  or affiliated party committee. 
 1124         2.a. An in-kind contribution to a state political party may 
 1125  be accepted only by the chairperson of the state political party 
 1126  or by the chairperson’s designee or designees whose names are on 
 1127  file with the division in a form acceptable to the division 
 1128  prior to the date of the written notice required in sub 
 1129  subparagraph b. An in-kind contribution to a county political 
 1130  party may be accepted only by the chairperson of the county 
 1131  political party or by the county chairperson’s designee or 
 1132  designees whose names are on file with the supervisor of 
 1133  elections of the respective county prior to the date of the 
 1134  written notice required in sub-subparagraph b. An in-kind 
 1135  contribution to an affiliated party committee may be accepted 
 1136  only by the leader of the affiliated party committee as defined 
 1137  in s. 103.092 or by the leader’s designee or designees whose 
 1138  names are on file with the division in a form acceptable to the 
 1139  division prior to the date of the written notice required in 
 1140  sub-subparagraph b. 
 1141         b. A person making an in-kind contribution to a state 
 1142  political party or county political party or affiliated party 
 1143  committee must provide prior written notice of the contribution 
 1144  to a person described in sub-subparagraph a. The prior written 
 1145  notice must be signed and dated and may be provided by an 
 1146  electronic or facsimile message. However, prior written notice 
 1147  is not required for an in-kind contribution that consists of 
 1148  food and beverage in an aggregate amount not exceeding $1,500 
 1149  which is consumed at a single sitting or event if such in-kind 
 1150  contribution is accepted in advance by a person specified in 
 1151  sub-subparagraph a. 
 1152         c. A person described in sub-subparagraph a. may accept an 
 1153  in-kind contribution requiring prior written notice only in a 
 1154  writing that is signed and dated before the in-kind contribution 
 1155  is made. Failure to obtain the required written acceptance of an 
 1156  in-kind contribution to a state or county political party or 
 1157  affiliated party committee constitutes a refusal of the 
 1158  contribution. 
 1159         d. A copy of each prior written acceptance required under 
 1160  sub-subparagraph c. must be filed with the division at the time 
 1161  the regular reports of contributions and expenditures required 
 1162  under s. 106.29 are filed by the state executive committee, and 
 1163  county executive committee, and affiliated party committee. 
 1164         e. An in-kind contribution may not be given to a state or 
 1165  county political party or affiliated party committee unless the 
 1166  in-kind contribution is made as provided in this subparagraph. 
 1167         (7)(a) Any person who knowingly and willfully makes or 
 1168  accepts no more than one contribution in violation of subsection 
 1169  (1) or subsection (5), or any person who knowingly and willfully 
 1170  fails or refuses to return any contribution as required in 
 1171  subsection (3), commits a misdemeanor of the first degree, 
 1172  punishable as provided in s. 775.082 or s. 775.083. If any 
 1173  corporation, partnership, or other business entity or any 
 1174  political party, affiliated party committee, political 
 1175  committee, committee of continuous existence, or electioneering 
 1176  communications organization is convicted of knowingly and 
 1177  willfully violating any provision punishable under this 
 1178  paragraph, it shall be fined not less than $1,000 and not more 
 1179  than $10,000. If it is a domestic entity, it may be ordered 
 1180  dissolved by a court of competent jurisdiction; if it is a 
 1181  foreign or nonresident business entity, its right to do business 
 1182  in this state may be forfeited. Any officer, partner, agent, 
 1183  attorney, or other representative of a corporation, partnership, 
 1184  or other business entity, or of a political party, affiliated 
 1185  party committee, political committee, committee of continuous 
 1186  existence, electioneering communications organization, or 
 1187  organization exempt from taxation under s. 527 or s. 501(c)(4) 
 1188  of the Internal Revenue Code, who aids, abets, advises, or 
 1189  participates in a violation of any provision punishable under 
 1190  this paragraph commits a misdemeanor of the first degree, 
 1191  punishable as provided in s. 775.082 or s. 775.083. 
 1192         (b) Any person who knowingly and willfully makes or accepts 
 1193  two or more contributions in violation of subsection (1) or 
 1194  subsection (5) commits a felony of the third degree, punishable 
 1195  as provided in s. 775.082, s. 775.083, or s. 775.084. If any 
 1196  corporation, partnership, or other business entity or any 
 1197  political party, affiliated party committee, political 
 1198  committee, committee of continuous existence, or electioneering 
 1199  communications organization is convicted of knowingly and 
 1200  willfully violating any provision punishable under this 
 1201  paragraph, it shall be fined not less than $10,000 and not more 
 1202  than $50,000. If it is a domestic entity, it may be ordered 
 1203  dissolved by a court of competent jurisdiction; if it is a 
 1204  foreign or nonresident business entity, its right to do business 
 1205  in this state may be forfeited. Any officer, partner, agent, 
 1206  attorney, or other representative of a corporation, partnership, 
 1207  or other business entity, or of a political committee, committee 
 1208  of continuous existence, political party, affiliated party 
 1209  committee, or electioneering communications organization, or 
 1210  organization exempt from taxation under s. 527 or s. 501(c)(4) 
 1211  of the Internal Revenue Code, who aids, abets, advises, or 
 1212  participates in a violation of any provision punishable under 
 1213  this paragraph commits a felony of the third degree, punishable 
 1214  as provided in s. 775.082, s. 775.083, or s. 775.084. 
 1215         Section 15. Section 106.088, Florida Statutes, is created 
 1216  to read: 
 1217         106.088 Independent expenditures; contribution limits; 
 1218  restrictions on affiliated party committees.— 
 1219         (1) As a condition of receiving a rebate of party 
 1220  assessments under s. 103.121(1)(b), the leader or treasurer of 
 1221  an affiliated party committee as defined in s. 103.092 shall 
 1222  take and subscribe to an oath or affirmation in writing. During 
 1223  the qualifying period for state candidates and prior to 
 1224  distribution of such funds, a printed copy of the oath or 
 1225  affirmation shall be filed with the Secretary of State and shall 
 1226  be substantially in the following form: 
 1227   
 1228  State of Florida 
 1229  County of.... 
 1230   
 1231  Before me, an officer authorized to administer oaths, personally 
 1232  appeared ...(name)..., to me well known, who, being sworn, says 
 1233  that he or she is the ...(title)... of the ...(name of 
 1234  party)......(name of chamber)... affiliated party committee; 
 1235  that the affiliated party committee has not made, either 
 1236  directly or indirectly, an independent expenditure in support of 
 1237  or opposition to a candidate or elected public official in the 
 1238  prior 6 months; that the affiliated party committee will not 
 1239  make, either directly or indirectly, an independent expenditure 
 1240  in support of or opposition to a candidate or elected public 
 1241  official, through and including the upcoming general election; 
 1242  and that the affiliated party committee will not violate the 
 1243  contribution limits applicable to candidates under s. 106.08(2), 
 1244  Florida Statutes. 
 1245  ...(Signature of committee officer)... 
 1246  ...(Address)... 
 1247  Sworn to and subscribed before me this .... day of _____, 
 1248  ...(year)..., at .... County, Florida. 
 1249  ...(Signature and title of officer administering oath)... 
 1250         (2)(a) Any affiliated party committee found to have 
 1251  violated the provisions of the oath or affirmation prior to 
 1252  receiving funds shall be ineligible to receive the rebate for 
 1253  that general election year. 
 1254         (b) Any affiliated party committee found to have violated 
 1255  the provisions of the oath or affirmation after receiving funds 
 1256  shall be ineligible to receive the rebate from candidates 
 1257  qualifying for the following general election cycle. 
 1258         (3) Any funds not distributed to the affiliated party 
 1259  committee pursuant to this section shall be deposited into the 
 1260  General Revenue Fund of the state. 
 1261         Section 16. Paragraph (a) of subsection (4) of section 
 1262  106.141, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 
 1263         106.141 Disposition of surplus funds by candidates.— 
 1264         (4)(a) Except as provided in paragraph (b), any candidate 
 1265  required to dispose of funds pursuant to this section shall, at 
 1266  the option of the candidate, dispose of such funds by any of the 
 1267  following means, or any combination thereof: 
 1268         1. Return pro rata to each contributor the funds that have 
 1269  not been spent or obligated. 
 1270         2. Donate the funds that have not been spent or obligated 
 1271  to a charitable organization or organizations that meet the 
 1272  qualifications of s. 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. 
 1273         3. Give not more than $10,000 of the funds that have not 
 1274  been spent or obligated to the affiliated party committee or 
 1275  political party of which such candidate is a member, except that 
 1276  a candidate for the Florida Senate may give not more than 
 1277  $30,000 of such funds to the affiliated party committee or 
 1278  political party of which the candidate is a member. 
 1279         4. Give the funds that have not been spent or obligated: 
 1280         a. In the case of a candidate for state office, to the 
 1281  state, to be deposited in either the Election Campaign Financing 
 1282  Trust Fund or the General Revenue Fund, as designated by the 
 1283  candidate; or 
 1284         b. In the case of a candidate for an office of a political 
 1285  subdivision, to such political subdivision, to be deposited in 
 1286  the general fund thereof. 
 1287         Section 17. Paragraph (a) of subsection (4) of section 
 1288  106.143, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 
 1289         106.143 Political advertisements circulated prior to 
 1290  election; requirements.— 
 1291         (4)(a) Any political advertisement, including those paid 
 1292  for by a political party or affiliated party committee, other 
 1293  than an independent expenditure, offered by or on behalf of a 
 1294  candidate must be approved in advance by the candidate. Such 
 1295  political advertisement must expressly state that the content of 
 1296  the advertisement was approved by the candidate and must state 
 1297  who paid for the advertisement. The candidate shall provide a 
 1298  written statement of authorization to the newspaper, radio 
 1299  station, television station, or other medium for each such 
 1300  advertisement submitted for publication, display, broadcast, or 
 1301  other distribution. 
 1302         Section 18. Section 106.1437, Florida Statutes, is 
 1303  reenacted to read: 
 1304         106.1437 Miscellaneous advertisements.—Any advertisement, 
 1305  other than a political advertisement, independent expenditure, 
 1306  or electioneering communication, on billboards, bumper stickers, 
 1307  radio, or television, or in a newspaper, a magazine, or a 
 1308  periodical, intended to influence public policy or the vote of a 
 1309  public official, shall clearly designate the sponsor of such 
 1310  advertisement by including a clearly readable statement of 
 1311  sponsorship. If the advertisement is broadcast on television, 
 1312  the advertisement shall also contain a verbal statement of 
 1313  sponsorship. This section shall not apply to an editorial 
 1314  endorsement. 
 1315         Section 19. Section 106.1439, Florida Statutes, is 
 1316  reenacted and amended to read: 
 1317         106.1439 Electioneering communications; disclaimers.— 
 1318         (1) Any electioneering communication, other than a 
 1319  telephone call, shall prominently state: “Paid electioneering 
 1320  communication paid for by ....(Name and address of person paying 
 1321  for the communication)....” 
 1322         (2) Any electioneering communication telephone call shall 
 1323  identify the persons or organizations sponsoring the call by 
 1324  stating either: “Paid for by ...(insert name of persons or 
 1325  organizations sponsoring the call)....” or “Paid for on behalf 
 1326  of ...(insert name of persons or organizations authorizing 
 1327  call)....” This subsection does not apply to any telephone call 
 1328  in which the individual making the call is not being paid and 
 1329  the individuals participating in the call know each other prior 
 1330  to the call. 
 1331         (3)(2) Any person who fails to include the disclaimer 
 1332  prescribed in this section in any electioneering communication 
 1333  that is required to contain such disclaimer commits a 
 1334  misdemeanor of the first degree, punishable as provided in s. 
 1335  775.082 or s. 775.083. 
 1336         Section 20. Paragraphs (a) and (e) of subsection (1) and 
 1337  subsection (3) of section 106.147, Florida Statutes, are amended 
 1338  to read: 
 1339         106.147 Telephone solicitation; disclosure requirements; 
 1340  prohibitions; exemptions; penalties.— 
 1341         (1)(a) Any electioneering communication telephone call or 
 1342  any telephone call supporting or opposing a candidate, elected 
 1343  public official, or ballot proposal must identify the persons or 
 1344  organizations sponsoring the call by stating either: “paid for 
 1345  by ....” (insert name of persons or organizations sponsoring the 
 1346  call) or “paid for on behalf of ....” (insert name of persons or 
 1347  organizations authorizing call). This paragraph does not apply 
 1348  to any telephone call in which both the individual making the 
 1349  call is not being paid and the individuals participating in the 
 1350  call know each other prior to the call. 
 1351         (e) Any electioneering communication paid for with public 
 1352  funds must include a disclaimer containing the words “paid for 
 1353  by ...(Name of the government entity paying for the 
 1354  communication)....” 
 1355         (3)(a) Any person who willfully violates any provision of 
 1356  this section commits a misdemeanor of the first degree, 
 1357  punishable as provided in s. 775.082 or s. 775.083. 
 1358         (b) For purposes of paragraph (a), the term “person” 
 1359  includes any candidate; any officer of any political committee, 
 1360  committee of continuous existence, affiliated party committee, 
 1361  or political party executive committee; any officer, partner, 
 1362  attorney, or other representative of a corporation, partnership, 
 1363  or other business entity; and any agent or other person acting 
 1364  on behalf of any candidate, political committee, committee of 
 1365  continuous existence, affiliated party committee, political 
 1366  party executive committee, or corporation, partnership, or other 
 1367  business entity. 
 1368         Section 21. Section 106.165, Florida Statutes, is amended 
 1369  to read: 
 1370         106.165 Use of closed captioning and descriptive narrative 
 1371  in all television broadcasts.—Each candidate, political party, 
 1372  affiliated party committee, and political committee must use 
 1373  closed captioning and descriptive narrative in all television 
 1374  broadcasts regulated by the Federal Communications Commission 
 1375  that are on behalf of, or sponsored by, a candidate, political 
 1376  party, affiliated party committee, or political committee or 
 1377  must file a written statement with the qualifying officer 
 1378  setting forth the reasons for not doing so. Failure to file this 
 1379  statement with the appropriate qualifying officer constitutes a 
 1380  violation of the Florida Election Code and is under the 
 1381  jurisdiction of the Florida Elections Commission. The Department 
 1382  of State may adopt rules in accordance with s. 120.54 which are 
 1383  necessary to administer this section. 
 1384         Section 22. Section 106.17, Florida Statutes, is reenacted 
 1385  and amended to read: 
 1386         106.17 Polls and surveys relating to candidacies.—Any 
 1387  candidate, political committee, committee of continuous 
 1388  existence, electioneering communication organization, affiliated 
 1389  party committee, or state or county executive committee of a 
 1390  political party may authorize or conduct a political poll, 
 1391  survey, index, or measurement of any kind relating to candidacy 
 1392  for public office so long as the candidate, political committee, 
 1393  committee of continuous existence, electioneering communication 
 1394  organization, affiliated party committee, or political party 
 1395  maintains complete jurisdiction over the poll in all its 
 1396  aspects. 
 1397         Section 23. Subsection (2) of section 106.23, Florida 
 1398  Statutes, is amended to read: 
 1399         106.23 Powers of the Division of Elections.— 
 1400         (2) The Division of Elections shall provide advisory 
 1401  opinions when requested by any supervisor of elections, 
 1402  candidate, local officer having election-related duties, 
 1403  political party, affiliated party committee, political 
 1404  committee, committee of continuous existence, or other person or 
 1405  organization engaged in political activity, relating to any 
 1406  provisions or possible violations of Florida election laws with 
 1407  respect to actions such supervisor, candidate, local officer 
 1408  having election-related duties, political party, affiliated 
 1409  party committee, committee, person, or organization has taken or 
 1410  proposes to take. Requests for advisory opinions must be 
 1411  submitted in accordance with rules adopted by the Department of 
 1412  State. A written record of all such opinions issued by the 
 1413  division, sequentially numbered, dated, and indexed by subject 
 1414  matter, shall be retained. A copy shall be sent to said person 
 1415  or organization upon request. Any such person or organization, 
 1416  acting in good faith upon such an advisory opinion, shall not be 
 1417  subject to any criminal penalty provided for in this chapter. 
 1418  The opinion, until amended or revoked, shall be binding on any 
 1419  person or organization who sought the opinion or with reference 
 1420  to whom the opinion was sought, unless material facts were 
 1421  omitted or misstated in the request for the advisory opinion. 
 1422         Section 24. Subsections (1) and (2) of section 106.265, 
 1423  Florida Statutes, are amended to read: 
 1424         106.265 Civil penalties.— 
 1425         (1) The commission is authorized upon the finding of a 
 1426  violation of this chapter or chapter 104 to impose civil 
 1427  penalties in the form of fines not to exceed $1,000 per count. 
 1428  In determining the amount of such civil penalties, the 
 1429  commission shall consider, among other mitigating and 
 1430  aggravating circumstances: 
 1431         (a) The gravity of the act or omission; 
 1432         (b) Any previous history of similar acts or omissions; 
 1433         (c) The appropriateness of such penalty to the financial 
 1434  resources of the person, political committee, committee of 
 1435  continuous existence, affiliated party committee, or political 
 1436  party; and 
 1437         (d) Whether the person, political committee, committee of 
 1438  continuous existence, affiliated party committee, or political 
 1439  party has shown good faith in attempting to comply with the 
 1440  provisions of this chapter or chapter 104. 
 1441         (2) If any person, political committee, committee of 
 1442  continuous existence, affiliated party committee, or political 
 1443  party fails or refuses to pay to the commission any civil 
 1444  penalties assessed pursuant to the provisions of this section, 
 1445  the commission shall be responsible for collecting the civil 
 1446  penalties resulting from such action. 
 1447         Section 25. Subsection (2) of section 106.27, Florida 
 1448  Statutes, is amended to read: 
 1449         106.27 Determinations by commission; legal disposition.— 
 1450         (2) Civil actions may be brought by the commission for 
 1451  relief, including permanent or temporary injunctions, 
 1452  restraining orders, or any other appropriate order for the 
 1453  imposition of civil penalties provided by this chapter. Such 
 1454  civil actions shall be brought by the commission in the 
 1455  appropriate court of competent jurisdiction, and the venue shall 
 1456  be in the county in which the alleged violation occurred or in 
 1457  which the alleged violator or violators are found, reside, or 
 1458  transact business. Upon a proper showing that such person, 
 1459  political committee, committee of continuous existence, 
 1460  affiliated party committee, or political party has engaged, or 
 1461  is about to engage, in prohibited acts or practices, a permanent 
 1462  or temporary injunction, restraining order, or other order shall 
 1463  be granted without bond by such court, and the civil fines 
 1464  provided by this chapter may be imposed. 
 1465         Section 26. Section 106.29, Florida Statutes, is amended to 
 1466  read: 
 1467         106.29 Reports by political parties and affiliated party 
 1468  committees; restrictions on contributions and expenditures; 
 1469  penalties.— 
 1470         (1) The state executive committee and each county executive 
 1471  committee of each political party and any affiliated party 
 1472  committee regulated by chapter 103 shall file regular reports of 
 1473  all contributions received and all expenditures made by such 
 1474  committee. Such reports shall contain the same information as do 
 1475  reports required of candidates by s. 106.07 and shall be filed 
 1476  on the 10th day following the end of each calendar quarter, 
 1477  except that, during the period from the last day for candidate 
 1478  qualifying until the general election, such reports shall be 
 1479  filed on the Friday immediately preceding both the primary 
 1480  election and the general election. In addition to the reports 
 1481  filed under this section, the state executive committee, and 
 1482  each county executive committee, and each affiliated party 
 1483  committee shall file a copy of each prior written acceptance of 
 1484  an in-kind contribution given by the committee during the 
 1485  preceding calendar quarter as required under s. 106.08(6). Each 
 1486  state executive committee and affiliated party committee shall 
 1487  file the original and one copy of its reports with the Division 
 1488  of Elections. Each county executive committee shall file its 
 1489  reports with the supervisor of elections in the county in which 
 1490  such committee exists. Any state or county executive committee 
 1491  or affiliated party committee failing to file a report on the 
 1492  designated due date shall be subject to a fine as provided in 
 1493  subsection (3). No separate fine shall be assessed for failure 
 1494  to file a copy of any report required by this section. 
 1495         (2) The chair and treasurer of each state or county 
 1496  executive committee shall certify as to the correctness of each 
 1497  report filed by them on behalf of such committee. The leader and 
 1498  treasurer of each affiliated party committee under s. 103.092 
 1499  shall certify as to the correctness of each report filed by them 
 1500  on behalf of such committee. Any committee chair, leader, or 
 1501  treasurer who certifies the correctness of any report while 
 1502  knowing that such report is incorrect, false, or incomplete 
 1503  commits a felony of the third degree, punishable as provided in 
 1504  s. 775.082, s. 775.083, or s. 775.084. 
 1505         (3)(a) Any state or county executive committee or 
 1506  affiliated party committee failing to file a report on the 
 1507  designated due date shall be subject to a fine as provided in 
 1508  paragraph (b) for each late day. The fine shall be assessed by 
 1509  the filing officer, and the moneys collected shall be deposited 
 1510  in the General Revenue Fund. 
 1511         (b) Upon determining that a report is late, the filing 
 1512  officer shall immediately notify the chair of the executive 
 1513  committee or the leader of the affiliated party committee as 
 1514  defined in s. 103.092 as to the failure to file a report by the 
 1515  designated due date and that a fine is being assessed for each 
 1516  late day. The fine shall be $1,000 for a state executive 
 1517  committee, $1,000 for an affiliated party committee, and $50 for 
 1518  a county executive committee, per day for each late day, not to 
 1519  exceed 25 percent of the total receipts or expenditures, 
 1520  whichever is greater, for the period covered by the late report. 
 1521  However, if an executive committee or an affiliated party 
 1522  committee fails to file a report on the Friday immediately 
 1523  preceding the general election, the fine shall be $10,000 per 
 1524  day for each day a state executive committee is late, $10,000 
 1525  per day for each day an affiliated party committee is late, and 
 1526  $500 per day for each day a county executive committee is late. 
 1527  Upon receipt of the report, the filing officer shall determine 
 1528  the amount of the fine which is due and shall notify the chair 
 1529  or leader as defined in s. 103.092. The filing officer shall 
 1530  determine the amount of the fine due based upon the earliest of 
 1531  the following: 
 1532         1. When the report is actually received by such officer. 
 1533         2. When the report is postmarked. 
 1534         3. When the certificate of mailing is dated. 
 1535         4. When the receipt from an established courier company is 
 1536  dated. 
 1537         5. When the electronic receipt issued pursuant to s. 
 1538  106.0705 is dated. 
 1539   
 1540  Such fine shall be paid to the filing officer within 20 days 
 1541  after receipt of the notice of payment due, unless appeal is 
 1542  made to the Florida Elections Commission pursuant to paragraph 
 1543  (c). An officer or member of an executive committee shall not be 
 1544  personally liable for such fine. 
 1545         (c) The chair of an executive committee or the leader of an 
 1546  affiliated party committee as defined in s. 103.092 may appeal 
 1547  or dispute the fine, based upon unusual circumstances 
 1548  surrounding the failure to file on the designated due date, and 
 1549  may request and shall be entitled to a hearing before the 
 1550  Florida Elections Commission, which shall have the authority to 
 1551  waive the fine in whole or in part. Any such request shall be 
 1552  made within 20 days after receipt of the notice of payment due. 
 1553  In such case, the chair of the executive committee or the leader 
 1554  of the affiliated party committee as defined in s. 103.092 
 1555  shall, within the 20-day period, notify the filing officer in 
 1556  writing of his or her intention to bring the matter before the 
 1557  commission. 
 1558         (d) The appropriate filing officer shall notify the Florida 
 1559  Elections Commission of the repeated late filing by an executive 
 1560  committee or affiliated party committee, the failure of an 
 1561  executive committee or affiliated party committee to file a 
 1562  report after notice, or the failure to pay the fine imposed. 
 1563         (4) Any contribution received by a state or county 
 1564  executive committee or affiliated party committee less than 5 
 1565  days before an election shall not be used or expended in behalf 
 1566  of any candidate, issue, affiliated party committee, or 
 1567  political party participating in such election. 
 1568         (5) No state or county executive committee or affiliated 
 1569  party committee, in the furtherance of any candidate or 
 1570  political party, directly or indirectly, shall give, pay, or 
 1571  expend any money, give or pay anything of value, authorize any 
 1572  expenditure, or become pecuniarily liable for any expenditure 
 1573  prohibited by this chapter. However, the contribution of funds 
 1574  by one executive committee to another or to established party 
 1575  organizations for legitimate party or campaign purposes is not 
 1576  prohibited, but all such contributions shall be recorded and 
 1577  accounted for in the reports of the contributor and recipient. 
 1578         (6)(a) The national, state, and county executive committees 
 1579  of a political party and affiliated party committees may not 
 1580  contribute to any candidate any amount in excess of the limits 
 1581  contained in s. 106.08(2), and all contributions required to be 
 1582  reported under s. 106.08(2) by the national executive committee 
 1583  of a political party shall be reported by the state executive 
 1584  committee of that political party. 
 1585         (b) A violation of the contribution limits contained in s. 
 1586  106.08(2) is a misdemeanor of the first degree, punishable as 
 1587  provided in s. 775.082 or s. 775.083. A civil penalty equal to 
 1588  three times the amount in excess of the limits contained in s. 
 1589  106.08(2) shall be assessed against any executive committee 
 1590  found in violation thereof. 
 1591         Section 27. Paragraph (d) of subsection (1) of section 
 1592  11.045, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 
 1593         11.045 Lobbying before the Legislature; registration and 
 1594  reporting; exemptions; penalties.— 
 1595         (1) As used in this section, unless the context otherwise 
 1596  requires: 
 1597         (d) “Expenditure” means a payment, distribution, loan, 
 1598  advance, reimbursement, deposit, or anything of value made by a 
 1599  lobbyist or principal for the purpose of lobbying. The term 
 1600  “expenditure” does not include contributions or expenditures 
 1601  reported pursuant to chapter 106 or federal election law, 
 1602  campaign-related personal services provided without compensation 
 1603  by individuals volunteering their time, any other contribution 
 1604  or expenditure made by or to a political party or affiliated 
 1605  party committee, or any other contribution or expenditure made 
 1606  by an organization that is exempt from taxation under 26 U.S.C. 
 1607  s. 527 or s. 501(c)(4). 
 1608         Section 28. Paragraph (b) of subsection (12) of section 
 1609  112.312, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 
 1610         112.312 Definitions.—As used in this part and for purposes 
 1611  of the provisions of s. 8, Art. II of the State Constitution, 
 1612  unless the context otherwise requires: 
 1613         (12) 
 1614         (b) “Gift” does not include: 
 1615         1. Salary, benefits, services, fees, commissions, gifts, or 
 1616  expenses associated primarily with the donee’s employment, 
 1617  business, or service as an officer or director of a corporation 
 1618  or organization. 
 1619         2. Contributions or expenditures reported pursuant to 
 1620  chapter 106, campaign-related personal services provided without 
 1621  compensation by individuals volunteering their time, or any 
 1622  other contribution or expenditure by a political party or 
 1623  affiliated party committee. 
 1624         3. An honorarium or an expense related to an honorarium 
 1625  event paid to a person or the person’s spouse. 
 1626         4. An award, plaque, certificate, or similar personalized 
 1627  item given in recognition of the donee’s public, civic, 
 1628  charitable, or professional service. 
 1629         5. An honorary membership in a service or fraternal 
 1630  organization presented merely as a courtesy by such 
 1631  organization. 
 1632         6. The use of a public facility or public property, made 
 1633  available by a governmental agency, for a public purpose. 
 1634         7. Transportation provided to a public officer or employee 
 1635  by an agency in relation to officially approved governmental 
 1636  business. 
 1637         8. Gifts provided directly or indirectly by a state, 
 1638  regional, or national organization which promotes the exchange 
 1639  of ideas between, or the professional development of, 
 1640  governmental officials or employees, and whose membership is 
 1641  primarily composed of elected or appointed public officials or 
 1642  staff, to members of that organization or officials or staff of 
 1643  a governmental agency that is a member of that organization. 
 1644         Section 29. Paragraph (d) of subsection (1) of section 
 1645  112.3215, Florida Statutes, is amended to read: 
 1646         112.3215 Lobbying before the executive branch or the 
 1647  Constitution Revision Commission; registration and reporting; 
 1648  investigation by commission.— 
 1649         (1) For the purposes of this section: 
 1650         (d) “Expenditure” means a payment, distribution, loan, 
 1651  advance, reimbursement, deposit, or anything of value made by a 
 1652  lobbyist or principal for the purpose of lobbying. The term 
 1653  “expenditure” does not include contributions or expenditures 
 1654  reported pursuant to chapter 106 or federal election law, 
 1655  campaign-related personal services provided without compensation 
 1656  by individuals volunteering their time, any other contribution 
 1657  or expenditure made by or to a political party or an affiliated 
 1658  party committee, or any other contribution or expenditure made 
 1659  by an organization that is exempt from taxation under 26 U.S.C. 
 1660  s. 527 or s. 501(c)(4). 
 1661         Section 30. This act shall take effect July 1, 2010. 
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