Maine’s two senators joined their Republican colleagues in blocking action on a bill that would require outside groups spending hundreds of millions on campaign ads to reveal how much they spend and who their big donors are.
With Republicans united in opposition, Democrats had no chance of getting the 60 votes needed to advance the Disclose Act to the full Senate, The Associated Press reported.
The bill would have required groups spending more than $10,000 during an election cycle to file a report within 24 hours and identify those donating more than $10,000. Current election law requires super political action committees, or super PACS, to make periodic reports to the Federal Election Commission, but nonprofits, including social welfare organizations, labor unions and trade groups, generally do not have to reveal the sources of election-related spending.
Democrats accuse the GOP of attempting to shield big-money donors from disclosure requirements.
Maine Sens. Susan Collins and Olympia Snowe said they support full financial disclosure but found fault with a bill that they said favored unions and was being rushed through Congress without hearings or opportunity for amendment. Both Snowe and Collins supported the McCain-Feingold bill, the bipartisan campaign finance law that was changed by the Citizens United decision.
Collins said Citizens United created serious problems but that the Democrats’ bill “preserves certain advantages for labor unions.”
“What we need is legislation that is truly equitable, that treats corporate and labor interests in the same way and that ensures there is disclosure of major donors,” Collins said in an interview prior to the Senate vote.
Collins added that she talked with Sen. John McCain, R-Arizona, on Monday about working with him to draft an alternative bill.
Snowe offered similar reasons for her votes against the bill.
“I am concerned about the legislation’s clearly unequal treatment of unions and corporations, as it imposes a new donor disclosure regime on certain entities, while not on others,” Snowe said in a statement. “The hallmark of the McCain-Feingold Act was its even-handed and balanced treatment of all sides – and this bill, created within the past week, fails that test.”
The Sunlight Foundation, a nonprofit and nonpartisan group that works for greater transparency in government, disputed that the bill favored unions. Although the $10,000 reporting threshold means that individual, dues-paying union members would probably not be identified, the unions themselves would be required to disclose donations of $10,000 or more, the foundation said.
Democrats have accused Republicans of refusing to work with them to address their concerns.
In Maine, several organizations waged phone call campaigns and aired online ads calling on Snowe and Collins to support the law. And when they didn’t, the groups accused the senators and other Republicans of attempting to shield the identity of mega-donors.
“Perhaps Republicans want to shield the handful of billionaires willing to contribute nine figures to sway a close presidential election,” said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada said Monday night during a previous, equally unsuccessful vote on the issue.
He said this election was in danger of being bought by “17 angry, old, white men.”
– The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Washington Bureau Chief Kevin Miller can be contacted at (207) 317-6256 or at: kmiller@mainetodaymedia.com
Twitter: @KevinMillerDC
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