Evil GOP bastards insulate their ‘dark money’ network against a citizens referendum by Arizona voters

dark_moneyOur lawless Tea-Publican legislators have little regard or respect for the voters, who for some insane reason continue to elect them to office.

The evil GOP bastards have spent this legislative session devising new and creative ways to disenfranchise voters and to make it harder for Arizona citizens to exercise their constitutional right to citizens initiative, referendum and recall. And if voters somehow manage to navigate the obstacle course and to succeed in passing a citizens initiative or referendum, the evil GOP bastards have devised new ways to nullify your actions and/or allow the legislature to overrule your citizens initiative or referendum (despite the Voter Protection Act of 1998) because they know better than you.

Case in point, earlier this year Governor Ducey signs ‘dark money on steroids’ bill, SB 1516, for which A ‘citizens veto’ (referendum) of SB 1516 is under consideration.

No worries, the evil GOP bastards simply passed another bill with nearly identical provisions that goes into effect retroactively, rather than January 1, 2017, so now the citizens of Arizona are forced into two citizens referendum drives to stop the GOP’s “dark money on steroids” network.

Howard Fischer reports, Bill allowing dark money also frustrates initiative bid to overturn it:

State lawmakers wrapped up the 2016 legislative session Saturday with what some critics say is a last-minute poke at voters.

Over the objections of several Democrats, the House voted 31-25 to give final approval to HB 2296 (.pdf).. The main provision would curb the ability of both the Secretary of State’s Office and the Citizens Clean Elections Commission to demand that certain “social welfare” groups disclose information on their donors.

If all that sounds familiar, it should: The same provisions were in SB 1516 signed into law earlier this year by Gov. Doug Ducey. But the wording of that bill means it cannot take effect until sometime later this summer.

HB 2296 would become law no earlier. But in a bit of legislative sleight of hand, it contains language making it effective, retroactively, later this month.

Rep. J.D. Mesnard, R-Chandler (this tool again), said the aim was simply to have the provisions in place for this year’s elections.

But Rep. Ken Clark, D-Phoenix, said he sees something more sinister in the measure which is now on the desk of Gov. Doug Ducey.

Clark is spearheading a petition drive to put the provisions of SB 1516 on the ballot in November. If voters reject what lawmakers have done, that legislation self destructs.

But here’s the thing: If SB 1516 goes away, the law — and specifically the provision designed to go after “dark money” — defaults to the way it was before the November election. And that would be the identical language in HB 2296.

Put another way, the changes in campaign disclosure laws would still remain.

Clark said that leaves only one option: Have two separate petition drives to force a vote on both measures. That adds to the effort and expense.

Mesnard denied that was the intent. [He is lying.] But a clearly angry Clark said that does not matter.

“If you are a responsible lawmaker and you know that your actions have an unintended consequence that will force the voters to have to go twice to the ballot to overturn one law, then you are acting against the spirit of our constitution,” he said.

It is a constitutional provision that gives voters the right to have the last word on virtually anything approved by the legislature. It takes just 75,321 valid signatures on petitions gathered within 90 days of the end of the legislative session to put any legislative act on “hold” until voters get to decide whether they want the new law.

But asking voters to review two separate measures, even if they have identical language, means two separate petition drives.

Mesnard conceded Clark’s point.

“That’s true,” he said of the need for two petition drives. But Mesnard said the new version and its retroactive effect is designed to short-circuit what he believes are improper investigations by the Citizens Clean Elections Commission.

That goes to the heart of the battle.

Current Arizona law requires groups that spend money to influence elections to register first with the state. SB 1516 — and now HB 2296 — say none of that is necessary if the groups are registered with the Internal Revenue Service as a non-profit “social welfare” organization. More to the point, the groups would not have to disclose their donors.

* * *

But Tom Collins, executive director of the Citizens Clean Elections Commission, said there are two problems with that.

First, he said the IRS does not consider anything spent to promote or kill ballot measures to be political spending. So as long as it spent less than half to elect candidates, it would be free to spend without disclosing donors.

“That’s a real sea change,” Collins said.

Beyond that, Collins the record shows that the IRS does not police these social welfare groups to see how they are spending their money to ensure they are not violating the limits on political spending. With the new law putting a group’s records off limits to state officials, Collins said that pretty much gives them permission to do what they want in secret.

“This bill would result in less disclosure than current law requires of who is contributing money for elections in the state of Arizona,” he said.

* * *

Mesnard said he would not have pushed the second bill, with its retroactive enforcement date, if Collins’ commission were not trying to look into the books — and the donors — of social welfare groups.

“This is about the Clean Election Commission overstepping its bounds,” he said.

“There’s fear that they’re going to insist on essentially be able to going in and prying open the books of private nonprofits,” Mesnard said. “And we’re trying to say, ‘No, you can’t do that.’ ”

The average voter who contributes to political parties or to campaigns is required to disclose his or her name/address/occupation and amount of contribution. There are limits.  But if you incorporate as a 501c nonprofit corporation, you can anonymously contribute unlimited amounts of money without any disclosure. This is fundamentally unfair to the average voter. This bullshit “privacy” argument made by this tool J.D. Mesnard (it comes from the “Kochtopus” Death Star, the Goldwater Institute) is pure Plutocrat privilege nonsense.

Kick these evil GOP bastards out of office!

How they voted in the House:

Screenshot from 2016-05-08 11:40:17

How they voted in the Senate:

Screenshot from 2016-05-08 11:41:00

 


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1 thought on “Evil GOP bastards insulate their ‘dark money’ network against a citizens referendum by Arizona voters”

  1. ok azbluemeenie why do 70% of white arizona keeps voting for evil republicans? if you can’t think why you better get more latino;s registered.

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