ALEC Legislator Fast Tracks a Bill to Block Local Campaign Finance Ordinances in Arizona [1]
Submitted by David Armiak [2] on

Update: Following publication, the Arizona Senate passed HB 2153 on a party line vote. It is now on Gov. Doug Ducey's desk awaiting his signature.
A state bill that would ban cities and counties from requiring dark money groups to disclose their donors is moving rapidly through the Arizona state legislature. HB 2153 [3] would make it illegal for localities to require tax exempt organizations to disclose donors and register as political action committees. The bill introduced by Rep. Vince Leach (R-11) was approved by the House and is waiting a final roll-call vote in the Senate.
This state interference in local democracy initiatives is a response to a Tempe ballot measure that passed earlier this month by a 9-to-1 margin which creates an ordinance [4] that requires groups that make more than $1,000 in independent expenditures in municipal elections to disclose its financial supporters and details of the organization. The city of Phoenix is considering [5] revising its charter to curb dark money in a similar fashion.
HB 2153 is based on an American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) resolution [6] that was adopted last year which spins campaign finance disclosure as an attack on “donor privacy.” ALEC is a corporate-funded organization that brings lobbyists and state politicians together behind closed doors to rewrite state laws.
Rep. Leach is a GOP legislative member of ALEC, and 22 other Arizona representatives and 8 senators have ties to the group.
ALEC and its sister organization, the State Policy Network (SPN), have made fighting campaign finance disclosure a central goal. ALEC founded the misnamed “Center to Protect Free Speech,” which produced a Donor Disclosure Toolkit [7] for legislatures that details how lawmakers should respond to donor disclosure laws.
ALEC’s toolkit lifts whole sections from an SPN Donor Privacy Toolkit [8] published on its United for Privacy campaign website. Both toolkits are partially written by Jon Riches, Director of National Litigation and General Counsel for the Goldwater Institute [9], Arizona’s SPN affiliate. Goldwater is lobbying for the passage of HB 2153 and sent its vice president for litigation to testify in support of the bill in front of a House committee.
If the preemption bill passes by roll-call vote in the Senate, it will head to Gov. Doug Ducey’s desk. Ducey has written for ALEC [10] and spoken [11] at ALEC meetings, so the measure trampling local democracy is likely to get his signature.