Don’t Bother Asking the SEC about Political Contributions

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The House Committee on Appropriations recently adopted a budget for an assortment of financial agencies. Tucked inside the 150-plus pages of legislative prose is a provision denying the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) funding to issue “any rule, regulation, or order regarding the disclosure of political contributions.”


The House Committee on Appropriations recently adopted a budget for an assortment of financial agencies. Tucked inside the 150-plus pages of legislative prose is a provision denying the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) funding to issue “any rule, regulation, or order regarding the disclosure of political contributions.”

The provision is an attempt to use the appropriations process to block the SEC from responding to Citizens United, the case that opened the floodgate of political spending by finding that the First Amendment protected corporate contributions.

The House adopted the same provision last year, only to see it die in the Senate. If it does so again, let us hope that the Senate has the same killer instinct and does not let this change slip through during the process of negotiating a final budget with the House.

Calls for reform

What happens when the Appropriations Committee meddles in the SEC’s disclosure process?

Put aside for the moment the compelling case for why the SEC should act on the issue and require more disclosure. Many have already made this case, including Justice Anthony Kennedy in what amounted to a command in Citizens United to provide effective disclosure of contributions, the more than 1.2 million supportive comments on a petition asking the SEC to adopt a rule in this area, and the recent salvo of letters calling for reform.  It included letters from two former SEC chairs (and one former commissioner), 144 business leaders, entrepreneurs, investors and philanthropists, and more than 70 foundations.

Let us just focus on the immediate consequences of a committee of the House of Representatives using the appropriations process to micromanage the system of corporate disclosure administered by the SEC.

The ban on rules regulating the disclosure of political contributions slipped into the appropriations bill with no serious public vetting. There were no hearings on the language, no erudite witnesses commenting on the consequences. The SEC has not, apparently, publicly commented on the language. Instead, the Appropriations Committee was left to its own devices in fashioning the applicable requirements. The consequences were predictable.

For one thing, the language is over-broad and unnecessarily interferes with other areas of the securities laws. The provision does not apply only to political contributions made by public companies but to political contributions of any kind. As a result, the provision would presumably apply to ongoing efforts by the SEC to address the problem of “pay to play,” the practice of securities professionals making political contributions to the government officials with whom they work.

The legislation would also potentially interfere with efforts by the SEC to enforce the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, a law that prohibits certain payments to foreign government officials. The appropriations bill could defund all of these areas.

The language could even give companies a pass from the SEC on lying about corporate contributions to political campaigns. To the extent companies inaccurately disclose the nature or amount of the contributions, the SEC has the existing authority to sanction them for misleading investors. The commission typically does so by issuing an order setting out the violation and the consequences.

But the language in the appropriations bill would not only prohibit any rules regarding the disclosure of political contributions but also prohibits any orders. The prohibition on orders, therefore, presumably defunds enforcement efforts by the SEC of existing requirements applicable to political contributions.

A blunt approach

At the same time, the language also does not really accomplish what the drafters apparently intended.

Under the legislation, it is true that the SEC will not be able to expend funds regarding the adoption of rules or the issuance of orders concerning political contributions. Nothing in the appropriations bill, however, prevents the staff of the SEC from using other, less formal mechanisms to require companies and others to disclose these contributions.

The staff has at its fingertips devices such as “no action” letters and interpretive releases that can influence the disclosure process. These are informal mechanisms that the staff sometimes uses to advise companies on their existing legal obligations.

In 2010, for example, the staff issued an interpretive release in an effort to clarify disclosure requirements with respect to climate change. The same could happen with respect to political contributions, even with the adoption of the language in the appropriations bill.

Contrast this blunt approach with the obligations imposed on the SEC. To adopt any rule on political contributions, the agency must draft the relevant provisions and submit them to the public for input. Any final rule will need to take into account the full panoply of viewpoints. In other words, the SEC can act only after becoming fully informed and hearing from all sides.

The appropriations process is no place for interference in the SEC’s oversight of the corporate disclosure process, including disclosure relating to political contributions. Therefore, remove the language in the present bill and leave the matter to the SEC to resolve.

House meddling with SEC to block disclosure of political contributions is republished with permission from The Conversation

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