The big news this week is that the Maine Ethics Commission has voted to investigate the American Legislative Exchange Council's (ALEC) campaign software scheme based on a complaint filed by CMD in July. CMD has filed an IRS complaint and 11 state complaints so far alleging that ALEC, a corporate, pay-to-play bill-writing network, is engaged in illegal electioneering by donating valuable voter management software to its legislative members. CMD Executive Director Arn Pearson testified yesterday during the commission's hearing. While ALEC's lawyer claimed the group's legislative members only used the software for constituent services—even though it is exactly the same as a partisan campaign package that uses the tag line, "We Turn Data Into Votes"—the commission opted to investigate what the software actually does in order to determine whether ALEC broke campaign finance laws. Prior to Maine, Connecticut launched an investigation into ALEC's practices. Next week, three more preliminary hearings on CMD's complaints against ALEC will take place in Minnesota, Ohio, and Wisconsin. This week we also have stories for you about ALEC's funders, GOP megadonor Art Pope's role in helping Republicans rig future elections, and Pfizer's donations to extremist anti-vax politicians. Here's the latest! |
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