AMY BERMAN JACKSON, United States District Judge
This case originated in 2011 when plaintiff Chris Van Hollen, Jr. — a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from the 8th Congressional District of the State of Maryland — filed a complaint challenging the authority of the Federal Election Commission to promulgate 11 C.F.R. § 104.20(c)(9), which narrowed the disclosure requirements set forth in the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act ("BCRA"), 52 U.S.C. § 30104(f)(d)(E)-(F) (2012),
The FEC did not appeal the decision. But the intervenor-defendants, the Center for Individual Freedom ("CFIF") and the Hispanic Leadership Fund ("HLF") did, and the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit held that the case should not have been decided at the first Chevron step. The Circuit Court found the BCRA's disclosure provisions to be ambiguous, "especially when viewed in the light of the Supreme Court's decisions" in Citizens United and WRTL II, and it remanded the case for consideration of the regulation at Chevron step two. Van Hollen, 694 F.3d at 110, 112.
The Court now concludes that the promulgation of 11 C.F.R. § 104.20(c)(9) was arbitrary, capricious, and contrary to law and that the regulation is an unreasonable interpretation of the BCRA for several reasons. First, the Commission initiated the rulemaking process for the stated purpose of responding to the decision in WRTL II, but nothing the Supreme Court did in that case provides a basis for narrowing the disclosure rules enacted by Congress. WRTL II dealt solely with the question of whether the statutory ban on corporate and labor organization funding of electioneering communications could withstand an as-applied constitutional challenge.
Second, there is little or nothing in the administrative record that would support the Commission's decision to introduce a limitation into the broad disclosure rules in the BCRA. Neither the petition for rulemaking nor the original notice of proposed rulemaking proposed altering the disclosure requirements for corporations and labor unions. None of the commenters asked the agency to amend the disclosure rules to include a purpose requirement, and the Commission did not incorporate the purpose requirement in the new rule until after the notice and comment period and the hearing had been concluded. The only post-hearing comment received in response to the newly incorporated language strongly opposed its inclusion.
Finally, the regulation's purpose requirement is inconsistent with the statutory language and purpose of the BCRA. Congress passed the disclosure provisions of the BCRA to promote transparency and to ensure that members of the public would be aware of who was trying to influence their votes just before an election. The added purpose requirement in section 104.20(c)(9) thwarts that objective by creating an easily exploited loophole that allows the true sponsors of advertisements to hide behind dubious and misleading names. Based on these considerations, the Court will vacate 11 C.F.R. § 104.20(c)(9), and it will grant plaintiff's motion for summary judgment.
Over the course of seven years, the Supreme Court of the United States weakened, and eventually invalidated entirely, the prohibition on the use of corporate and union treasury funds to finance electioneering communications. See Citizens United, 558 U.S. at 365, 130 S.Ct. 876; WRTL II, 551 U.S. at 470-76, 127 S.Ct. 2652; McConnell v. FEC, 540 U.S. 93, 93, 124 S.Ct. 619, 157 L.Ed.2d 491 (2003), overruled by Citizens United, 558 U.S. at 310, 130 S.Ct. 876. In the midst of this changing legal environment, the Commission began a rulemaking process and solicited public comment "generally regarding the effect of the [WRTL II] decision on the Commission's rules governing corporate and labor organization funding of electioneering communications, the definition of `electioneering communication,' and the rules governing reporting of electioneering communications."
In December 2007, the agency adopted a variant of the first alternative. It promulgated 11 C.F.R. § 104.20(c)(9), which included the following language:
11 C.F.R. § 104.20(c)(9) (emphasis added).
The Commission provided several explanations for adding this new "purpose" or "intent" requirement to the corporate and labor organization disclosure regulation. First, it noted that those entities' "general treasury funds are often largely comprised of funds received from investors," donors, customers, or members "who may not necessarily support the organization's electioneering communications." Electioneering Communications, Final Rule, 72 Fed. Reg. 72899, 72911 (Dec. 26, 2007). And second, it stated that compliance with the disclosure rules as previously written would impose a heavy burden on corporations and labor organizations: "[W]itnesses at the Commission's hearing testified that the effort necessary to identify those persons who provided funds totaling $1,000 or more ... would be very costly and require an inordinate amount of effort." Id. The Commission then concluded that "the policy underlying the disclosure provisions of BCRA [was] properly met by requiring corporations and labor organizations to disclose and report only those persons who made donations for the purpose of funding [electioneering communications]." Id.
Plaintiff Chris Van Hollen — concerned that "corporations have exploited the enormous loophole [the new regulation] created," Compl. ¶ 29 — filed this case against the FEC under the Administrative Procedure Act ("APA"). 5 U.S.C. § 706. He argued that the agency exceeded its statutory authority in promulgating that regulation and that the regulation is also arbitrary, capricious, and contrary to law under the APA. Two months after plaintiff filed his complaint, CFIF and HLF filed motions to intervene as defendants
On March 30, 2012, the Court entered an order granting plaintiff's motion for summary judgment and denying the other three motions. Order [Dkt. #47]. After determining that plaintiff had standing to bring his APA challenge, the Court conducted a Chevron analysis and struck down 11 C.F.R. § 104.20(c)(9) as inconsistent with text of the statute. The Commission did not appeal the Court's order, but intervenor-defendants CFIF and HLF did. Van Hollen, 694 F.3d at 110. On September 18, 2012, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit concluded that since the BCRA was ambiguous, the case should not have been decided at the first step of the Chevron test. Id. at 112.
The D.C. Circuit remanded the case with instructions to the District Court to refer the matter first to the Commission to ascertain whether the agency intended to engage in further rulemaking to clarify the regulatory regime. The judgment further provided: "[i]f the FEC elects instead to defend the current regulation, then the District Court should allow the parties to present arguments on Appellee's claims that the regulation cannot survive review under Chevron step two or [Motor Vehicle Manufacturers Ass'n of the United States, Inc. v. State Farm Mutual Auto. Insurance Co., 463 U.S. 29, 42-43, 103 S.Ct. 2856, 77 L.Ed.2d 443 (1983)], and then decide these issues in the first instance." Id.
On September 20, 2012, the Court referred the matter to the Commission and directed it to advise the Court on or before October 12, 2012, whether it intended to pursue a new rulemaking or defend the regulation. Order Referring Matter to Def. FEC for Further Consideration [Dkt. #66]. In a status report filed on October 4, 2012, the Commission stated that it did not intend to pursue a rulemaking and that it would continue to defend 11 C.F.R. § 104.20(c)(9) as written before the Court. FEC Status Report [Dkt. #67]. But the following day, intervenor-defendant CFIF advised the Court that it had petitioned the FEC to engage in the rulemaking that the agency had just informed the Court that it did not intend to undertake. CFIF Status Report [Dkt. #68]. The matter was stayed pending the FEC's consideration of CFIF's petition, and on March 12, 2013, the stay was lifted in light of the agency's decision to deny the petition and forego further rulemaking. See Oct. 18, 2012 Minute Order Staying Case; Mar. 12, 2013 Minute Order Lifting Stay. The Court permitted the parties to supplement their original memoranda with additional arguments on the Chevron step two issue, and it heard oral argument.
This Court is bound by the Circuit's determination that section 30104(f)(2)(E)-(F) is ambiguous, and therefore, it must now address the question of whether the implementing regulation, 11 C.F.R. § 104.20(c)(9), is "based on a permissible construction of the statute." Chevron, 467 U.S. at 843, 104 S.Ct. 2778. At the second step of the Chevron analysis, the reviewing court must give "considerable
Here, the Court of Appeals specifically directed this Court to determine whether the regulation could survive review under the test prescribed in the State Farm opinion. Van Hollen, 694 F.3d at 112. In State Farm, the Supreme Court reiterated that under the arbitrary and capricious standard, "a reviewing court may not set aside an agency rule that is rational, based on consideration of the relevant factors, and within the scope of the authority delegated to the agency by the statute." 463 U.S. at 42, 103 S.Ct. 2856. The Supreme Court went on to explain the process in greater detail:
Id. at 43, 103 S.Ct. 2856 (citations omitted). This, then, is the framework that must govern the Court's decision. But as plaintiff points out, that analysis cannot be divorced from the context of the particular statutory scheme involved.
Plaintiff Van Hollen cites Shays v. FEC ("Shays II"), 414 F.3d 76 (D.C.Cir.2005), and Shays v. FEC ("Shays III"), 528 F.3d 914 (D.C.Cir.2008), to the Court. Pl.'s Supplemental Briefing on Remanded Issues ("Pl.'s Supp.") at 1-2 [Dkt. #87]. He asserts that a reviewing court's task is to determine whether agency regulations are reasonable "in light of the language, legislative history, and policies of the statute," id. at 2, quoting Shays v. FEC, 337 F.Supp.2d 28, 78 (D.D.C.2004), and he calls upon the Court to follow the approach "exemplified in Shays" and to reject the regulations here on the grounds that they frustrate the policy behind the BCRA. Id. at 1-2, citing Shays III, 528 F.3d at 919.
The first Shays opinion cited is not helpful because it does not concern a Chevron step two exercise. In Shays II, the court addressed the standing question at length, and then it affirmed the District Court's invalidation of a set of FEC rules as too lax. See 414 F.3d at 83-96. The first two rules failed at the threshold Chevron inquiry, as the court found that they contravened the unambiguously expressed intent of Congress, and the Circuit Court upheld the District Court's invalidation of the other three rules on APA grounds, noting that it did not need to reach the second Chevron question of whether the rules were reasonable because the agency had
But in Shays III, the Court of Appeals did directly address the second step of the Chevron analysis when it approved the District Court's "thorough" rejection of a set of FEC rules based on the finding that they were "either contrary to BCRA's purpose or arbitrary and capricious." 528 F.3d at 919. The Court stated: "[i]n applying Chevron's second step and the APA, we must reject administrative constructions of [a] statute ... that frustrate the policy that Congress sought to implement." Id. (alterations in original) (internal quotation marks omitted).
So, under the precedent that this Court is bound to follow, the challenged rule must also be tested against the policy that BCRA was intended to advance.
The starting point of the second step of the Chevron analysis must be the stated reason behind the regulation, which is illuminated by both the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking ("NPRM") and the Explanation and Justification that accompanied the announcement of the final rule. The rulemaking was supposed to be about one narrow subject: what to do to implement the Supreme Court's decision in WRTL II. See 72 Fed.Reg. at 50261 ("These proposed rules would implement the Supreme Court's decision in FEC v. Wisconsin Right to Life, Inc., which held that the prohibition on the use of corporate and labor organization funds for electioneering communications is unconstitutional as applied to certain types of electioneering communications."); see also id. at 50262 ("The Commission is initiating this rulemaking to implement the Supreme Court's decision in WRTL II. ... The Commission is seeking public comment on two proposed alternative ways to implement the WRTL II decision in the rules governing electioneering communications."). To assess the reasonableness of the regulations, then, one must first ascertain what the Supreme Court decided in that case that required implementation.
WRTL II dealt with the constitutionality of section 203 of the BCRA, 2 U.S.C. § 441(b)(2), as applied to particular advertisements that the Wisconsin advocacy organization planned to broadcast. 551 U.S. at 449, 127 S.Ct. 2652. At that time, section 203 made it a crime for a corporation or labor union to use its general treasury funds to pay for any "electioneering communication," 2 U.S.C. § 441b(b)(2), that is, a broadcast, cable, or satellite communication that refers to a candidate for federal office and is aired within a prescribed time period before an election. 52 U.S.C. § 30104(f)(3)(A).
WRTL II was not the first time the Supreme Court addressed section 203: the opinion followed McConnell, in which the Court considered a series of facial challenges to multiple provisions of the statute. 540 U.S. at 114, 124 S.Ct. 619. As part of that exercise, the McConnell Court found the regulation of corporate and labor union expenditures in section 203 to be constitutional on its face. Id. at 203-09, 124 S.Ct. 619. The plaintiffs claimed that section 203 was overbroad and that it violated the First Amendment because it covered not only campaign speech, or "express advocacy," but also more general "issue advocacy" that might mention a candidate for federal office. Id. at 205-07, 124 S.Ct. 619. The Court disagreed and found that the compelling governmental interests that justified the imposition of restrictions on express campaign speech would also apply to advertisements that are the "functional equivalent" of express campaign speech. Id. at 204-06, 124 S.Ct. 619. Thus, it
It was WRTL II that directly presented an as-applied challenge to section 203. The non-profit issue advocacy corporation sought to broadcast radio advertisements that clearly identified a particular Senator running for re-election during the period when "electioneering communications" would be illegal under section 203. 551 U.S. at 458-61, 127 S.Ct. 2652. The Supreme Court reviewed its decision in McConnell and explained that resolving an as-applied challenge required it to determine at the outset "whether the speech at issue is the `functional equivalent' of speech expressly advocating the election or defeat of a candidate for federal office, or instead a `genuine issue a[d].'" Id. at 457, 127 S.Ct. 2652 (alteration in original), quoting McConnell, 540 U.S. at 206, 124 S.Ct. 619. The Court observed that McConnell did not adopt any test to be used as the standard for future as-applied challenges, and so, it found it necessary to do so. Id. at 464, 127 S.Ct. 2652.
The Court determined that in order to safeguard First Amendment rights, it was necessary that the standard be an objective one, "focusing on the substance of the communication rather than amorphous considerations of intent and effect." Id. at 469, 127 S.Ct. 2652.
Id. (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).
This then is the sole holding of WRTL II: that the section 203 prohibition against the use of a corporation's or labor organization's general funds for electioneering communications can only be applied to express campaign ads or to those issue ads that can only be reasonably interpreted as a plea to vote for or against a particular candidate.
Applying the new test, the majority concluded that the particular ads at issue were not the functional equivalent of express campaign speech, and that since the interests that would justify restricting corporate campaign speech or its functional equivalent do not support restrictions on issue advocacy, section 203 was unconstitutional as applied to WRTL's ads. Id. at 457, 127 S.Ct. 2652.
After the WRTL II decision was handed down, a petition for rulemaking was filed. The petition — filed by the James Madison Center for Free Speech, which was represented by the same counsel who had represented WRTL — did not call for a change in the disclosure requirements either. Petition for Rulemaking: Protecting "Genuine Issue Ads" from the "Electioneering Communication" Prohibition & Repealing 11 C.F.R. § 100.22(b), James Madison Ctr. for Free Speech, AR 96 [Dkt. #17-2]. Instead, the organization urged the agency to undertake a rulemaking to make two changes to the FEC's regulations in the wake of WRTL II: 1) to recognize the protection accorded to genuine issue ads in WRTL II by promulgating a rule limiting the ban on corporate spending on "electioneering communications" to ads that meet the WRTL II definition; and 2) to repeal 11 C.F.R. § 100.22(b), the Commission's definition of "expressly advocating." Id., AR 98-103.
In response to that petition, the agency published a NPRM and requested comments on proposed rules that "would implement the Supreme Court's decision in FEC v. Wisconsin Right to Life, Inc." 72 Fed.Reg. at 50261. Acknowledging that "[t]he plaintiff in [WRTL II] ... did not contest ... the reporting requirement in section [30104](f)(1)" and therefore that the case did not directly impact the BCRA's reporting requirements, id. at 50262, the agency nonetheless set out two alternative approaches for how it could revise the then-established disclosure requirements to apply to the newly allowed WRTL II ads.
Under the first alternative, the agency observed that "corporations and labor organizations that make [WRTL II] electioneering communications ... totaling
Id. Although the agency posed this question, the first alternative set out in the Notice did not include any sort of limiting language.
Alternative 2 embodied a simpler approach. Under that option, the agency proposed that "a communication that qualifies for [the WRTL II] exemption in proposed section 100.29(c)(6) would be exempted from the definition of `electioneering communication.'" Id. at 50272. In other words, all WRTL II communications would be exempt from the "regulations imposing reporting requirements on persons making `electioneering communications,'" while "the reporting requirements applicable to all communications that continue to meet the definition of `electioneering communication' would remain unchanged." Id. Thus, neither of the alternatives proposed in the FEC's notice incorporated the specific limiting language that is the subject of this litigation.
The Commission received twenty-seven written comments on the proposed rules, and it held a two day hearing at which fifteen witnesses testified. 72 Fed.Reg. at 72900. After the hearing and before it promulgated the final rule, the Commission added the language that is at issue in this case — "made for the purpose of furthering electioneering communications" — for the first time. See Memorandum on Draft Final Rule on Electioneering Communication to the Commission (Nov. 16, 2007), AR 1006 (setting forth its proposed draft B of the regulation). The agency received only one comment in response to the newly proposed language, which strongly opposed the proposal. Letter from the Campaign Legal Center to the Federal Election Commission (Nov. 19, 2007), AR 1024-25.
Before WRTL II, the McConnell Court upheld the disclosure provisions on their face, with the understanding that they applied to individuals, to those corporations and unions using segregated bank accounts, and to "groups" that had many individual donors. The rules also applied to some corporations, see FEC v. Mass. Citizens for Life, Inc., 479 U.S. 238, 107 S.Ct. 616, 93 L.Ed.2d 539 (1986), even if that group was small.
WRTL II left the reporting provisions untouched.
And even after WRTL II, when the restrictions on corporate and labor union spending were struck down entirely in Citizens United, and the Supreme Court was well aware that the statutory reporting requirements would now apply to a large number of ads funded by those organizations, it again left the reporting requirements untouched. 558 U.S. at 368, 130 S.Ct. 876 (alterations in original) (citations omitted) ("[Citizens United] contends that the governmental interest in providing information to the electorate does not justify requiring disclaimers for any commercial advertisements, including the ones at issue here. We disagree.... The disclaimers required by section 311 `provid[e] the electorate with information' and `insure that the voters are fully informed' about the person or group who is speaking.").
Therefore, the Court finds that it was unreasonable for the FEC to alter the statutory reporting requirements on the stated grounds that it was implementing the Supreme Court's decision in WRTL II. There was nothing about implementing the new definition of "functional equivalent of express advocacy" for purposes of enforcing section 203 that required narrowing the disclosure requirements in 52 U.S.C. § 30104(f)(2).
In addition to considering the regulation in light of its stated purpose, the Court must also review the record to determine whether the agency fully explained how its choice was predicated upon data it accumulated during the rulemaking process. Here, the parties did not deal with the record before the agency in any detail in their briefs. So the Court found it necessary to review the record in its
As an initial point, the Court notes that it was not until after the notice and comment period that the Commission announced that it had decided to depart from the proposed rules set forth in the NPRM and to do something entirely different — to limit corporate and labor union disclosure requirements to cover only the names and addresses of donors who intended to fund an electioneering communication. 72 Fed. Reg. at 72911 ("As discussed in detail below, after consideration of the comments, the Commission has decided to depart from the rules proposed in the NPRM...."). Although the mere fact that changes were made to a proposed rule after the notice and comment period does not itself invalidate the rule or the process, see Air Transport Ass'n of Am. v. Civil Aeronautics Bd., 732 F.2d 219, 224 (D.C.Cir.1984), the chronology here has an impact upon this portion of the State Farm analysis. As the record stands, none of the comments received during the NPRM stage or at the Commission's hearing addressed the language that the Commission eventually adopted, and the one post-hearing comment that did address the proposed course of action vehemently opposed it. The record is therefore largely devoid of evidence that supports the specific language that the Commission used to curtail the disclosure requirements in the case of corporations and labor organizations.
The record also lacks evidence that supports the Commission's decision to alter the disclosure regulations in the first place. In the Explanation and Justification that accompanied the promulgation of the final rule, the Commission stated that the disclosure regulation governing corporations and labor organizations that paid for electioneering campaigns would be tailored so that those entities need "disclose only the identities of those persons who made a donation aggregating $1,000 or more specifically for the purpose of furthering [electioneering communications] made by that" entity. 72 Fed.Reg. at 72911 (emphasis added). It offered the following explanation in support of its decision:
Id. The agency also noted — without further specific citations to the record or testimony — that "witnesses at the Commission's hearing testified that the effort necessary to identify those persons who provided funds totaling $1,000 or more to a corporation or labor organization would be very costly and require an inordinate amount of effort." Id. Based on those considerations, the agency then summarily concluded that "the policy underlying the disclosure provisions of BCRA [was] properly met by requiring corporations and labor organizations to disclose and report only those persons who made donations for the purpose of funding [electioneering communications]." Id.
Four of the commenters did not discuss the question of whether the reporting rules should be changed in their comments at all. See Comments of the James Madison Center for Free Speech, AR 96-103 (the organization that petitioned for the rulemaking); Comments of the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network, Inc., AR 222-27; Comments of the Thomas Jefferson Center for the Protection of Free Expression and Comments of the Media Institute, AR 249-62. And although there were several commenters that did mention disclosure, they generally mentioned it in the context of advancing their position that their issue ads should not be subject to any regulation. They favored the approach embodied in Alternative 2 — establishing an exclusion to the definition of electioneering communications for the type of speech protected by WRTL II — and observed that excluding constitutionally protected communications from the definition of electioneering communications would also mean that the reporting requirements would not apply to them. See, e.g., Comments of National Association of Realtors, AR 376-82; see also Comments of Citizens United, AR 298-323.
For example, the American Association of Advertising Agencies, the American Advertising Federation, and the Association of National Advertisers sought clarification that their commercial and business advertisements were fully shielded by the Constitution and not subject to either the prohibitions or the reporting requirements in the BCRA. See Comments of the American Association of Advertising Agencies, the American Advertising Federation, and the Association of National Advertisers, AR 231-41. They favored a broad safe harbor that would clearly distinguish commercial speech from prohibited communications and noted: "There is no legal rationale for subjecting to the electioneering communication reporting regime ads that are protected under the WRTL II decision.
The Free Speech Coalition, Inc. and the Free Speech and Education Fund, Inc. echoed those concerns, and they called for the promulgation of a narrow definition of "express advocacy and its functional equivalent" that would in turn limit the applicability of the reporting and disclosure requirements. Comments of the Free Speech Coalition, Inc. and the Free Speech & Education Fund, Inc., AR 325-35. "[I]f the funding limitations placed upon a broadcast of a genuine issue ad or any other broadcast communication is found to be unconstitutional, then the reporting and disclosure requirement that would otherwise be attached to the ad because it is the functional equivalent of express advocacy cannot be justified by the Buckley standard...." Id. The two free speech organizations warned that disclosure and reporting requirements posed the same dangers and should be subject to the same strict scrutiny as absolute prohibitions if they imposed any burden on constitutionally protected speech. Id.; see also Comments of Independent Sector, AR 365 (advocating Alternative 2 — excluding issue ads from the definition of electioneering communications — over Alternative 1 because "issue advocacy is a fundamental right and purpose of nonprofit organizations" and a "distinction between the funding of ads, which the Supreme Court struck down, and the disclosure of funding for that right cannot be maintained.... Aside from the daunting complexity involved in following FEC procedures, donor disclosure requirements present significant privacy concerns that are not outweighed by the government interest in disclosure.... We are also concerned about the chilling effect of proposed Alternative One on advocacy rights"); Comments of OMB Watch, AR 384-88 (calling for a more specific general rule exempting issue advocacy and grassroots lobbying from the statutory prohibitions and objecting to the imposition of any reporting requirements on broadcasts that should be exempt).
And similarly, the American Taxpayers Alliance and Americans for Limited Government also warned that compelled disclosure could infringe upon or chill the exercise of First Amendment rights and rejected the notion that the Commission could regulate or impose reporting requirements on issue ads that fell short of express advocacy or its functional equivalent. Comments of the American Taxpayers Alliance and Comments of Americans for Limited Government, AR 416-29.
In sum, the commenters who expressed concerns about the burdens or the constitutionality of the reporting requirements were primarily advancing the view that certain advertising should fall outside of the scope of the regulatory regime altogether. None of them called for or even discussed revising or narrowing of the reporting requirements for corporations and labor unions sponsoring genuine electioneering
Meanwhile, on the other end of the spectrum, there were approximately a dozen commenters who urged the Commission to keep the disclosure requirements intact. See Comments of S.B. Hornik, AR 167; Comments of Professors Richard L. Hasen of School of Law: Loyola University Chicago and Professor Richard Briffault of Columbia Law School, AR 184-88; Comments of Washington State Public Disclosure Commission, AR 190-92; Comments of Professor Allison Hayward of George Mason University Law School, AR 243-47; Comments of Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee and Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, AR 264-69; Comments of Common Cause, Public Citizen, and U.S. Public Interest Research Group ("PIRG"), AR 346-60; Comments of Senators McCain, Feingold, and Snowe and Representative Shays, AR 369-74; Comments of Public Campaign, AR 390-91; Comments of the Campaign Legal Center, Democracy 21, Brennan Center for Justice, Common Cause, League of Women Voters, and U.S. PIRG, AR 393-414; Comments of Campaign Legal Center and Robert F. Bauer, AR 431-33; Comments of Alliance for Justice, AR 435-51; Comments of American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations ("AFL-CIO"), American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees ("AFSCME"), National Education Association ("NEA"), and Service Employees International Union ("SEIU"), AR 453-75.
The Center for Competitive Politics expressed strong views against revising the disclosure rules:
Comments of Center for Competitive Politics, AR 339.
Similarly, Common Cause, Public Citizen, and U.S. PIRG admonished the Commission that WRTL II did not open the door to altering that portion of the statute:
Comments of Common Cause, et al., AR 351 (footnote omitted). That view was seconded by the Congressional sponsors of Title II of the BCRA, Senator John McCain, Senator Russell D. Feingold, Senator Olympia Snowe, and Representative Christopher Shays, who insisted that the Supreme Court's holding finding some funding restrictions to be unconstitutional did not extend to the reporting requirements:
Comments of Senator McCain, et al., AR 371.
Other commenters underscored the salutary purposes of disclosure and took the position that reporting requirements are much less burdensome than restrictions on expenditures. See Comments of Public Campaign, AR 390-91 ("Disclosure enhances transparency and can provide citizens with the information to determine how to vote or respond to calls for grassroots lobbying.... I urge the Commission to retain the extant disclosure requirements for all ads that meet the definition of `electioneering communication.'").
After the written comments were submitted, there was a hearing to consider the NPRM. The hearing to consider the NPRM was held on October 17 and 18, 2007, and it consisted of a series of panels. The witnesses and the Commissioners considered many issues other than the possible narrowing of the disclosure rules, and those discussions that do not bear on the issue presented in this case are not summarized here.
The first panel included James Bopp, who represented Wisconsin Right to Life in WRTL II, on behalf of the organization that filed the petition for rulemaking: The James Madison Center for Free Speech. He was joined by Marc Elias of Perkins Coie, representing the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, and former
Elias similarly "implored" the Commission to do what was necessary under WRTL II and no more; "you are not faced with questions about disclosure." AR 511; 537. Elias also cautioned against attempting to predict how the Supreme Court would treat the disclosure of WRTL II communications. AR 594.
Hayward's general comments about the burdens of disclosure included her observation that the "contributors" to be disclosed under the statute would not include an organization's commercial customers, those who pay for its services, or members who pay membership dues. AR 611. Elias agreed. AR 612; 616 ("Are there `contributors' to Ford?"). So this panel did not supply evidence that compliance would be difficult for commercial enterprises or labor unions that did not elect to establish the segregated bank account.
At least one of the Commissioners did express concerns about how the rule would affect non-profit organizations since they are not generally required to identify their contributors, and the delineation between dues and "donations" paid to them might be unclear. AR 616-19. But much of the record consists of the Commissioners themselves thinking out loud about those issues — there was little data placed before them. And there was no testimony offered that suggested that the availability of the segregated bank account option would not alleviate any burdens or privacy concerns associated with imposing the disclosure requirements on a nonprofit or any other organization.
Finally, as the Commission wrestled with the larger question of how it should administer the statutory disclosure requirements in the case of organizations that Congress did not anticipate would be funding electioneering communications in the first place, Elias urged the Commission to be guided by the approach that the BCRA is "a disclosure statute." AR 599. He cautioned the Commission to address only section 203 issues, not issues related to section 201 disclosures. AR 599-600. Even James Bopp, who was the most vocal member of the panel on behalf of grassroots advocacy organizations and who warned against adopting an approach that would chill their lobbying and issue advocacy, conceded that no change to the disclosure requirements was required by the WRTL II decision. AR 626. Instead, Bopp's position was limited to advocating for Alternative 2, which would exclude WRTL II communications from the definition of electioneering communications all together. AR 601-04.
Gold emphasized that the line of prohibition in the statute defined the line of disclosure, and he pressed for an approach along the lines of Alternative 2 that would narrowly define "electioneering communication" rather than a new regulation addressing the prohibition or the related disclosure rules directly. AR 641. In the event the agency took a different approach, Gold observed that the Commission was faced with a situation that had not been contemplated by Congress: "unions and corporations would never be in a position to have to report electioneering communications because they were simply banned from doing so." Id. Gold also testified that the words "contribute" or "donate" connote a voluntary transfer without consideration, so under the terms of the statute, "such income [as] receipts, dues, investment income, damages awards and other commercial income and the like ought not to be subject to disclosure." AR 645. He explained that taking a broader approach would impose "a tremendous burden on unions in particular. The obligation to report income at the $1,000 level would be remarkable in comparison to a regulatory requirement ... which requires unions to disclose all receipts at the $5,000 threshold." AR 646 (referring to the $5,000 threshold for disclosure under the long-standing Labor Management Report and Disclosure Act).
Simon urged the FEC to leave the disclosure requirement for electioneering communications untouched.
AR 649-651. Simon was asked whether the FEC could choose its first alternative and adopt language that would exempt business income and membership dues
The Commissioners turned back to the union representative to ask if there were some way to exempt membership dues while still exposing those hiding behind vague monikers. The witness did not express a need for further regulation in the union context since he opined that dues would fall outside of the disclosure provisions as they were already written. "[T]he main point is that the statute talks in terms of `contributing contributions' and you have interpreted it to mean `donating donations.' Union dues are neither. Plainly they are neither." AR 659-60. But Gold did caution that an organization should not be required to reveal its members simply because it had engaged in a single electioneering communication:
AR 660-61.
The Chairman of the Commission observed that when WRTL II identified a new group of communications that could not be prohibited, it necessarily drew a broader group of entities into the regulatory regime, and then the panel went on to discuss with how it should define the class of communications that were protected. AR 665-721.
The third panel on October 17, 2007 consisted of Jessica Robinson of the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees and Paul Ryan from the Campaign Legal Center. AR 721-790. Robinson's remarks were directed to the need for a broad, clearly delineated safe harbor for permissible issue advocacy. She recommended that the Commission adopt Alternative 2, which would limit disclosure obligations by limiting the set of communications to which they would pertain. AR 721-26. She did say, though, that if the agency adopted Alternative 1, instead, it should simplify the disclosure requirements. She feared that the regulatory requirement to disclose "donations" could be applied to dues and therefore difficult to enforce and she concluded, "[t]he easiest way to address these issues is to require reporting only for those people who earmark funds to be used for WRTL II type communications and other funds should be reported just as a donation of the labor union." AR 727.
Ryan pointed out that while there were several commenters who proposed exempting WRTL II ads from the BCRA disclosure requirements, there was a large group of commenters, who came from
The panel then talked a great deal about the scope of any safe harbor and where the Supreme Court had drawn the line on permissible expenditures for issue ads, before it turned again to the disclosure issue. One Commissioner asked whether there would be any union members whose dues would exceed $1,000 per year, and the answer was yes, although no numbers were provided. AR 766-67. The Commissioner also posed questions about how to exempt legitimate dues from disclosure requirements without creating a loophole whereby an anonymous advocacy organization could simply structure itself to charge exorbitant "dues" and thereby shield the names of a limited set of individual donors. Robinson responded, "I suppose one thing you would look at is donative intent.... Union dues, they are not donations because they are required for union membership. So one of the ways you would look at it is you would look at the intent of the members of [the group]. Are they doing it so the organization can pay for electioneering communications?" AR 768-69. The specter of probing a contributor's intent prompted this comment by the Vice Chairman: "It's one of those things that we would have to get into discovery for and that would be a bad thing." AR 769. Robinson agreed, id., and the panel resumed its discussion about the content of WRTL II ads.
On October 18, 2007, the Commission heard from Brian Svoboda on behalf of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, Jeremiah Morgan of William J. Olson, P.C., representing the Free Speech Coalition and Free Speech Defense and Education Fund, and Michael Trister for the Alliance for Justice. AR 797-899. Morgan took a strong stance against imposing disclosure requirements on entities sponsoring issue ads, and he argued that neither of the alternatives in the Notice would comport with the First Amendment. AR 798-805. Svoboda encouraged the Commission to proceed narrowly and to do little more than what WRTL II required, particularly in the disclosure arena, which was not addressed in the opinion at all and might require a different legal standard and method of legal review. AR 805-09. He maintained that this approach would reflect "fidelity to what it was that Congress passed," AR 806, but in his remarks, Trister countered that the existing reporting requirements were not written for corporations or labor unions, so it would be impossible for the Commission to divine how Congress would have decided the question. Under those circumstances, he counseled the agency to adopt Alternative 2, excluding WRTL II communications from the definition of electioneering communications, and to leave the question of what reporting requirements should apply to the funding of this new particular category of speech up to the legislature. AR 812-16.
After the panelists discussed the safe harbor issue in depth, a Commissioner asked:
AR 833-34.
Svoboda posited that Congress provided for the segregated account as one possible option for organizations that wanted to limit disclosure by disclosing only those who donated to the segregated account. AR 834-37. Trister suggested that the agency could call for the information that 501(c) organizations are already required to supply to the IRS. But he expressed the view that there should be a distinction between a general support grant, which an organization can use for any purpose, and an earmarked or special project grant, and he noted that general support grants, even if reportable to the IRS, should not be included within the FEC definition of donation. "If they gave it whenever they gave it and said, `Here's $1,000 and I want you to run an ad,' then they ought to report that. But if they give them $1,000 and say, `here's $1,000. I like your organization. Keep up the good work,' which is essentially a general support grant, then it is unfair and it [is] misleading to the public to suggest that person was connected to the ad in some way, that they paid for the ad." AR 839-40. Trister also noted that Congress had distinguished between earmarked and non-earmarked funds in other reporting contexts. AR 840.
Svoboda generally agreed with Trister as to unions, but he thought that an intent-based distinction would be problematic in the case of those non-profit organizations created for the primary purpose of running electioneering communications. He cautioned that such an approach would create an enormous hole in the statutory requirement, leaving both the public, and a candidate who might wish to respond to an attack, in the dark about who had sponsored an advertisement at a critical time close to an actual election. AR 842-44. In response to a question by a Commissioner concerned about potential threats to those who might criticize an incumbent officeholder, Svoboda further explained that the identity of the speaker, and not simply the content of the speech, could play an important role in determining the nature of the response. AR 850-52. Trister took the position that Svoboda's concerns were overstated, because such organizations would likely be required to disclose under the regulations for registered political committees anyway. AR 845.
The panel was then occupied by an extended legal discussion on the question of whether the justifications for campaign finance regulation set forth in the Supreme Court's opinion in Buckley v. Valeo would apply to WRTL II ads and what Chief Justice Roberts meant on page 2672 of the WRTL II opinion when he questioned whether issue ads that are not the functional equivalent of express advocacy raise the sort of corruption concern identified in Buckley as reason for campaign finance regulation. And Commissioner von Sakovsky asked, if WRTL II ads were not electoral activities, how did the FEC have any
The final panel consisted of Stephen Hoersting of the Center for Competitive Politics; John Sullivan of the Service Employees International Union; Heidi Abegg, on behalf of the American Taxpayers Alliance and Americans for Limited Government, and Michael Boos of Citizens United. AR 900; 902. Abegg urged the Commissioners to think about those 501(c)(4) organizations that may express unpopular opinions and generate strong adverse reactions from both the government and the public. She took the position that disclosure requirements would raise privacy concerns and pose a risk of harassment and reprisals. She spoke of a longstanding tradition of anonymous public speech, and said that there would be no compelling governmental interest that would support disclosure regulations in the case of communications that are not express advocacy or its functional equivalent. Ultimately, Abegg urged the adoption of Alternative 2, which would have the effect of eliminating disclosure requirements for WRTL II communications. AR 902-08.
Boos of Citizens United also noted that Alternative 1 did not solve the problems related to those communications because it would leave the "burdensome" disclosure scheme that applies to electioneering communications intact. But Boos failed to elaborate on how disclosure was burdensome. AR 910. He took the position that the FEC should adopt Alternative 2 instead since it would exempt the ads in question — not only the WRTL II grassroots ads, but also Citizens United's advertisements promoting the books and documentary films it produces — from the regulatory scheme altogether. Finally, he called for a broader safe harbor in Alternative 2. AR 908-14.
Stephen Hoersting agreed with the notion that "it would be absurd to have organizations Congress never intended to run ECs all of a sudden have to start reporting their electioneering communications," but he cautioned: "it would be untenable for the Commission to invoke its administrative authority to stay application of Section 201, a facially valid provision, without some organization asserting the application of 201 violates the rights of speech and association. It would be unseemly for that question to be litigated in the posture of an agency defending its administrative prerogatives ... with no factual background of a speaker who is actually chilled." AR 915. See also AR 927-28. He concluded: "The Commission should therefore hold its nose and apply Section 201 to issue advocates.... The word `contributes' ... should guide the Commission in crafting disclosure requirements even if disclosure comes down harder on nonprofit organizations whose ads are funded by contributors than it would for for-profit corporations." AR 916.
The union witness explained that the SEIU, AFL, NEA, and AFSCME were all very active in the area of issue advocacy, spending considerable resources on federal
AR 923-24.
There was then considerable discussion by the panel about the extent of the safe harbor provisions in the regulations under consideration and the manner in which the agency could and should implement the WRTL II imperative to define the functional equivalent of express advocacy. AR 925-65. In response to a question from one of the Commissioners returning to the disclosure issue, Stephen Hoersting suggested that the Commission could probably draw an inference from Congress's rejection of amendments to the Honest Leadership Open Government Act that would have required the disclosure of donors to grassroots lobbying organizations that Congress did not intend that the FECA disclosure rules would apply to grassroots issue advertisements. AR 964-65. Boos, from Citizens United, stressed the fact that if the agency were to define electioneering communication to exempt certain ads, then those ads would be free of any the disclosure and reporting requirements as well. AR 967.
At the close of the hearing, the Vice Chairman asked Abegg to provide more information in support of her claim that disclosure could pose some threat to potential donors. AR 968. The witness reiterated that disclosure requirements might chill political speech, but she presented the Commission with no specifics:
AR 969-70. Abegg went on:
AR 970. She maintained that "[i]t is a very real concern" that could stop the flow of donations, and Hoersting echoed that sentiment. He indicated that he had been involved in conversations where "people stopped their activities because they heard about this disclosure aspect," but his testimony on that point was similarly vague. AR 971.
AR 971. Sullivan from SEIU reminded the Commission of the need to protect the
A month later, on November 16, 2007, the General Counsel to the Commission transmitted a Memorandum to the Commission which set forth two proposed draft final rules for the implementation of a WRTL II exemption. AR 1001-12. Draft A simply created an exemption from the definition of "electioneering communication." AR 1002-04. But Draft B included changes to the electioneering communications reporting requirements in 11 CFR § 104.20, adding the language at issue in this case. AR 1006. The agency received only one letter responding to the change in the reporting requirements, and in it, J. Gerald Hebert and Paul S. Ryan of the Campaign Legal Center expressed their strong objection. AR 1024-26 ("We believe it would be a mistake of historic proportions for the Commission to go beyond the text of the controlling opinion in WRTL.").
Based upon this review of the entire record and the hearing transcript, the Court cannot conclude that the FEC "examine[d] the relevant data and articulate[d] a satisfactory explanation for its action including a `rational connection between the facts found and the choice made.'" See State Farm, 463 U.S. at 43, 103 S.Ct. 2856, quoting Burlington Truck Lines v. United States, 371 U.S. 156, 168, 83 S.Ct. 239, 9 L.Ed.2d 207 (1962). It is hard to put one's finger upon any data that prompted the particular rule in question, or the specific material in the transcript that supports the agency's statement in the Explanation and Justification that "witnesses at the Commission's hearing testified that the effort necessary to identify those persons who provided funds totaling $1,000 or more to a corporation or labor organization would be very costly and require an inordinate amount of effort." 72 Fed.Reg. at 72911. There was no testimony about how many organizations now covered by the regulatory regime would be affected by the burdens involved with compliance, what those burdens would actually entail, and what the costs would be.
The witnesses appeared to generally agree that neither the statute nor the existing regulations defining "contributors" as "donors" would call for the disclosure of the names of a for-profit corporation's commercial customers and investors, or names of all labor union members, since none of those individuals could fairly be characterized as "donors." Thus, the concerns that were expressed related largely to non-profit advocacy groups. In the Explanation and Justification that accompanied the final rule, the agency stated that a non-profit corporation's coffers would include "donations from persons who support the corporation's mission," but that those "donors do not necessarily support the corporation's electioneering communications." 72 Fed.Reg. at 72911. But no testimony indicated how many non-profit organizations, if any, collected contributions
It is true that at the second step of the Chevron analysis, the reviewing court is required to accord appropriate weight to an agency's interpretation of a statutory scheme that falls within its bailiwick. 467 U.S. at 844, 104 S.Ct. 2778. But an agency's interpretation of an ambiguous statutory provision must still be reasonable "in light of the language, legislative history, and policies of the statute." Shays v. FEC, 337 F.Supp.2d 28, 78 (D.D.C.2004), aff'd 414 F.3d 76 (D.C.Cir. 2005) ("Shays I"), quoting Republican National Committee v. FEC, 76 F.3d 400, 406 (D.C.Cir.1996). Moreover, in Shays III, the Court of Appeals declared: "[i]n applying Chevron's second step and the APA, we must reject administrative constructions of a statute that frustrate the policy that Congress sought to implement." 528 F.3d at 918 (internal quotations and edits omitted). In light of those precedents, the FEC's decision to take it upon itself to "limit" the statutory disclosure requirements cannot be sustained, and for those reasons, in addition to those set forth above, the Court does not find section 104.20(c)(9) to be a reasonable interpretation of the BCRA.
First, looking at the language of the statute, section 30104(f)(1) imposes its disclosure requirements on "[e]very person who makes a disbursement for the direct costs of producing and airing electioneering communications in an aggregate amount in excess of $10,000 during any calendar year." 52 U.S.C. § 30104(f)(1). The BCRA defines "person" to include corporations and labor unions, 52 U.S.C. § 30101(11), and as the FEC acknowledged in its pleadings before this Court, even before WRTL II, the disclosure rules applied to some corporations, in particular, the non-profit corporations described in FEC v. Massachusetts Citizens for Life, Inc., 479 U.S. 238, 107 S.Ct. 616, 93 L.Ed.2d 539 (1986). See Def.'s Mem. [Dkt. #24] at 6. And section 30104(f)(2) requires disclosure of "the names and addresses of all contributors who contributed an aggregate amount of $1,000 or more," 52 U.S.C. § 30104(f)(2)(E)-(F) (emphasis added), with no limitation other than the threshold amount.
It is true that the Court of Appeals has already stated that the words "contributors" and "contributed" can, on their face, be construed to include a purpose requirement. Ctr. for Individual Freedom v. Van Hollen, 694 F.3d at 111. But an interpretation that narrows the application of the reporting provision would be inconsistent with the policies underlying the statute. There can be no dispute that the concept of disclosure and transparency is fundamental to the BCRA. As the Court set out in some detail in its prior opinion, the legislative history of the BCRA makes it clear that the purpose behind the disclosure requirements was to enable voters to be informed about who was trying to influence their decisions. 147 Cong. Rec. S302205, 53034 (Mar. 28, 2001) (statement
Therefore, it was contrary to the policy goal that Congress intended to implement for the Commission to add limiting language to its regulations when the aim of that language was — as the FEC put it — "to ensure that disclosure of the newly-permitted electioneering communications would be narrowly tailored...." Def.'s Mem. at 10. Congress did not call for narrow tailoring; it called for just the opposite.
And the new rule serves to frustrate the aim of the statute because the introduction of a subjective test to the reporting regime creates an exception that has the potential to swallow the rule entirely. A donor can avoid reporting altogether by transmitting funds but remaining silent about their intended use.
Moreover, the decision to reduce disclosure and transparency was not justified or necessitated by the reasons the agency identified when the final rule was promulgated. The Commission posited that the donative purpose limitation was needed because the general treasury of a corporation or labor organization is likely to contain funds derived from individuals who do not necessarily support the entity's electioneering communications, and that therefore, disclosing the identity of those payors would not advance the goals underlying the reporting requirements. 72 Fed.Reg. at 72911. But the same rationale applies equally to partnerships, unincorporated entities, and any other "persons," and Congress determined that they would all be bound by the disclosure requirements anyway. See also Citizens United, 558 U.S. at 351, 130 S.Ct. 876 ("All speakers, including individuals and the media, use money amassed from the economic marketplace to fund their speech."). And, prior to WRTL II, the disclosure provisions already applied to some corporations — the MCFL organizations — which, like other non-profits, pursue a broad range of educational and advocacy activities beyond the mere funding of electioneering communications. Furthermore, the agency's statement that it would be too burdensome to require organizations to identify all "persons who provided funds," see 72 Fed.Reg. at 72911, is inconsistent not only with the statute, but with the agency's own regulations, because that is not who had to be identified under the existing regime in the first place. FEC regulations implementing the BCRA reporting provisions require the disclosure of "the name and address of each donor who donated an amount aggregating $1,000 or more," 11 CFR § 104.20(c)(8) (emphasis added), not "persons who provided funds." The Commission failed to articulate why a for-profit corporation's customers and investors, or a labor union's members — all of whom transfer funds in return for some consideration in the form of goods or services or an ownership interest — would not be fully protected by the regulation's limiting reporting requirements to "donors," or why further elaboration on that term — rather than the interposition of an intent limitation that could eviscerate the reporting
Since nothing about the WRTL II decision altered the operation of those regulations, it was unreasonable to add an intent requirement that limited disclosure obligations for the supposed purpose of implementing the changes brought about by WRTL II. Indeed, the Commission explicitly acknowledged in the Explanation and Justification for the rule that WRTL II did not authorize it to eliminate the reporting requirements. See 72 Fed.Reg. at 72901 ("Thus, because McConnell has upheld the definition of ECs, as well as the reporting and disclaimer requirements, as facially valid, and because WRTL II did not address these provisions, the Commission has no mandate to revise the underlying definition of `electioneering communication' or remove the reporting and disclaimer requirements.")
Finally, the regulation cannot be supported on the grounds that the Commission fairly balanced the need for disclosure against sensitive First Amendment and privacy concerns. See Def.'s Mem. at 33-36; CIF Supplemental Mem. [Dkt. #93] at 5-7. This was not a justification advanced in the Explanation and Justification, and more important, those arguments have been foreclosed by the Supreme Court. In Citizens United, the Court clearly found that the disclosure requirements in the BCRA — even those that apply to ads that are not express advocacy or its functional equivalent — do not impinge upon constitutional rights, see Citizens United, 558 U.S. at 367-69, 130 S.Ct. 876. See also Independence Institute v. FEC, Civ. Action No. 14-1500 (CKK), 70 F.Supp.3d 502, 2014 WL 4959403 (D.D.C. Oct. 6, 2014); Def.'s Opp. at 7 (noting that in McConnell, the Supreme Court "upheld the electioneering communication disclosure requirements, noting that they did not suppress speech and that important state interests support the requirements"). Moreover, the record evidence on the need to address privacy concerns was extremely thin; the fact that some contributors "just don't want their names known" does not provide grounds to override a clear Congressional choice in favor of transparency. AR 970.
For the reasons above, the Court finds that 11 C.F.R. § 104.20(c)(9) is unreasonable and therefore fails under the second step of the Chevron test, and that it is arbitrary, capricious, and contrary to law in violation of the APA. As a result, the Court will enter judgment in favor of plaintiff, and it will vacate 11 C.F.R. § 104.20(c)(9). A separate order will issue.
Section 104.207(c)(7)-(8) of FEC's implementing regulations generally tracks the language of section 30104(f)(2)(E)-(F), except that it substitutes the words "donor" and "donated" for "contributor" and "contributed." It calls for the following disclosures:
11 C.F.R. § 104.20(c)(7)(i), (c)(8) (2014).
540 U.S. at 196, 124 S.Ct. 619 (footnote omitted).