About Colorado Ethics Watch

Colorado Ethics Watch uses high impact legal actions to hold public officials and organizations accountable for unethical activities that undermine the integrity of state and local government.
Sign up for Email Alerts



image Ethics Watch Tipline
image
image
“The fact that they only gave money when he was doing these final rules, that more than ever really raises flags. There’s something fishy going on.”
Rep. Mark Ferrandino, commenting on campaign contributions from payday lending companies to Attorney General John Suthers as Suthers writes regulations to implement a new payday lending law, as reported in the Grand Junction Daily Sentinel, August 13, 2010

Ethics Watch Supports Proposed New Campaign Expenditure Disclosure Rule

Bernie Buescher
February 5, 2010

Today, Ethics Watch submitted to Secretary of State Bernie Buescher comments in support of a proposed campaign finance rule that would require campaigns to provide detailed disclosures of expenditures that were paid for by the candidate, third parties or by credit card and later reimbursed by the campaign. Secretary Buescher's proposed rule would end the practice of reporting only the reimbursement or credit card payment and not the underlying expenditure that was being reimbursed. If adopted, the new rule will increase transparency of campaign spending.

The new Rule 4.25 would require committees to report the underlying expenditures paid for by a candidate or third person or through the use of a credit card. The rule would codify the Secretary of State’s office’s long-standing advice to committees to report expenditures in as much detail as possible.

In 2009, Ethics Watch observed that several candidate committees, from both parties, reported large reimbursements or credit card payments but provided no detail regarding the expenses that were being reimbursed or paid for through credit cards. Ethics Watch is submitting to the Secretary of State several examples of such reports filed by several candidate committees. These vague disclosures defeat the purpose of requiring campaigns to report expenditures. The proposed Rule will end the practice of reporting only the reimbursement payment and not the underlying expenditure, and will improve transparency of campaign spending.

The Secretary of State's Rulemaking Notice and Ethics Watch's comments can be viewed on the right hand side of this page.



image


Colorado Ethics Watch is a project of
image
© 2010, Ethics Watch, All Rights Reserved.
1630 Welton Street, Suite 415, Denver, CO 80202 • Contact Us
image

image