The link below takes you to a story which discusses the innovative way the current chair of the FEC is using to bring issues to the commission.
- Click here for it.
On a Thursday morning in June, the six commissioners of the Federal Election Commission—three Republican appointees, three Democratic appointees—convened at their headquarters in downtown Washington for their monthly open meeting. On the agenda was a provocative item: The group’s Democratic chairwoman, Ann Ravel, and one of her Democratic colleagues, Ellen Weintraub, had filed a petition with their own commission—as if they were ordinary citizens rather than two of the six people who actually run the place. The petition urged the FEC to beef up disclosure of anonymous campaign spending and to crack down on the increasingly commonplace practice of coordination between candidates and supposedly independent super PACs.
It was a highly unorthodox move—and that was precisely the point. “People will say: ‘You’re the chair of the commission. You should work from within.’ I tried,” Ravel told CNN at the time. “We needed to take more creative avenues to try and get public disclosure.”
Now the six commissioners had before them a technical question: not whether to act on the petition—which was unlikely to happen, given their 3-3 divide on major questions and the substantial partisan enmity among them—but merely whether to publish the text of the petition in the Federal Register. This formality set off what was surely one of the most bizarre exchanges in FEC history. In the view of Matthew Petersen, one of the three Republican commissioners, because Ravel and Weintraub were sitting commissioners neither qualified as a “person” eligible to petition the FEC.
For more on the FEC, click on these below:
- The FEC homepage.
- Wikipedia: FEC.
- Wikipedia: Regulatory Capture.
- NYT: F.E.C. Can’t Curb 2016 Election Abuse, Commission Chief Says.
- The Atlantic: Another Massive Problem With U.S. Democracy: The FEC Is Broken.
- CPI: Gridlocked elections watchdog goes two years without top lawyer.