Dangerous Liaisons
Planning to use the resources of your business to support your favorite candidate? Be careful not to cross the line.
The New York car dealer knew corporations were prohibited from
contributing to federal election campaigns, but he wanted to do all
he could to see his congressman reelected. Knowing individuals may
contribute up to $1,000 per candidate, he and the congressman
hatched a plan. The car dealer gave $2,000 "bonuses" to
29 current and former employees, telling them to deposit the money
in their personal bank accounts. Then each employee and his or her
spouse each wrote a check for $1,000 to the congressman's
campaign. Suddenly, the campaign was flooded with $1,000 checks
from secretaries and mechanics who'd never before donated a
dime. The opposition got wind of it, uncovered the scheme, and
started running ads charging the congressman with illegal campaign
practices. In the end, the scheme cost the congressman the
election, and the car dealer had to answer for it in court.
When you care strongly about a candidate or a ballot issue, you
may want to invest your own resources and those of your business in
hopes of influencing the election. Isn't that what democracy is
all about? Well, yes, but federal and state election laws designed
to prevent influence-peddling place strict limits on what any given
individual or business can do. Make sure you understand both the
federal and state laws that apply to elections so you don't
inadvertently cross the line.
Steven C. Bahls, dean of Capital University Law School in
Columbus, Ohio, teaches entrepreneurship law. Freelance writer Jane
Easter Bahls specializes in business and legal topics.
Content Continues Below
Page 1 |
2 |
3 |
4