J6 Obsessive Dismisses a Presidential Assassination Attempt; Maine's Platner Is Now a Demo...
Humans. Americans. Let Everyone Be Treated Equally.
Detransitioner Asks IBM Shareholders to Stop Funding Trans Surgeries for Minors
Future GOP Presidential Nominees Must Endure Severe Storms
What About Earth’s Threatened and Endangered People?
You Are on Your Own in America's Progressive Cities
Biden’s Ill-Advised Rule Against Critical Minerals Mining Is Finally Gone
Socialist Cognitive Dissonance: Our Revolution Endorses Billionaire Tom Steyer for Califor...
The Social Media Age Is Over, but America Can Still Lead on Tech
Has Iran’s Ceasefire Become a Green Light for Repression?
Desperate Families Here and Abroad Show They Need Government Support, Not Resistance
Fake Iranian Opposition – Wolves in Different Wolves' Clothes
Wait, the Biden Administration Did What to Christians?
Trump Says the U.S. Will Be Taking Over Cuba 'Almost Immediately'
Feds Seize $2M From Pasadena Wound Clinic Accused of Defrauding Medicare for Fake...
OPINION

Nonprofit 'Disclosure' Requirements Are an Assault on the First Amendment

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Nonprofit 'Disclosure' Requirements Are an Assault on the First Amendment
AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli, File

California Attorney General Xavier Becerra says he wants to prevent charitable fraud, while the House Democrats who approved the "For the People Act" last week say they want to fortify democracy, fight corruption and block foreign interference in U.S. elections. But the methods they have chosen pose a serious threat to freedom of speech and freedom of association.

Advertisement

Under a policy at the center of a First Amendment case the Supreme Court will hear this term, Becerra requires that all 115,000 nonprofit organizations operating in California report information about their major donors. That information is supposed to be confidential, but in practice it is not, because California has a history of accidentally posting it online and making it easily available to anyone with rudimentary hacking skills.

In a 1958 case involving Alabama's demand that the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People disclose its membership lists, the Supreme Court recognized that such requirements can have a chilling effect on freedom of association, because they expose supporters of controversial groups to harassment and threats of violence. When the government compels disclosure of organizational information that may result in "reprisals against and hostility to the members," the Court has said, it must show that the policy is "substantially related" to a "compelling" government interest and "narrowly tailored" for that purpose.

Becerra's blanket demand for the names and addresses of nonprofit donors plainly fails that test, since he can always seek such information from an organization that is actually suspected of fraud. The challenge to his overreaching nosiness has attracted support from a broad coalition of civil liberties groups and nonprofits representing all sorts of causes and political preferences.

Advertisement

Related:

LEFTISM

Unlike Becerra, the legislators who supported the For the People Act are not even pretending to keep the information required by the bill confidential. To the contrary, they aim to force public disclosure of donor information through a sweeping definition of "election-related" speech.

The 791-page bill, which passed the House by a party-line vote of 220 to 210, expands the definition of "electioneering communications" to include "any communication which is placed or promoted for a fee on an online platform" and mentions a federal officeholder or candidate within 30 days of a primary or 60 days of a general election. It also expands the category of federally regulated "public communications" to cover any "paid internet or paid digital communication," which apparently would include organizational websites and staff-written social media posts.

So-called electioneering communications need not target a politician's constituents or advocate his election or defeat. They would nevertheless have to reveal the organization's top donors, whether or not they sponsored the message or approved of its content.

The bill also would require that nonprofits file publicly accessible reports of vaguely defined "campaign-related disbursements," including donor information, with the Federal Election Commission. The reports would declare support of or opposition to particular candidates, even when the organizations have taken no such stand.

For example, says Institute for Free Speech Senior Fellow Eric Wang, "left-leaning organizations calling on President Biden to adopt a more left-leaning agenda could be required to affirmatively and publicly declare to the FEC that their ads 'oppose' Biden," even when that is not actually true. The bill also requires a "public file" of expenditures for online ads related to any "national legislative issue of public importance," which Wang warns may expose "organizers of contentious but important political causes like 'Black Lives Matter'" to "harassment by opponents or hostile government officials."

Advertisement

Such requirements are bound to make advocacy groups, especially small ones, think twice before speaking out on the issues that motivate them and discourage donors from supporting them. But that seems to be the point.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., thinks "it's good to have a deterrent effect" when "somebody is trying to influence government for their purposes." Call that policy what you like, but it assuredly is not "for the people."

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement