Author Topic: In complaint, Ted Cruz says Democrats broke campaign finance laws to help Colin Allred  (Read 365 times)

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Offline libertybele

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In complaint, Ted Cruz says Democrats broke campaign finance laws to help Colin Allred

Sen. Ted Cruz accused national Democrats on Thursday of illegally exceeding contribution limits to his opponent U.S. Rep. Colin Allred’s campaign.

But Democrats say they’re simply doing what Republicans have been doing in their ads.

Cruz alleged that the Democratic Senate Campaign Committee (DSCC) illegally spent more than $10 million for television ads in Texas benefiting Allred. The Federal Election Commission (FEC) allows national party groups to spend roughly $2.8 million in coordination with Senate candidates in Texas, an amount based on the state’s voting population. Party groups prefer doing ads in coordination with candidates because candidates enjoy cheaper rates than outside spending groups.

National party groups can exceed the coordinated spending limit through “hybrid ads,” which must devote half of the time of each ad for “generically referenced candidates.” Just what that entails has been a source of contention within the FEC and the basis of Cruz’s complaint.

Cruz’s complaint focuses on four ads by the Allred campaign and the DSCC. One of the ads dedicates roughly half of its time to abortion, featuring Kate Cox, a Texas woman who had to leave the state to terminate her nonviable pregnancy. Cruz asserts that the ad does not include any references to “generically referenced candidates” and therefore does not follow FEC guidance. The other ads include references to Cruz “and extremists” featuring images of Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, but Cruz asserts that is not enough to constitute an attack on “generically referenced candidates.”

But in a recent ruling, the FEC failed to determine whether similar cases violated the law. In an Oct. 10 ruling on a complaint by Democrats, the FEC deadlocked on whether references to “greedy politicians” or former President Donald Trump constitute “a reference to generic candidates of the Republican Party, allocable as party advocacy.”

A deadlock effectively allows candidates to continue as they had prior to the ruling.

The recent FEC ruling was in response to a complaint by the DSCC over Republicans' frequent use of hybrid ads to get lower rates...

https://www.texastribune.org/2024/10/25/ted-cruz-colin-allred-texas-senate-ethics-complaint/

Offline Hoodat

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Sometime in early 2026, the FEC will issue a ruling on this.
If a political party does not have its foundation in the determination to advance a cause that is right and that is moral, then it is not a political party; it is merely a conspiracy to seize power.     -Dwight Eisenhower-

"The [U.S.] Constitution is a limitation on the government, not on private individuals ... it does not prescribe the conduct of private individuals, only the conduct of the government ... it is not a charter for government power, but a charter of the citizen's protection against the government."     -Ayn Rand-

Online cato potatoe

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Based on early turnout, and what we know about the political climate in the sunbelt, I’ll be surprised if Ted does not win easily.