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Pedestrians walk past the numerous campaign signs lined along Middlefield at Loma Verde Avenue as Election Day nears in 2018. Photo by Veronica Weber.

Everyone agrees that there’s too much money in Palo Alto politics, even those who benefit the most from this trend.

Vice Mayor Lydia Kou, who raised more than $70,000 in her successful reelection bid in 2020, said she had some concerns as she watched donations pile up over the course of the campaign, which received dozens of small individual contributions as well a handful of large four-figure donations. This includes a pair of $5,000 contributions from venture capitalist G. Leonard Baker and Mary Anne Baker, local residents who have given prolifically in the last three elections to residents affiliated with the council’s slow-growth wing.

“I was having a hard time with how high it was going,” Kou said in a recent interview.

Even with the high totals, Kou finished the race for cash well behind Greg Tanaka, who raised nearly $90,000 in his successful bid for a second term. A council member who favors pro-growth policies, he saw local developers pump tens of thousands of dollars into his campaign, with Roxy Rapp donating $10,000 and Charles Keenan, John McNellis and John Shenk contributing $5,000 each.

Like Kou, Tanaka told this news organization that the influence of money on politics is problematic.

“At every level of government, I think it’s a problem,” said Tanaka, who is currently looking to unseat the U.S. Rep Anna Eshoo in District 16. “That’s how someone could be in office for 30 years — because it’s almost impossible to beat an incumbent like that.”

Now, a movement is afoot to curb campaign cash. A new proposal from the local chapter of the League of Women Voters and Clean Money Campaign would limit individual contributions to Palo Alto campaigns to $500.

The League of Women Voters last year formed a task force that developed the proposal and reached out to council members to share their ideas. This week, they presented to the council a petition with more than 500 signatures supporting the reform.

Lisa Ratner, who served on the League of Women Voters task force dedicated to the subject, told the council on Monday that large donations “undermine the integrity of our local government by creating perception, real or imagined, that City Council votes are influenced more by the size of the contributions than by the interests of those living in the city.”

In a recent interview, members of the League’s task force said that they had initially floated three proposals: setting donation limits, capping total campaign expenditures and increasing disclosure of independent expenditures. After the latter two proposed reforms failed to gain traction, the League narrowed its focus to just the first.

Both the rising cost of running elections in Palo Alto and the growing percentage of donations coming from major donors are concerning, the task force members said. A study from the technology nonprofit MapLight found that between 2014 and 2018, the average amount raised by a winning council member rose 57%, going from $40,000 to $63,000. About one-third of the cash raised by all the candidates came from just 25 contributors, while small donors (those who gave less than $100) accounted for only 3% of the funding.

An analysis by League of Women Voters members of the 2020 election showed similar trends, with the 10 candidates in the race raising a total $439,532 and the average individual winning candidates raising $66,620. In addition, just 20 donors accounted for 29% of all itemized contributions, according to a report that the organization released.

The funds raised represent a significant escalation from past elections, Ratner told this news organization. In 2012 and before, a winning candidate typically raised around $25,000, she said.

“That just seemed to be completely out of line, in terms of the number of people who need to be contacted when you’re running,” Ratner said. “And it’s also discouraging to the people who don’t have the ability to raise that kind of money.”

The idea of capping individual contributions or campaign expenditures is far from new. Council members in Mountain View have long abided by a voluntary pledge to limit their expenses to about $25,000 (it was $27,400 in the 2020 election). The city also has a $1,000 cap on individual contributions ($500 for candidates who opt not to adopt voluntary expenditure limits).

Hayward has a voluntary expenditure limit of $79,303 and individual donation limits of $1,000 for those who abide by this limit or $250 for those who do not. In Redwood City, the donation limit is $1,000 and the voluntary expenditure limit is $2.25 per district resident.

In Palo Alto, however, the proposal to limit contributions is proving to be a tough sell. Local politics in recent elections has, with some exceptions, been dominated by slates. One side has typically drawn contributions from builders and developers. The other has benefitted from giant contributions from five local families as well as from independent expenditures by Palo Altans for Sensible Zoning, a political action committee that favors “residentialist” candidates.

The problem of independent expenditures

Voter Dave Vort at a polling booth at the Rinconada Library in Palo Alto on Nov. 3, 2020. Photo by Olivia Treynor.

And while candidates from both sides have said they are concerned about the high sums of campaign cash, they also argued that capping contributions and setting an expenditure limit would leave open giant loopholes that the opposite side would exploit.

One problem that candidates from both sides pointed to is “dark money” that is spent by political action committees to support certain candidates. Thanks to the controversial 2010 decision by the Supreme Court in Citizens United vs. FEC, corporations and outside groups can spend as much as they want to on elections as long as they don’t coordinate with the campaigns they are supporting.

Judy Kleinberg, a former mayor who is supporting the effort to cap contributions, said the rise of independent expenditures and political action committees has transformed local politics. When she ran for council in 1999 and in 2004, she limited her campaign spending to $20,000. Even accounting for the growing costs of waging a campaign, the numbers today are on a different scale.

“That’s a huge, seismic, tectonic change in Palo Alto politics,” Kleinberg told this news organization. “They have influenced a lot of candidates who were not supported by the PAC to get more money — to fight against the PACs who had seemingly unlimited amounts of money and could do what they wanted.”

Kleinberg is part of a group of former mayors that is supporting the proposal for a contribution cap. The list also includes Betsy Bechtel, Peter Drekmeier, Liz Kniss, Le Levy, Dena Mossar, Nancy Shepherd, Lanie Wheeler and Gail Woolley.

Wary of unintended consequences

Amy McCarter places her ballot in the voting machine at the vote center at Palo Alto Art Center in Palo Alto on Nov. 3, 2020. Photo by Magali Gauthier.

Current Mayor Pat Burt is a bit more skeptical. While he supports exploring campaign finance reforms, he said he is concerned that limiting individual contributions would encourage more contributions of the sort that the city cannot legally limit, namely independent expenditures.

In discussing campaign finance reform, Burt alluded to the H.L. Mencken adage about every complex problem having a solution that is “clear, simple and wrong.”

“There’s clearly a problem, both generally and in Palo Alto, increasingly, in our campaigning,” Burt said. “But as you think through what happens if you do just one thing, it gets a lot more complicated.”

As an example of what can go wrong, he pointed to the city of Santa Clara, where San Francisco 49ers owner Jed York contributed $3 million in 2020 to help four city council members get elected. While that case is a bit of an anomaly in the Bay Area, Burt suggested that something similar could happen in Palo Alto if giant corporations wanted to elect a slate of candidates who oppose initiatives like the business tax, which the council is planning to bring to the voters this fall.

Residents bound by contribution limits would have a hard time counteracting the independent expenditures made by these corporations through political action committees.

Despite his reservations about the particular approach championed by the task force, Burt said he’s open to exploring a cap on expenditures as part of a broader set of measures. The Mountain View approach, he noted, has been very successful in limiting expenditures.

Kou and Tanaka also expressed concerns about political action committees and independent expenditures, which each characterized as giant loopholes in the League’s proposal. In the last council race, PASZ supported Burt, Kou and Greer Stone, all of whom prevailed, and Ed Lauing, who fell short.

‘There’s clearly a problem, both generally and in Palo Alto, increasingly, in our campaigning.’

Pat Burt, mayor, city of Palo Alto

Tanaka and Kou also raised concerns about the prospect of a very wealthy candidate self-financing their campaign. Other candidates in the race, if bound by strict limits, would have a harder time competing.

Kou said that there were times during her campaign when she considered stopping accepting donations. Then she saw ads or blogs attacking her and she would feel compelled to refute and correct the misinformation, she said. Having a large number of contributions gave her both the resources to respond and reassurance that she had support in the community.

“I was concerned, and it made me feel a little worried about how (the contribution total was) going up, but at the same time it let me know that there are people out there who believe in me,” Kou said.

Despite his skepticism about the League’s proposal, Tanaka said he would be willing to discuss other approaches.

“I’m a bit of an optimist. I think anything is possible and I’m open to exploring ideas. But these are big holes and that kind of money is never reported. That’s an issue.”

Would funding limits lead to more canvassing?

Council member Alison Cormack, who was elected in 2018, has been more receptive to campaign finance reform. In announcing last week her decision not to seek a second term, she cited her inability to convince her colleagues to pursue reform as one of the main disappointments of her term. Giant donations create an impression of undue influence, she said in an interview. This is why she limited contributions to her campaign to $1,000, she said.

Alison Cormack is greeted by supporters Julie Duffield, left, and Maria Daehler, center, as she wins a seat on the Palo Alto City Council on Nov. 6, 2018. Photo by Veronica Weber.

Cormack also said that she believes talking to a wide swath of local residents is a crucial part of a campaign. Candidates who receive giant donations from few sources can avoid going through that.

“All my colleagues who have taken much larger donations have spoken to fewer people and haven’t had as much connection with the community,” Cormack said. “They’ve really gotten a narrow view.”

Council member Greer Stone also talked about the importance of reaching out to the wider community. During his 2020 campaign, he said he attended every debate and accepted every invitation for a meeting over coffee or at a farmers market. Though he was endorsed by PASZ in 2020 and received several $950 contributions from donors affiliated with residentialists, his campaign raised about $41,000, which is relatively modest by Palo Alto’s standards.

Stone agreed with the League of Women Voters that Palo Alto has a problem when it comes to campaign cash.

“I think the amount of money raised in Palo Alto campaigns over the last several years has been incredibly high, and I’d imagine there’s a lot of potential candidates looking at that. And that might be a reason why they choose not to run,” Stone said. “I also hope they can see successful candidates like myself and say, ‘You can have a competitive campaign by not raising $100,000.'”

‘All my colleagues who have taken much larger donations have spoken to fewer people and haven’t had as much connection with the community.’

Alison Cormack, city council member, Palo Alto

Yet unlike Cormack, he is not convinced that capping individual contributions is the way to go unless other measures are also considered. Though he said he is keeping an open mind about the League’s proposal, he also raised concerns about the idea of this move encouraging more independent expenditures and self-financed campaigns.

“I don’t think anyone likes to see the influence of money on politics, and having an even playing field is a worthy cause,” Stone said. “But one of the areas I’m always focused on is: What are the unintended consequences of decisions that might not be as obvious when you first look at the issue?”

But even if the limit on individual contributions faces long odds under the current council, some members suggested that they would be open to consider other measures to address campaign finance reform. Council member Tom DuBois, who has been affiliated with PASZ in both of his council campaigns, suggested that an $85,000 limit on total expenditures — in the neighborhood of what Hayward has — might be a good place to start.

“If you start with something really restrictive, it makes it harder to adopt it,” DuBois said. “Unfortunately, it always comes up too late.”

While some residents have raised concerns about large donations coming from a few local families, DuBois suggested that this is not necessarily a bad thing given the resources that corporations and developers can muster to support their favored candidates.

“I think we’ve been lucky we’d had residents stepping up to offset some of that money coming into campaigns. Otherwise, I’d feel we’d have an uneven playing field.”

What about out-of-town money?

One area that he thinks the council should consider is requiring candidates to list how much money is coming from out-of-town sources. There is a big difference, he said, between entities that have projects going in front of the council making major contributions and residents doing so. In some ways, however, it is inevitable that Palo Alto elections would entail major expenditures.

“We want the small-town feel of a $20,000 campaign, but we are kind of a big city with big money in terms of big decisions,” DuBois said. “The city budget, when you consider utilities, is approaching $1 billion.”

Palo Alto City Council incumbents Tom DuBois, left, and Eric Filseth, and Board of Education incumbent Ken Dauber laugh together as they attend an election party and check the results of their races. All three looked to maintain their seats. Photo by Veronica Weber.

Both DuBois and Stone said they would support more disclosure of independent expenditures. DuBois said he would favor having each candidate show on their website the percentage of money that they receive from local residents as opposed to out-of-town sources, a measure that they said would add transparency to the process.

Council member Eric Filseth, who has also been supported by PASZ, similarly said that transparency should be the primary focus. The influx of money from out of town and from real estate developments is particularly concerning, he said in an email, “especially since those contributions have been very, very unevenly distributed among candidates.

‘We want the small-town feel of a $20,000 campaign, but we are kind of a big city with big money in terms of big decision.’

Tom DuBois, city council member, Palo Alto

“I can think of no good reason for large amounts of out-of-town and financial-interest money to try to influence a local city election, but plenty of bad reasons why they might try,” Filseth stated. “I wish the League would tackle those things instead, or at least in addition. We need to be sure that any reform we undertake doesn’t accidentally skew the playing field in favor of such special interests. That’s not in the interests of residents.”

Not everyone on the council sees it that way. Tanaka, whose contributors included the California Real Estate Political Action Committee, suggested that local residents aren’t the only stakeholders in the city’s election process and that it’s perfectly reasonable to consider other voices. Some local employees, for example, may be spending “most of their waking moments in Palo Alto” even if they don’t reside in the city. They should also factor into council decisions, he said.

“There are people who vote for us, but there are also people who work in our city. They may not be able to vote, but we need to consider them,” Tanaka said. “They’re huge contributors to our city. Do we not consider impacts on them? I think we need to have a more holistic view of the health of the city.”

Correction: In the 2020 City Council election, candidates raised a total of $439,532. The story previously attributed the number to just the winning candidates.

Gennady Sheyner covers local and regional politics, housing, transportation and other topics for the Palo Alto Weekly, Palo Alto Online and their sister publications. He has won awards for his coverage...

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34 Comments

  1. PA Online provides a great service with this explanation of campaign contribution limits.

    It seems to me that local, state and federal court rulings generally open gates of cash flow to candidates and special interest groups. Well-intentioned reforms are proposed and sometimes adopted; however, for every door closed another opens.

    Equally important are recent court rulings which, in general, are less restrictive. This article will not be easy for PA Online to write and it will set better context.

    Nevertheless, it is important for everyone to better appreciate which campaign restrictions are possible and which are impossible. Late in November, we all need to review the disclosed campaign contributions and those which were not disclosed. Unfortunately, there is more than a trickle of “late disclosures” and loan paybacks worthy of attention later in 2023.

  2. Individual citizens should be able to contribute. Large corporations, developers, and other special interests should not be allowed to donate.

  3. None of those council members who opined that they were receiving large amount donations turned them down or set lower personal limits. Are our city council members being influenced by these huge contributions? Let’s support the LWV’s campaign limitation. $500 per person.

  4. I had no problem running for City Council while maintaining a voluntary cap of $500 and not accepting any PAC money. I spent only approximately $10,000 (mostly for my website and email software) and received 8000 votes. I believe that was the biggest money-to-vote ratio of all candidates. I also sent no mailings, in respect of our natural environment.

    In fact, the biggest challenge for me when I voluntarily chose not to hold any pay-to-attend fundraisers and when I chose not to reach out to my network of wealthy friends, instead choosing to meet as many individual community members as possible, is that the local press viewed my small-money donations (which were almost ALL of my donations) as demonstrative of “lack of support.”

    The press plays a hugely important role in enabling campaign finance reform. As long as the local press continues to rate candidates by dollar signs rather than by commitment, capability, and community support, it will be harder for candidates to prioritize speaking with community members over speaking with big money donors, which currently happens for most candidates.

    But as I said at the city council meeting, if I choose to run again (something I have not decided), then I again will voluntarily follow the $500 cap on contributions, and always prioritize speaking with community members who have least access to our elected and appointed leaders, over the moneyed interests that already have too much influence on City Hall. I hope that others would choose this as well.

    Democracy is a something we do, not something that happens to us. But Democracy is much easier when the Press does its part and evaluates candidates on FAR more measures than how much money the candidate has raised. Perhaps, even, the Press could acknowledge, the amount of money raised — often correlating with corruption rather than community support — can be a disqualifier rather than qualifier. Just a thought.

    So obviously I support the $500 limit and just like last time, would abide by it whether it’s required or not.

  5. Limiting individual contributions makes no sense unless you limit contributions from lobbyists, companies, non-profits, etc. since they’re the ones who are contributing the most money, usually to pro-development candidates.

    It’s the utmost hypocrisy for the League of Women Voters and Ms. Cormack to jump on the campaign “reform” bandwagon after A) Ms. Kniss’s campaign finance regulations and B) taking all that money from office developers which is one reason we have such ridiculous new housing density targets.

  6. To clarify, I am close to certain that the LWV limits ALL campaign contributions – whether from individuals or PACs or organizations or companies or nonprofits — to $500. In other words, $500 from any source, no matter the source. Otherwise, I agree, it makes no sense.

    To the extent that others have been incorrectly describing the LWVPA initiative, I fear that they are likely not paying attention (or else, perhaps less likely?) intentionally misstating the truth.

    Here is the LWVPA page explaining their initiatives:

    https://www.lwvpaloalto.org/local-campaign-finance-reform.html

    And background research supporting their initiatives is here:

    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1b6dO9fGFZ-utS3v26XTlzQO1OPXafkH2/view

    I support all of their initiatives 100% and I voluntarily followed them in 2020. Should I run again, I would voluntarily follow them again.

  7. The League of Women voters is led by Liz Kniss who has long been very supportive of developers and big business. In fact, in her last election where she served on city council, she said she would not take developer contributions and then after the election it was revealed she had but not reported them till after the election.

    This proposal by the LWV under Liz Kniss is designed to stop residents from countering large donations by developers and corporations. Greg Scharf also self funded $50K or $100K as a real estate lawyer when he campaigned. Many of us see the proposal by the LWB for what it is, an attempt to shift power back towards developers.

    I do think disclosures about who and where the money is coming from would be helpful. The reality is most reform can be worked around so it would just result in more money flowing into PACs.

  8. However well intentioned, this is the wrong way round. Until outside money spent by PACs is also restricted, limiting individual campaign contributions is, in practice, a cynical attempt to hobble candidates who serve the interests of individuals and communities rather than corporations and other deep pocket entities who can still spend with no individual dollar limit. Worse, whose advertising and mailers on behalf of their favored candidates can legally obscure whose interests they actually represent.

  9. Liz Kniss violated campaign finance laws, a 4-year-long investigation concludes

    https://paloaltoonline.com/news/2021/02/08/liz-kniss-violated-campaign-finance-laws-a-4-year-long-investigation-concludes

    “Kniss violated two laws: one that prohibits candidates from using their personal bank accounts for campaign expenditures and another that requires them to report the employers and occupations of donors who contribute more than $100.”

    “her failure to disclose 31 contributions, totaling $19,340, that she had received from developers in the weeks before the November 2016 election but did not list in her filings until Jan. 11.”

  10. Ironic an organization in which former council member Liz Knizz plays a prominent and influential role is touting “campaign finance reform” that would result in giving the advantage to PACs etc. that have hidden sources of unlimited donations.

  11. An in depth analysis several years ago of the funding of Palo Alto City Council elections (Campaign Funding in Silicon Valley: Spotlight on Palo Alto| March 31, 2020) https://maplightarchive.org/story/campaign-funding-in-silicon-valley-spotlight-on-palo-alto/ showed that most Palo Alto candidates receive significant financial support from wealthy donors and corporations:

    “Just 25 contributors were responsible for one in three dollars raised by candidates in the 2014, 2016, and 2018 elections. While money was not determinative of all election outcomes or political actions, it certainly indicates salient patterns of political influence in the city.”

    The last phrase in the last sentence is surely behind the largesse of many of the large dollar donors to Palo Alto elections. I support the LWV proposal. We ought not, as the proverb says: “Let the Perfect Be the Enemy of the Good.”

  12. If you want to analyze the data for donors in the 2020 City Council campaign, it can be found in the Appendix of my 2020-09-29 blog “Examining Candidates Donations: Palo Alto City Council” (https://www.paloaltoonline.com/blogs/p/2020/09/29/examining-candidates-donations-palo-alto-city-council).

    That appendix contains links to multiple overlapping datasets, with one being an Excel workbook with multiple worksheets. Actually, there are earlier versions representing stages in my cleaning up of the data.

    Did I do a similar analysis later in the campaign? No. The next round of reports would cover through October 17 and be published on October 22, 11 days before Election Day. With early voting and vote-by-mail, a great many of the voters would have already cast their ballots — that analysis would have been irrelevant to them. With campaigns needing to be up-to-speed by the beginning of October, candidates need to have most of their fund-raising completed.

  13. I’m so glad to read this thorough story by Gennady Sheyner. It’s terrific that all of the Council members answered this journalists’ questions about where they stand on local campaign finance reform. And it’s wonderful to see that there is so much agreement that the influence on money in politics is problematic.

    I also note that a majority of Council members express concern about independent expenditures. This is a concern that the League shares. And while the Supreme Court has made it clear that, under the First Amendment, PACs can spend as much as they want on political campaigns, they’ve also made it clear that it’s okay to require that ads paid for by a PAC must disclose the PAC’s biggest donors. In Palo as things now stand, PAC donors must be disclosed only if they donate more than $50,000 to the PAC — California’s threshold for state and local races in California. But local jurisdictions can set a lower threshold, as Mountain View has done. By lowering the threshold to require disclosure of a PAC’s top donors of $2500 or more, the City Council could signal its understanding that voters have a right to know who is spending money to influence our elections. The Council could, and should pass an ordinance to this effect now.

    The League also proposed a voluntary expenditure limit of $30,000 — the same as neighboring Mountain View. Based on this story, at least three Council members (Burt, Stone and Dubois) appear supportive of setting a voluntary expenditure limit. But Dubois’s proposal of an $85,000 limit is much too high. Expenditure limits should bear some relationship to how much a candidate needs to spend to reach the population of people who will vote for that office. Dubois points to Hayward’s limit of $79K in support of his proposal, but Hayward’s City Council represents more than 158,000 residents compared with Palo Alto’s 68,000.

    If money in politics is problematic, as the Council seems to agree, let’s see them do something about it.

  14. ArtL – Can you please re-post that URL? It didn’t work for me (maybe it’s my user error?)

    Kathy – thank you so much for the explanation. I do think it’s important to note that although the states are not allowed to limit corporate/PAC donations (truly insane, as others note), candidates can agree voluntarily not to take money from PACs, SuperPACs, and corporations. Elizabeth Warren and her opponent Scott Brown famously made that agreement in Warren’s successful Senate race in 2012.

    Thinking of true solutions, as noted by the highly-respected Brennan Center –
    https://www.brennancenter.org/our-work/research-reports/citizens-united-explained
    Many consider publicly-funded elections to be the straightest way to avoid corruption and outsized influence by the wealthiest few. As the article I posted explained, a system that matches small-dollar donations by individuals (perhaps even only individuals residing in the jurisdiction) with public money contributions would double the impact of small local donors. Already, as of 2018, 14 states and 24 local governments have instituted some version of public financing. This opens the door for candidates up and down the income range to run, resulting in greater potential for a representative local government. If anywhere could benefit from such a program, Palo Alto can.

    With a representative electorate that is more independent of the 20 wealthy people and entities that have greatest influence on our elected officials, then we could trust our local government to make decisions in the community’s best interest, not in the best interest of its wealthiest stakeholders (e.g. Castilleja).

    That our City Council thinks that it should cost $80,000 to attempt to obtain a position that pays $12,000/year is horrifying. Personally, I think that the expenditures should not exceed $12,000 (I spent even less). If we seek an equal playing field, we have to be willing to make changes that benefit the public and not the politicians.

  15. “I do think it’s important to note that although the states are not allowed to limit corporate/PAC donations (truly insane, as others note),…”

    Which is exactly why this proposal from Liz Kniss et al is so cynically opportunistic; she obviously resents that more residentialist candidates have undercut the developers whom she and her acolytes so ardently support(ed) in their quest to turn PA into an office park.

  16. The League of Women Voters is a good government organization. The proposals made are not a cynical attempt to support candidates on either side of the local residentialist/pro-growth divide. They are meant to reduce money in politics and would have the same effect on all candidates regardless of their political views.

    If every candidate agreed to a voluntary expenditure limit, and large donors were limited to $500, every candidate would have enough money to make the case for their election (it works in neighboring Mountain View!). As Greer Stone points out, $41,000 was enough for him to win.

    We all know money in politics is a problem. Let’s act on campaign finance reform.

  17. Yes, the League of Womens Voters used to be a good government organization. I wonder if the same can be said for its local chapter and its newish local president who unashamedly pushed over-development while famously denying Palo Alto has/had traffic problems and for which we’re now paying the price with local density targets.

    Why her rush to limit contributions NOW while letting increased spending by lobbyists, companies, non-profits continue to soar?? We’ve seen what “Corporations are people, my friends” thinking re Citizens United has done to the national election landscape.

  18. Kathy,

    Kindly confirm, clarify, and/or correct the following in relation to Political Action Committees (PACs) and the research of the Local Campaign Finance Reform Task Force of the League of Women Voters of Palo Alto:

    1. As per U.S. Supreme Court decision (Citizens United, 2010), there is no limit on how much money can be contributed to PACs or other outside groups.

    2. There is also no limit on how much such groups can spend on mailers or other communications for an election as long as such communications are not coordinated with the specific candidate or campaign committee. Hence the term “Independent Expenditure.”

    3. If, however, those communications are made in coordination with a campaign, they are considered to be a campaign contribution, and, therefore, in California, must be reported as such by the candidate in filings to California’s Fair Political Practices Commission.

    4. California state law limits the maximum contribution from any single source, including PACs, to a city council candidate in an election cycle to a maximum of $4,900.

    5. Municipalities can set their own lower maximum single-source contribution level, and the LWV Task Force is advocating that the limit here be $500.

  19. I’ve always found it funny that those who criticize Citizens United the loudest are the same ones who applaud partisan media broadcasts or other media outlets (like newspapers, websites and magazines) that actively endorse candidates.

  20. This LWV proposal is simply unworkable, allowing too much money to continue to flow into the pockets of too many candidates, while knee-capping others.

    Neither PACs nor Independent Expenditure Committees (IEs) need consent of any candidate to donate tens of thousands of dollars to a City Council campaign. It’s against the law for candidates to have any contact, control or coordination with either. A candidate can’t refuse the money. It doesn’t matter what a candidate wants.

    And then there is Councilmember Cormack who hypocritically supports the LWV proposal, yet advises like-minded candidates to run as a “team” (slate), sharing mailer expenses (and ad expanses?) which cuts off independent candidates at the knees who must pay all costs by themselves. Hardly a way to level the playing field and make it easier for candidates to run. Cormackian slight-of-hand at its worst.

    That PAC’s, IEs, slates and self-financing campaigns ($60,000 came out of the pocket of one City Council candidate) are all reasons this LWV proposal fails – it doesn’t make for fairer elections or help all candidates.

  21. I’m often disappointed in bias written into articles here. For example:
    “One side has typically drawn contributions from builders and developers. The other has benefitted from giant contributions from five local families…”

    Elsewhere in the article, we learn that the [non-“giant”] contributions from “builders and developers” range as high as $10,000, while the “giant contributions” from local families range only as high as $5,000.

    I guess that’s a reason why people want to publish news — so they can put their spin on it.

    I was also disappointed to read Tanaka’s comments against disclosure of local vs. out-of-town donations:
    “Tanaka, … suggested that local residents aren’t the only stakeholders in the city’s election process and that it’s perfectly reasonable to consider other voices. Some local employees, for example, may be spending “most of their waking moments in Palo Alto” even if they don’t reside in the city.”

    If people who don’t live in Palo Alto want to sway our elections, it’s only fair that we then be allowed to sway the elections in their communities. Living in a community means you have skin in the game.

  22. Cormack opines in the article –
    “All my colleagues who have taken much larger donations [than her] have spoken to fewer people and haven’t had as much connection with the community,” Cormack said. “They’ve really gotten a narrow view.”

    What utter made-up nonsense. You have no way of knowing this.

    Do you hear yourself, Councilmember Cormack? You should be embarrassed by this statement. If you are not, then we should all be concerned by your lack of judgment. Perhaps you should think about resigning from Council now rather than waiting until years end. This may be best for our City.

  23. In response to Fred Balin’s 5 questions — yes, that is accurate.

    But let me add this:

    PACs, businesses, and other organizations in Palo Alto don’t always opt to publish their own ads. Instead, they often donate directly to campaigns, and if the City passes a $500 cap on donations to campaigns from a single source, that cap would apply to those donations. The purpose of having such caps is to address the potential for undue influence over a candidate, and it would have that effect on any organization that prefers to give to a candidate’s campaign rather than publish their own ads (uncoordinated with the candidate).

    It’s true that PACs can (under Citizens United) make unlimited independent expenditures (buy ads etc.) in support of a candidate (or candidates) as long as they don’t coordinate with the candidate (or candidates). Typically, the organizations that do this have their own donors. The League would like to see increased disclosure of who those donors are. Currently, disclosure is only required for donors who give more than $50,000 to a PAC (the default amount under state law). This is another area where City Councils can lower the threshold. We propose $2500.

    We acknowledge that there is no perfect solution to the problem of money in politics. But there are things that can be done by our City Council that would be an improvement over inaction. We hope the community will join us in urging that something be done rather than nothing.

  24. Once again, the most hyperbolic and unhelpful comments – some of which are slanderous in my view – are posted by readers who do not have the courage to publish their name.

    I urge Palo Alto Online to change their policy of allowing comments from unnamed individuals. This would improve the civility and discourse of these forums and enable them to be “a thoughtful gathering place for sharing community information and opinion”. Contact Palo Alto Online if you agree with my sentiment.

    And thanks to Kathy Miller for a series of informative and thoughtful posts on this important topic.

  25. @Bruce Hodge, any woman who’s been online long enough knows not to use her full name for fear of harassment. One of our female city councilwomen received 7 drunken threatening phone calls — threats to rape her, slit her throat, harm her kids and family — BECAUSE her political posts ob Facebook had so infuriated a 29-yr-old YIMBT.

    He threatened to keep doing it until she was forced to change her phone number.

    After receiving vulgar phone calls and death threat, Palo Alto council member is speaking out

    Menlo Park man pleads ‘no contest’ to charge of harassing Lydia Kou

    https://www.paloaltoonline.com/news/2021/08/18/after-receiving-vulgar-phone-calls-and-death-threat-palo-alto-council-member-is-speaking-out

    And what consequences did this guy face? He was charged with a misdemeanor and had to go to AA after which his record was expunged!

    How many times have we read about other women who’s also been stalked, sometines for years, only to have the DA say, “Oh, we would have loved to have charged his with a felony but he only threatened ONE woman, had he threatened multiple women, we night have been able to do more.

    So Bruce, if you’ve never been harassed, threatened, stalked etc., please stop lecturing us about courage, especially those of us who have unique names and are easy to locate physically. We value our security and our tires in one piece.

    Now, back to those companies, real estate groups, non-profits, institutions etc that are funding the YIMBYs pro-development candidates who keep screaming about thpse horrible NIMBY’s and PROP 13 while never, ever saying a word about BUSINESSES that benefit even more from Prop 13 on their conmercial properties …

  26. Is Palo Alto ready for any REAL reform on any important city policy? Or is it just totally hamstrung by political, bureaucratic, property owner, and special interest group haggling and infighting? Grand broad self-serving political statements are easy since they’re all just useless pap — all form and lacking real-world substance. The HARD part of “reform” is to negotiate grind out all of the details necessary to even get a chance at succeeding. And Palo Alto seems to me to be totally paralyzed because all of their reform options on anything are negative and not positive to various powerful special interest coalitions.

  27. My comments to the City Council during oral communications last night follows:

    Is Palo Alto ready for campaign finance reform? That’s the Weekly’s Page 3 headline above council member responses to the research, recommendations, and advocacy of the League of Women Voters task force.

    25 years ago we were a leader when this body mandated that each council candidate, prior to accepting any contribution, file a statement with the city clerk accepting or rejecting a voluntary expenditure ceiling: $14,000. The ordinance held through the ‘97 council election until suspended due to litigation of state law. And so it remains, marked and dormant today within our municipal code.

    But voter approval of a statewide proposition in 2000 cleared the way for rewrites and new ordinances. Mountain View, for example, by 2006, passed a voluntary expenditure ceiling of $15,000, with penalties for those who break their pledge. A decade later they added tightened disclosure requirements for advertisements from outside groups and included in-kind contributions, i.e., goods and services, into their voluntary expenditure limit. And this year, they added mandatory per person contribution limits.

    The task force draws from within this background and that of nearly three-quarters of California’s municipalities who post their rules beyond state mandate
    on the Fair Political Practices Commission website. But Palo Alto has nothing yet to add.

    There is no Herculian task here for city clerk and city attorney to lay out options and legal parameters. So bring on the Colleagues’ Memo for full discussion of the concepts in and related to the League’s task force.

  28. Where does all of this money go…towards the production and distribution of those ubiquitous lawn signs?

    There can’t be all that much involved in covering print and media expenditures as there are only around 3-4 local publications and SF newspaper and TV coverage is always limited.

  29. @mjh, that Tanaka ad is inescapable and has been stalking me for days wherever I go, whatever source I read. It reminds me of that old stalker song “Every breath you take, every step you take, I’ll be watching you.” ENOUGH.

  30. “Kou and Tanaka also expressed concerns about political action committees and independent expenditures, which each characterized as giant loopholes in the League’s proposal.” And well Tanaka should know. The newly formed PAC, DAO of America, just spent $265,250 in dark money on mailers and digital ads for Tanaka’s run for congress. For more details see PA weekly article https://paloaltoonline.com/news/2022/06/06/cryptocurrency-supporters-boost-greg-tanakas-bid-for-congress

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