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SF 998

1st Engrossment - 83rd Legislature (2003 - 2004) Posted on 12/15/2009 12:00am

KEY: stricken = removed, old language.
underscored = added, new language.

Current Version - 1st Engrossment

  1.1                          A bill for an act
  1.2             relating to elections; providing for fair and clean 
  1.3             elections; increasing disclosure of campaign 
  1.4             contributions to candidates; encouraging candidates to 
  1.5             accept only clean money for their political campaigns; 
  1.6             limiting campaign contributions and expenditures; 
  1.7             increasing public subsidies for state candidates who 
  1.8             agree to limit the sources and amounts of 
  1.9             contributions to their campaigns; appropriating money; 
  1.10            amending Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 10A.01, 
  1.11            subdivision 1; 10A.02, subdivisions 8, 10, 11, 11a, 
  1.12            12, 13; 10A.025, subdivisions 1, 2; 10A.071, 
  1.13            subdivision 3; 10A.34; 10A.37; 129D.13, by adding a 
  1.14            subdivision; 129D.14, by adding a subdivision; 
  1.15            204B.11, subdivision 1; 211A.13; 211B.12; 211B.15, 
  1.16            subdivision 16; 340A.404, subdivision 10; 353.03, 
  1.17            subdivision 1; 383B.042, subdivision 5; proposing 
  1.18            coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 
  1.19            204B; 211B; proposing coding for new law as Minnesota 
  1.20            Statutes, chapter 10B; repealing Minnesota Statutes 
  1.21            2002, sections 10A.01, subdivisions 3, 4, 6, 7, 9, 10, 
  1.22            11, 12, 13, 15, 16, 17, 18, 20, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 
  1.23            29, 30, 32, 34, 36; 10A.105; 10A.11; 10A.12; 10A.13; 
  1.24            10A.14; 10A.15; 10A.16; 10A.17; 10A.18; 10A.20; 
  1.25            10A.24; 10A.241; 10A.242; 10A.25; 10A.255; 10A.257; 
  1.26            10A.27; 10A.273; 10A.275; 10A.28; 10A.29; 10A.30; 
  1.27            10A.31; 10A.315; 10A.321; 10A.322; 10A.323; 10A.324; 
  1.28            290.06, subdivision 23.  
  1.29  BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA: 
  1.30     Section 1.  [FAIR AND CLEAN ELECTIONS ACT.] 
  1.31     This act may be cited as the Fair and Clean Elections Act.  
  1.32     Sec. 2.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 10A.01, 
  1.33  subdivision 1, is amended to read: 
  1.34     Subdivision 1.  [APPLICATION.] For the purposes of this 
  1.35  chapter and chapter 10B, the terms defined in this section have 
  1.36  the meanings given them unless the context clearly indicates 
  1.37  otherwise. 
  2.1      Sec. 3.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 10A.02, 
  2.2   subdivision 8, is amended to read: 
  2.3      Subd. 8.  [DUTIES.] (a) The board must report at the close 
  2.4   of each fiscal year to the legislature, the governor, and the 
  2.5   public concerning the action it has taken, the names, salaries, 
  2.6   and duties of all individuals in its employ, and the money it 
  2.7   has disbursed.  The board must include and identify in its 
  2.8   report any other reports it has made during the fiscal year.  It 
  2.9   may indicate apparent abuses and offer legislative 
  2.10  recommendations. 
  2.11     (b) The board must prescribe forms for statements and 
  2.12  reports required to be filed under this chapter or chapter 10B 
  2.13  and make the forms available to individuals required to file 
  2.14  them. 
  2.15     (c) The board must make available to the individuals 
  2.16  required to file the reports and statements a manual setting 
  2.17  forth the recommended uniform methods of bookkeeping and 
  2.18  reporting. 
  2.19     (d) The board must develop a filing, coding, and 
  2.20  cross-indexing system consistent with the purposes of this 
  2.21  chapter and chapter 10B. 
  2.22     (e) The board must make the reports and statements filed 
  2.23  with it available for public inspection and copying by the end 
  2.24  of the second day following the day on which they were 
  2.25  received.  An individual may copy a report or statement by hand 
  2.26  or by duplicating machine and the board must provide duplicating 
  2.27  services at cost for this purpose.  
  2.28     (f) Notwithstanding section 138.163, the board must 
  2.29  preserve reports and statements for a period of five years from 
  2.30  the date of receipt. 
  2.31     (g) The board must compile and maintain a current list and 
  2.32  summary of all statements or parts of statements pertaining to 
  2.33  each candidate. 
  2.34     (h) The board may prepare and publish reports it considers 
  2.35  appropriate. 
  2.36     Sec. 4.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 10A.02, 
  3.1   subdivision 10, is amended to read: 
  3.2      Subd. 10.  [AUDITS AND INVESTIGATIONS.] The board may make 
  3.3   audits and investigations with respect to statements and reports 
  3.4   that are filed or that should have been filed under this chapter 
  3.5   or chapter 10B.  In all matters relating to its official duties, 
  3.6   the board has the power to issue subpoenas and cause them to be 
  3.7   served.  If a person does not comply with a subpoena, the board 
  3.8   may apply to the district court of Ramsey county for issuance of 
  3.9   an order compelling obedience to the subpoena.  A person failing 
  3.10  to obey the order is punishable by the court as for contempt. 
  3.11     Sec. 5.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 10A.02, 
  3.12  subdivision 11, is amended to read: 
  3.13     Subd. 11.  [VIOLATIONS; ENFORCEMENT.] (a) The board may 
  3.14  investigate any alleged violation of this chapter or chapter 
  3.15  10B.  The board must investigate any violation that is alleged 
  3.16  in a written complaint filed with the board and must within 30 
  3.17  days after the filing of the complaint make a public finding of 
  3.18  whether there is probable cause to believe a violation has 
  3.19  occurred, except that if the complaint alleges a violation of 
  3.20  section 10A.25 or 10A.27 10B.13 or 10B.17, the board must either 
  3.21  enter a conciliation agreement or make a public finding of 
  3.22  whether there is probable cause, within 60 days after the filing 
  3.23  of the complaint.  The deadline for action on a written 
  3.24  complaint may be extended by majority vote of the board.  
  3.25     (b) Within a reasonable time after beginning an 
  3.26  investigation of an individual or association, the board must 
  3.27  notify the individual or association of the fact of the 
  3.28  investigation.  The board must not make a finding of whether 
  3.29  there is probable cause to believe a violation has occurred 
  3.30  without notifying the individual or association of the nature of 
  3.31  the allegations and affording an opportunity to answer those 
  3.32  allegations.  
  3.33     (c) A hearing or action of the board concerning a complaint 
  3.34  or investigation other than a finding concerning probable cause 
  3.35  or a conciliation agreement is confidential.  Until the board 
  3.36  makes a public finding concerning probable cause or enters a 
  4.1   conciliation agreement: 
  4.2      (1) a member, employee, or agent of the board must not 
  4.3   disclose to an individual information obtained by that member, 
  4.4   employee, or agent concerning a complaint or investigation 
  4.5   except as required to carry out the investigation or take action 
  4.6   in the matter as authorized by this chapter; and 
  4.7      (2) an individual who discloses information contrary to 
  4.8   this subdivision is subject to a civil penalty imposed by the 
  4.9   board of up to $1,000.  
  4.10     Sec. 6.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 10A.02, 
  4.11  subdivision 11a, is amended to read: 
  4.12     Subd. 11a.  [DATA PRIVACY.] (a) If, after making a public 
  4.13  finding concerning probable cause or entering a conciliation 
  4.14  agreement, the board determines that the record of the 
  4.15  investigation contains statements, documents, or other matter 
  4.16  that, if disclosed, would unfairly injure the reputation of an 
  4.17  innocent individual, the board may: 
  4.18     (1) retain the statement, document, or other matter as a 
  4.19  private record, as defined in section 13.02, subdivision 12, for 
  4.20  a period of one year, after which it must be destroyed; or 
  4.21     (2) return the statement, document, or other matter to the 
  4.22  individual who supplied it to the board. 
  4.23     (b) When publishing reports or statements on its Web site, 
  4.24  the board must not publish the home street address or telephone 
  4.25  number of an individual. 
  4.26     Sec. 7.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 10A.02, 
  4.27  subdivision 12, is amended to read: 
  4.28     Subd. 12.  [ADVISORY OPINIONS.] (a) The board may issue and 
  4.29  publish advisory opinions on the requirements of this chapter or 
  4.30  chapter 10B based upon real or hypothetical situations.  An 
  4.31  application for an advisory opinion may be made only by an 
  4.32  individual or association who wishes to use the opinion to guide 
  4.33  the individual's or the association's own conduct.  The board 
  4.34  must issue written opinions on all such questions submitted to 
  4.35  it within 30 days after receipt of written application, unless a 
  4.36  majority of the board agrees to extend the time limit.  
  5.1      (b) A written advisory opinion issued by the board is 
  5.2   binding on the board in a subsequent board proceeding concerning 
  5.3   the person making or covered by the request and is a defense in 
  5.4   a judicial proceeding that involves the subject matter of the 
  5.5   opinion and is brought against the person making or covered by 
  5.6   the request unless: 
  5.7      (1) the board has amended or revoked the opinion before the 
  5.8   initiation of the board or judicial proceeding, has notified the 
  5.9   person making or covered by the request of its action, and has 
  5.10  allowed at least 30 days for the person to do anything that 
  5.11  might be necessary to comply with the amended or revoked 
  5.12  opinion; 
  5.13     (2) the request has omitted or misstated material facts; or 
  5.14     (3) the person making or covered by the request has not 
  5.15  acted in good faith in reliance on the opinion. 
  5.16     (c) A request for an opinion and the opinion itself are 
  5.17  nonpublic data.  The board, however, may publish an opinion or a 
  5.18  summary of an opinion, but may not include in the publication 
  5.19  the name of the requester, the name of a person covered by a 
  5.20  request from an agency or political subdivision, or any other 
  5.21  information that might identify the requester, unless the person 
  5.22  consents to the inclusion. 
  5.23     Sec. 8.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 10A.02, 
  5.24  subdivision 13, is amended to read: 
  5.25     Subd. 13.  [RULES.] Chapter 14 applies to the board.  The 
  5.26  board may adopt rules to carry out the purposes of this 
  5.27  chapter or chapter 10B. 
  5.28     Sec. 9.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 10A.025, 
  5.29  subdivision 1, is amended to read: 
  5.30     Subdivision 1.  [FILING DATE.] If a scheduled filing date 
  5.31  under this chapter or chapter 10B falls on a Saturday, Sunday, 
  5.32  or legal holiday, the filing date is the next regular business 
  5.33  day. 
  5.34     Sec. 10.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 10A.025, 
  5.35  subdivision 2, is amended to read: 
  5.36     Subd. 2.  [PENALTY FOR FALSE STATEMENTS.] (a) A report or 
  6.1   statement required to be filed under this chapter must be signed 
  6.2   and certified as true by the individual required to file the 
  6.3   report.  An individual who signs and certifies to be true a 
  6.4   report or statement knowing it contains false information or who 
  6.5   knowingly omits required information is guilty of a gross 
  6.6   misdemeanor and subject to a civil penalty imposed by the board 
  6.7   of up to $3,000. 
  6.8      (b) If a report of campaign contributions or expenditures 
  6.9   under section 10B.12 is in error, or if a person knowingly fails 
  6.10  to file a report of excess contributions under section 10B.12, 
  6.11  subdivision 7, or a notice of independent expenditures under 
  6.12  section 10B.12, subdivision 10, the board may impose a civil 
  6.13  penalty of up to ten times the amount of the error, or up to ten 
  6.14  times the amount that should have been reported, respectively.  
  6.15     (c) The board may order a candidate to return to the board 
  6.16  any public subsidy the candidate has received.  The board must 
  6.17  deposit the amount returned in the state treasury and credit it 
  6.18  to the general fund.  
  6.19     (d) After making a public finding that it has probable 
  6.20  cause to believe a candidate has violated this subdivision, the 
  6.21  board must bring an action, or transmit the finding to a county 
  6.22  attorney who must bring an action, in the district court of 
  6.23  Ramsey county or, in the case of a legislative candidate, the 
  6.24  district court of a county within the legislative district, to 
  6.25  collect a civil penalty imposed by the board, to demand the 
  6.26  return of any public subsidy paid to the candidate, or to have 
  6.27  the nomination or office declared forfeited.  If a candidate is 
  6.28  judged to have violated this subdivision, the court, after 
  6.29  entering the judgment, may enter a supplemental judgment 
  6.30  declaring that the candidate has forfeited the nomination or 
  6.31  office, except as provided in paragraph (e).  If the court 
  6.32  enters the supplemental judgment, it must transmit to the filing 
  6.33  officer a transcript of the supplemental judgment, the 
  6.34  nomination or office becomes vacant, and the vacancy must be 
  6.35  filled as provided by law. 
  6.36     (e) If the candidate has been elected to the legislature, 
  7.1   the court, after entering the judgment that the candidate has 
  7.2   violated this subdivision, must transmit a transcript of the 
  7.3   judgment to the secretary of the senate or the chief clerk of 
  7.4   the house of representatives, as appropriate, for further 
  7.5   consideration by the house to which the candidate was elected. 
  7.6      Sec. 11.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 10A.071, 
  7.7   subdivision 3, is amended to read: 
  7.8      Subd. 3.  [EXCEPTIONS.] (a) The prohibitions in this 
  7.9   section do not apply if the gift is: 
  7.10     (1) a contribution as defined in section 10A.01, 
  7.11  subdivision 11 10B.01, subdivision 10; 
  7.12     (2) services to assist an official in the performance of 
  7.13  official duties, including but not limited to providing advice, 
  7.14  consultation, information, and communication in connection with 
  7.15  legislation, and services to constituents; 
  7.16     (3) services of insignificant monetary value; 
  7.17     (4) a plaque or similar memento recognizing individual 
  7.18  services in a field of specialty or to a charitable cause; 
  7.19     (5) a trinket or memento of insignificant value; 
  7.20     (6) informational material of unexceptional value; or 
  7.21     (7) food or a beverage given at a reception, meal, or 
  7.22  meeting away from the recipient's place of work by an 
  7.23  organization before whom the recipient appears to make a speech 
  7.24  or answer questions as part of a program. 
  7.25     (b) The prohibitions in this section do not apply if the 
  7.26  gift is given: 
  7.27     (1) because of the recipient's membership in a group, a 
  7.28  majority of whose members are not officials, and an equivalent 
  7.29  gift is given to the other members of the group; or 
  7.30     (2) by a lobbyist or principal who is a member of the 
  7.31  family of the recipient, unless the gift is given on behalf of 
  7.32  someone who is not a member of that family. 
  7.33     Sec. 12.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 10A.34, is 
  7.34  amended to read: 
  7.35     10A.34 [REMEDIES.] 
  7.36     Subdivision 1.  [PERSONAL LIABILITY.] A person charged with 
  8.1   a duty under this chapter or chapter 10B is personally liable 
  8.2   for the penalty for failing to discharge it. 
  8.3      Subd. 1a.  [RECOVERING LATE FEES.] The board may bring an 
  8.4   action in the district court in Ramsey county to recover a late 
  8.5   filing fee imposed under this chapter or chapter 10B.  Money 
  8.6   recovered must be deposited in the general fund of the state. 
  8.7      Subd. 2.  [INJUNCTION.] The board or a county attorney may 
  8.8   seek an injunction in the district court to enforce this chapter 
  8.9   or chapter 10B. 
  8.10     Subd. 3.  [NOT A CRIME.] Unless otherwise provided, a 
  8.11  violation of this chapter or chapter 10B is not a crime. 
  8.12     Subd. 4.  [CIVIL PENALTIES.] Unless otherwise provided, a 
  8.13  civil penalty imposed by the board under this chapter or chapter 
  8.14  10B may not exceed $1,000.  The penalty may be collected by the 
  8.15  board in a civil action brought in the district court in Ramsey 
  8.16  county or in the county where the defendant resides. 
  8.17     Sec. 13.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 10A.37, is 
  8.18  amended to read: 
  8.19     10A.37 [FREEDOM TO ASSOCIATE AND COMMUNICATE.] 
  8.20     Nothing in this chapter or chapter 10B may be construed to 
  8.21  abridge the right of an association to communicate with its 
  8.22  members. 
  8.23     Sec. 14.  [10B.01] [DEFINITIONS.] 
  8.24     Subdivision 1.  [APPLICATION.] The definitions in this 
  8.25  section apply to this chapter and chapter 10A. 
  8.26     Subd. 2.  [ADVANCE OF CREDIT.] "Advance of credit" means 
  8.27  any money owed for goods provided or services rendered.  
  8.28  "Advance of credit" does not mean a loan as defined in 
  8.29  subdivision 17. 
  8.30     Subd. 3.  [APPROVED EXPENDITURE.] "Approved expenditure" 
  8.31  means an expenditure made on behalf of a candidate by an entity 
  8.32  other than the principal campaign committee of the candidate if 
  8.33  the expenditure is made with the authorization or expressed or 
  8.34  implied consent of, or in cooperation or in concert with, or at 
  8.35  the request or suggestion of the candidate, the candidate's 
  8.36  principal campaign committee, or the candidate's agent.  An 
  9.1   approved expenditure is a contribution to that candidate. 
  9.2      Subd. 4.  [ASSOCIATION.] "Association" means a group of two 
  9.3   or more persons, who are not all members of an immediate family, 
  9.4   acting in concert. 
  9.5      Subd. 5.  [BALLOT QUESTION.] "Ballot question" means a 
  9.6   question or proposition that is placed on the ballot and that 
  9.7   may be voted on by all voters of the state.  "Promoting or 
  9.8   defeating a ballot question" includes activities related to 
  9.9   qualifying the question for placement on the ballot.  
  9.10     Subd. 6.  [BOARD.] "Board" means the state campaign finance 
  9.11  and public disclosure board. 
  9.12     Subd. 7.  [CAMPAIGN EXPENDITURE OR EXPENDITURE.] (a) 
  9.13  "Campaign expenditure" or "expenditure" means a purchase or 
  9.14  payment of money or anything of value, or an advance of credit, 
  9.15  made or incurred for the purpose of influencing the nomination 
  9.16  or election of a candidate or for the purpose of promoting or 
  9.17  defeating a ballot question. 
  9.18     (b) "Expenditure" includes a cost incurred to design, 
  9.19  produce, or disseminate a communication if the communication 
  9.20  contains words such as "vote for," "reelect," "(name of 
  9.21  candidate) for (office)," "vote against," "defeat," or another 
  9.22  phrase or campaign slogan that in context can have no reasonable 
  9.23  meaning other than to advocate support for or opposition to the 
  9.24  nomination or election of one or more clearly identified 
  9.25  candidates. 
  9.26     (c) "Expenditure" is presumed to include a cost incurred to 
  9.27  design, produce, or disseminate a communication if the 
  9.28  communication names or depicts one or more clearly identified 
  9.29  candidates, is disseminated during the 45 days before a primary 
  9.30  election, the 60 days before a general election, or during a 
  9.31  special election cycle until election day, and the cost exceeds 
  9.32  the following amounts for a communication naming or depicting a 
  9.33  candidate for the following offices: 
  9.34     (1) $500 for a candidate for governor, lieutenant governor, 
  9.35  attorney general, secretary of state, or state auditor; or 
  9.36     (2) $100 for a candidate for state senator or 
 10.1   representative. 
 10.2      An individual or association presumed under this paragraph 
 10.3   to have made an expenditure may rebut the presumption by an 
 10.4   affidavit signed by the spender and filed with the board stating 
 10.5   that the cost was not incurred with intent to influence the 
 10.6   nomination, election, or defeat of any candidate, supported by 
 10.7   any additional evidence the spender chooses to submit.  The 
 10.8   board may consider any additional evidence it deems relevant and 
 10.9   material and must determine by a preponderance of the evidence 
 10.10  whether the cost was incurred with intent to influence the 
 10.11  nomination, election, or defeat of a candidate. 
 10.12     (d) An expenditure is considered to be made in the year in 
 10.13  which the candidate made the purchase of goods or services or 
 10.14  incurred an obligation to pay for goods or services. 
 10.15     (e) An expenditure made for the purpose of defeating a 
 10.16  candidate is considered made for the purpose of influencing the 
 10.17  nomination or election of that candidate or any opponent of that 
 10.18  candidate. 
 10.19     (f) Except as provided in clause (1), "expenditure" 
 10.20  includes the dollar value of a donation in kind. 
 10.21     "Expenditure" does not include: 
 10.22     (1) noncampaign disbursements as defined in subdivision 20; 
 10.23     (2) services provided without compensation by an individual 
 10.24  volunteering personal time on behalf of a candidate, ballot 
 10.25  question, political committee, political fund, principal 
 10.26  campaign committee, or party unit; 
 10.27     (3) the publishing or broadcasting of news items or 
 10.28  editorial comments by the news media, if the news medium is not 
 10.29  owned by or affiliated with any candidate or principal campaign 
 10.30  committee; or 
 10.31     (4) a cost incurred for a communication by a membership 
 10.32  organization, including a labor organization, to its members, or 
 10.33  a cost incurred for a communication by a corporation to its 
 10.34  executive or administrative personnel.  
 10.35     (g) For purposes of paragraph (f), clause (4), "labor 
 10.36  organization" means an organization of any kind, or any agency 
 11.1   or employee representative committee or plan, in which employees 
 11.2   participate and which exists for the purpose, in whole or in 
 11.3   part, of dealing with employers concerning grievances, labor 
 11.4   disputes, wages, rates of pay, hours of employment, or 
 11.5   conditions of work.  A local, national, or international union, 
 11.6   or a local or state central body of a federation of unions, is 
 11.7   each considered a separate labor organization for purposes of 
 11.8   paragraph (f), clause (4).  
 11.9      (h) For purposes of paragraph (f), clause (4), "executive 
 11.10  or administrative personnel" means individuals employed by a 
 11.11  corporation who are paid on a salary rather than an hourly basis 
 11.12  and who have policymaking, managerial, professional, or 
 11.13  supervisory responsibilities.  
 11.14     This definition includes individuals who run the 
 11.15  corporation's business, such as officers, other executives, and 
 11.16  plant, division, and section managers; and individuals following 
 11.17  the recognized professions, such as lawyers and engineers. 
 11.18     This definition does not include: 
 11.19     (1) professionals who are represented by a labor 
 11.20  organization; 
 11.21     (2) salaried foremen and other salaried lower-level 
 11.22  supervisors having direct supervision over hourly employees; 
 11.23     (3) former or retired personnel; or 
 11.24     (4) individuals who may be paid by the corporation, such as 
 11.25  consultants, but who are not employees of the corporation for 
 11.26  the purpose of the collection of, and liability for, employee 
 11.27  taxes. 
 11.28     Individuals on commission may be considered executive or 
 11.29  administrative personnel if they have policymaking, managerial, 
 11.30  professional, or supervisory responsibility and if the 
 11.31  individuals are employees of the corporation for the purpose of 
 11.32  the collection of, and liability for, employee taxes.  
 11.33     The Fair Labor Standards Act, United States Code, title 29, 
 11.34  chapter 8, and the regulations issued under the act may serve as 
 11.35  a guideline in determining whether individuals have 
 11.36  policymaking, managerial, professional, or supervisory 
 12.1   responsibilities.  
 12.2      (i) For purposes of paragraph (f), clause (4), "membership 
 12.3   organization" means an unincorporated association, trade 
 12.4   association, cooperative, corporation without capital stock, or 
 12.5   a local, national, or international labor organization that: 
 12.6      (1) is composed of members, some or all of whom are vested 
 12.7   with the power and authority to operate or administer the 
 12.8   organization, under the organization's articles, bylaws, 
 12.9   constitution, or other formal organizational documents; 
 12.10     (2) expressly states the qualifications and requirements 
 12.11  for membership in its articles, bylaws, constitution, or other 
 12.12  formal organizational documents; 
 12.13     (3) makes its articles, bylaws, constitution, or other 
 12.14  formal organizational documents available to its members; 
 12.15     (4) expressly solicits persons to become members; 
 12.16     (5) expressly acknowledges the acceptance of membership, 
 12.17  such as by sending a membership card or including the member's 
 12.18  name on a membership newsletter list; and 
 12.19     (6) is not organized primarily for the purpose of 
 12.20  influencing the nomination for election, or election, of any 
 12.21  individual for elected office.  
 12.22     (j) For purposes of paragraph (f), clause (4), the term 
 12.23  "members" includes all persons who are currently satisfying the 
 12.24  requirements for membership in a membership organization, 
 12.25  affirmatively accept the membership organization's invitation to 
 12.26  become a member, and either: 
 12.27     (1) have some significant financial attachment to the 
 12.28  membership organization, such as a significant investment or 
 12.29  ownership stake; 
 12.30     (2) pay membership dues at least annually of a specific 
 12.31  amount predetermined by the organization; or 
 12.32     (3) have a significant organizational attachment to the 
 12.33  membership organization that includes affirmation of membership 
 12.34  on at least an annual basis and direct participatory rights in 
 12.35  the governance of the organization.  For example, the rights 
 12.36  could include the right to vote directly or indirectly for at 
 13.1   least one individual on the membership organization's highest 
 13.2   governing board; the right to vote on policy questions where the 
 13.3   highest governing body of the membership organization is 
 13.4   obligated to abide by the results; the right to approve the 
 13.5   organization's annual budget; or the right to participate 
 13.6   directly in similar aspects of the organization's governance.  
 13.7      The board may determine, on a case-by-case basis, that 
 13.8   persons who do not precisely meet the definition of member but 
 13.9   have a relatively enduring and independently significant 
 13.10  financial or organizational attachment to the organization may 
 13.11  be considered members.  For example, student members who pay a 
 13.12  lower amount of dues while in school, long-term dues-paying 
 13.13  members who qualify for lifetime membership status with little 
 13.14  or no dues obligation, and retired members may be considered 
 13.15  members of the organization.  
 13.16     Members of a local union are considered to be members of 
 13.17  any national or international union of which the local union is 
 13.18  a part and of any federation with which the local, national, or 
 13.19  international union is affiliated.  
 13.20     In the case of a membership organization that has a 
 13.21  national federation structure or has several levels, including, 
 13.22  for example, national, state, regional, or local affiliates, a 
 13.23  person who qualifies as a member of any entity within the 
 13.24  federation or of any affiliate also qualifies as a member of all 
 13.25  affiliates.  
 13.26     (k) The status of a membership organization, and of 
 13.27  members, for purposes of paragraph (f), clause (4), must be 
 13.28  determined under paragraphs (i) and (j) and not by provisions of 
 13.29  state law governing unincorporated associations, trade 
 13.30  associations, cooperatives, corporations without capital stock, 
 13.31  or labor organizations.  
 13.32     Subd. 8.  [CANDIDATE.] "Candidate" means an individual who 
 13.33  seeks nomination or election as a state constitutional officer, 
 13.34  legislator, or judge.  An individual is deemed to seek 
 13.35  nomination or election if the individual has taken the action 
 13.36  necessary under the law of this state to qualify for nomination 
 14.1   or election, has received contributions or made expenditures in 
 14.2   excess of $100, or has given implicit or explicit consent for 
 14.3   any other person to receive contributions or make expenditures 
 14.4   in excess of $100, for the purpose of bringing about the 
 14.5   individual's nomination or election.  A candidate remains a 
 14.6   candidate until the candidate's principal campaign committee is 
 14.7   dissolved under section 10B.29. 
 14.8      Subd. 9.  [CONDUIT FUND.] "Conduit fund" means money, a 
 14.9   negotiable instrument, or a donation in kind collected by an 
 14.10  association from its employees and contributed to a candidate or 
 14.11  political committee only as directed by the employee from whom 
 14.12  the money was collected.  
 14.13     Subd. 10.  [CONTRIBUTION.] (a) "Contribution" means money, 
 14.14  a negotiable instrument, or a donation in kind that is given to 
 14.15  a political committee, political fund, conduit fund, principal 
 14.16  campaign committee, or party unit. 
 14.17     (b) "Contribution" includes a loan or advance of credit to 
 14.18  a political committee, political fund, principal campaign 
 14.19  committee, or party unit, if the loan or advance of credit is:  
 14.20  (1) forgiven; or (2) repaid by an individual or an association 
 14.21  other than the political committee, political fund, principal 
 14.22  campaign committee, or party unit to which the loan or advance 
 14.23  of credit was made.  If an advance of credit or a loan is 
 14.24  forgiven or repaid as provided in this paragraph, it is a 
 14.25  contribution in the year in which the loan or advance of credit 
 14.26  was made. 
 14.27     (c) "Contribution" does not include services provided 
 14.28  without compensation by an individual volunteering personal time 
 14.29  on behalf of a candidate, ballot question, political committee, 
 14.30  political fund, principal campaign committee, or party unit, or 
 14.31  the publishing or broadcasting of news items or editorial 
 14.32  comments by the news media. 
 14.33     Subd. 11.  [DEPOSITORY.] "Depository" means a bank, savings 
 14.34  association, or credit union organized under federal or state 
 14.35  law and transacting business within this state. 
 14.36     Subd. 12.  [DONATION IN KIND.] "Donation in kind" means 
 15.1   anything of value that is given, other than money or negotiable 
 15.2   instruments.  An approved expenditure is a donation in kind. 
 15.3      Subd. 13.  [ELECTION.] "Election" means a primary, special 
 15.4   primary, general, or special election. 
 15.5      Subd. 14.  [ELECTION CYCLE.] "Election cycle" means the 
 15.6   period from January 1 following a general election for an office 
 15.7   to December 31 following the next general election for that 
 15.8   office, except that "election cycle" for a special election 
 15.9   means the period from the date the special election writ is 
 15.10  issued to 60 days after the special election is held. 
 15.11     Subd. 15.  [FINANCIAL INSTITUTION.] "Financial institution" 
 15.12  means a lending institution chartered by an agency of the 
 15.13  federal government or regulated by the commissioner of commerce. 
 15.14     Subd. 16.  [INDEPENDENT EXPENDITURE.] (a) "Independent 
 15.15  expenditure" means an expenditure that is made without the 
 15.16  express or implied consent, authorization, or cooperation of, 
 15.17  and not in concert with or at the request or suggestion of, any 
 15.18  candidate or any candidate's principal campaign committee or 
 15.19  agent.  An independent expenditure is not a contribution to a 
 15.20  candidate. 
 15.21     (b) An expenditure is presumed to be not independent if, 
 15.22  for example: 
 15.23     (1) in the same election cycle in which the expenditure 
 15.24  occurs, the spender or the spender's agent retains the 
 15.25  professional services of an individual or entity that, in a 
 15.26  nonministerial capacity, provides or has provided 
 15.27  campaign-related service, including polling or other campaign 
 15.28  research, media consulting or production, direct mail, or 
 15.29  fund-raising, to a candidate supported by the spender for 
 15.30  nomination or election to the same office as any candidate whose 
 15.31  nomination or election the expenditure is intended to influence 
 15.32  or to a political party working in coordination with the 
 15.33  supported candidate; 
 15.34     (2) the expenditure pays for a communication that 
 15.35  disseminates, in whole or in substantial part, a broadcast or 
 15.36  written, graphic, or other form of campaign material designed, 
 16.1   produced, or distributed by the candidate, the candidate's 
 16.2   principal campaign committee, or their agents; 
 16.3      (3) the expenditure is based on information about the 
 16.4   candidate's electoral campaign plans, projects, or needs that is 
 16.5   directly or indirectly provided by the candidate, the 
 16.6   candidate's principal campaign committee, or their agents to the 
 16.7   spender or the spender's agent, with an express or tacit 
 16.8   understanding that the spender is considering making the 
 16.9   expenditure; 
 16.10     (4) before the election, the spender or the spender's agent 
 16.11  informs a candidate or the principal campaign committee or agent 
 16.12  of a candidate for the same office as a candidate clearly 
 16.13  identified in a communication paid for by the expenditure about 
 16.14  the communication's contents; timing, location, mode, or 
 16.15  frequency of dissemination; or intended audience; or 
 16.16     (5) in the same election cycle in which the expenditure 
 16.17  occurs, the spender or the spender's agent is serving or has 
 16.18  served in an executive, policymaking, fund-raising, or advisory 
 16.19  position with the candidate's campaign or has participated in 
 16.20  strategic or policymaking discussions with the candidate's 
 16.21  campaign relating to the candidate's pursuit of nomination or 
 16.22  election to office and the candidate is pursuing the same office 
 16.23  as a candidate whose nomination or election the expenditure is 
 16.24  intended to influence. 
 16.25     An individual or association presumed under this paragraph 
 16.26  to have made an expenditure that was not independent may rebut 
 16.27  the presumption by an affidavit signed by the spender and filed 
 16.28  with the board stating that the expenditure was made without the 
 16.29  express or implied consent, authorization, or cooperation of, 
 16.30  and not in concert with or at the request or suggestion of, any 
 16.31  candidate or any candidate's principal campaign committee or 
 16.32  agent, supported by any additional evidence the spender chooses 
 16.33  to submit.  The board may consider any additional evidence it 
 16.34  deems relevant and material and must determine by a 
 16.35  preponderance of the evidence whether the expenditure was 
 16.36  independent.  
 17.1      (c) An expenditure by anyone other than a principal 
 17.2   campaign committee that does not qualify as an independent 
 17.3   expenditure under this subdivision is deemed to be an approved 
 17.4   expenditure under subdivision 3. 
 17.5      Subd. 17.  [LOAN.] "Loan" means an advance of money or 
 17.6   anything of value made to a political committee, political fund, 
 17.7   principal campaign committee, or party unit. 
 17.8      Subd. 18.  [MAJOR POLITICAL PARTY.] "Major political party" 
 17.9   means a major political party as defined in section 200.02, 
 17.10  subdivision 7. 
 17.11     Subd. 19.  [MINOR POLITICAL PARTY.] "Minor political party" 
 17.12  means a minor political party as defined in section 200.02, 
 17.13  subdivision 23. 
 17.14     Subd. 20.  [NONCAMPAIGN DISBURSEMENT.] "Noncampaign 
 17.15  disbursement" means a purchase or payment of money or anything 
 17.16  of value made, or an advance of credit incurred, or a donation 
 17.17  in kind received, by a principal campaign committee for any of 
 17.18  the following purposes: 
 17.19     (1) payment for accounting and legal services; 
 17.20     (2) return of a contribution to the source; 
 17.21     (3) repayment of a loan made to the principal campaign 
 17.22  committee by that committee; 
 17.23     (4) return of a public subsidy; 
 17.24     (5) payment for food, beverages, entertainment, and 
 17.25  facility rental for a fund-raising event; 
 17.26     (6) services for a constituent by a member of the 
 17.27  legislature or a constitutional officer in the executive branch, 
 17.28  performed from the beginning of the term of office to 
 17.29  adjournment sine die of the legislature in the election year for 
 17.30  the office held, and one-half the cost of services for a 
 17.31  constituent by a member of the legislature or a constitutional 
 17.32  officer in the executive branch performed from adjournment sine 
 17.33  die to 60 days after adjournment sine die; 
 17.34     (7) payment for food and beverages provided to campaign 
 17.35  volunteers while they are engaged in campaign activities; 
 17.36     (8) payment of expenses incurred by elected or appointed 
 18.1   leaders of a legislative caucus in carrying out their leadership 
 18.2   responsibilities; 
 18.3      (9) payment by a principal campaign committee of the 
 18.4   candidate's expenses for serving in public office, other than 
 18.5   for personal uses; 
 18.6      (10) costs of child care for the candidate's children when 
 18.7   campaigning; 
 18.8      (11) fees paid to attend a campaign school; 
 18.9      (12) costs of a postelection party during the election year 
 18.10  when a candidate's name will no longer appear on a ballot or the 
 18.11  general election is concluded, whichever occurs first; 
 18.12     (13) interest on loans paid by a principal campaign 
 18.13  committee on outstanding loans; 
 18.14     (14) filing fees; 
 18.15     (15) notes or advertisements in the news media expressing 
 18.16  gratitude after the general election; 
 18.17     (16) the cost of campaign material purchased to replace 
 18.18  defective campaign material, if the defective material is 
 18.19  destroyed without being used; 
 18.20     (17) contributions to a party unit; and 
 18.21     (18) other purchases or payments specified in board rules 
 18.22  or advisory opinions as being for any purpose other than to 
 18.23  influence the nomination or election of a candidate or to 
 18.24  promote or defeat a ballot question. 
 18.25     The board must determine whether an activity involves a 
 18.26  noncampaign disbursement within the meaning of this subdivision. 
 18.27     A noncampaign disbursement is considered to be made in the 
 18.28  year in which the candidate made the purchase of goods or 
 18.29  services or incurred an obligation to pay for goods or services. 
 18.30     Subd. 21.  [POLITICAL COMMITTEE.] "Political committee" 
 18.31  means an association a major purpose of which is to influence 
 18.32  the nomination or election of a candidate or to promote or 
 18.33  defeat a ballot question, other than a principal campaign 
 18.34  committee or a political party unit. 
 18.35     Subd. 22.  [POLITICAL FUND.] "Political fund" means an 
 18.36  accumulation of dues or voluntary contributions by an 
 19.1   association other than a political committee, principal campaign 
 19.2   committee, or party unit, if the accumulation is collected or 
 19.3   expended to influence the nomination or election of a candidate 
 19.4   or to promote or defeat a ballot question. 
 19.5      Subd. 23.  [POLITICAL PARTY.] "Political party" means a 
 19.6   major political party or a minor political party.  A political 
 19.7   party is the aggregate of all its political party units in this 
 19.8   state.  
 19.9      Subd. 24.  [POLITICAL PARTY UNIT OR PARTY UNIT.] "Political 
 19.10  party unit" or "party unit" means the state committee or the 
 19.11  party organization within a house of the legislature, 
 19.12  congressional district, county, legislative district, 
 19.13  municipality, or precinct. 
 19.14     Subd. 25.  [POPULATION.] "Population" means the population 
 19.15  established by the most recent federal census, by a special 
 19.16  census taken by the United States Bureau of the Census, by an 
 19.17  estimate made by the metropolitan council, or by an estimate 
 19.18  made by the state demographer under section 4A.02, whichever has 
 19.19  the latest stated date of count or estimate. 
 19.20     Subd. 26.  [PRINCIPAL CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE.] "Principal 
 19.21  campaign committee" means a principal campaign committee formed 
 19.22  under section 10B.02. 
 19.23     Subd. 27.  [STATE COMMITTEE.] "State committee" means the 
 19.24  organization that, by virtue of the bylaws of a political party, 
 19.25  is responsible for the day-to-day operation of the political 
 19.26  party at the state level. 
 19.27     Sec. 15.  [10B.02] [PRINCIPAL CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE.] 
 19.28     Subdivision 1.  [SINGLE COMMITTEE.] A candidate must not 
 19.29  accept contributions from a source, other than self, in 
 19.30  aggregate in excess of $100 or accept a public subsidy unless 
 19.31  the candidate designates and causes to be formed a single 
 19.32  principal campaign committee for each office sought.  A 
 19.33  candidate may not authorize, designate, or cause to be formed 
 19.34  any other political committee bearing the candidate's name or 
 19.35  title or otherwise operating under the direct or indirect 
 19.36  control of the candidate.  However, a candidate may be involved 
 20.1   in the direct or indirect control of a party unit. 
 20.2      Subd. 2.  [REPLACEMENT OF OFFICERS.] A candidate may at any 
 20.3   time without cause remove and replace the chair, treasurer, 
 20.4   deputy treasurer, or any other officer of the candidate's 
 20.5   principal campaign committee. 
 20.6      Sec. 16.  [10B.03] [ORGANIZATION OF COMMITTEES AND PARTY 
 20.7   UNITS.] 
 20.8      Subdivision 1.  [CHAIR AND TREASURER.] A political 
 20.9   committee, principal campaign committee, or party unit must have 
 20.10  a chair and a treasurer.  The chair and treasurer may be the 
 20.11  same individual. 
 20.12     Subd. 2.  [TREASURER VACANCY.] A political committee, 
 20.13  principal campaign committee, or party unit may not accept a 
 20.14  contribution or make an expenditure or permit an expenditure to 
 20.15  be made on its behalf while the office of treasurer is vacant. 
 20.16     Subd. 3.  [DEPUTY TREASURERS.] The treasurer of a political 
 20.17  committee, principal campaign committee, or party unit may 
 20.18  appoint as many deputy treasurers as necessary and is 
 20.19  responsible for their accounts. 
 20.20     Subd. 4.  [DEPOSITORIES.] The treasurer of a political 
 20.21  committee, principal campaign committee, or party unit may 
 20.22  designate one or two depositories in each county in which a 
 20.23  campaign is conducted. 
 20.24     Subd. 5.  [COMMINGLING PROHIBITED.] A political committee, 
 20.25  principal campaign committee, or party unit may not commingle 
 20.26  its funds with personal funds of officers, members, or 
 20.27  associates of the committee. 
 20.28     Subd. 6.  [PENALTY.] A person who knowingly violates this 
 20.29  section is subject to a civil penalty imposed by the board of up 
 20.30  to $3,000. 
 20.31     Sec. 17.  [10B.04] [POLITICAL FUNDS.] 
 20.32     Subdivision 1.  [WHEN REQUIRED.] An association other than 
 20.33  a political committee or party unit may not contribute more than 
 20.34  $100 in aggregate in any one year to candidates, political 
 20.35  committees, or party units or make any approved or independent 
 20.36  expenditure or expenditure to promote or defeat a ballot 
 21.1   question unless the contribution or expenditure is made from a 
 21.2   political fund.  
 21.3      Subd. 2.  [COMMINGLING PROHIBITED.] The contents of a 
 21.4   political fund may not be commingled with other funds or with 
 21.5   the personal funds of an officer or member of the fund. 
 21.6      Subd. 3.  [TREASURER.] An association that has a political 
 21.7   fund must elect or appoint a treasurer of the political fund. 
 21.8      Subd. 4.  [TREASURER VACANCY.] A political fund may not 
 21.9   accept a contribution or make an expenditure or contribution 
 21.10  from the political fund while the office of treasurer of the 
 21.11  political fund is vacant. 
 21.12     Subd. 5.  [DUES OR MEMBERSHIP FEES.] An association may, if 
 21.13  not prohibited by other law, deposit in its political fund money 
 21.14  derived from dues or membership fees.  Under section 10B.12, the 
 21.15  treasurer of the fund must disclose the name of any member whose 
 21.16  dues, membership fees, and contributions deposited in the 
 21.17  political fund together exceed $100 in a year. 
 21.18     Subd. 6.  [PENALTY.] A person who knowingly violates this 
 21.19  section is subject to a civil penalty imposed by the board of up 
 21.20  to $3,000. 
 21.21     Sec. 18.  [10B.05] [CONDUIT FUNDS.] 
 21.22     Subdivision 1.  [COMMINGLING PROHIBITED.] The contents of a 
 21.23  conduit fund may not be commingled with other funds or with the 
 21.24  personal funds of an officer or member of the fund. 
 21.25     Subd. 2.  [TREASURER.] An association that has a conduit 
 21.26  fund must elect or appoint a treasurer of the fund. 
 21.27     Subd. 3.  [TREASURER VACANCY.] A conduit fund may not 
 21.28  accept a contribution or make an expenditure or contribution 
 21.29  from the fund while the office of treasurer of the fund is 
 21.30  vacant. 
 21.31     Subd. 4.  [PENALTY.] A person who knowingly violates this 
 21.32  section is subject to a civil penalty imposed by the board of up 
 21.33  to $3,000.  
 21.34     Sec. 19.  [10B.06] [ACCOUNTS THAT MUST BE KEPT.] 
 21.35     Subdivision 1.  [ACCOUNTS; PENALTY.] The treasurer of a 
 21.36  political committee, political fund, conduit fund, principal 
 22.1   campaign committee, or party unit must keep an account of: 
 22.2      (1) the sum of all contributions, except any donation in 
 22.3   kind valued at $20 or less, made to the committee, fund, or 
 22.4   party unit; 
 22.5      (2) the name and address of each source of a contribution 
 22.6   made to the committee, fund, or party unit in excess of $20, 
 22.7   together with the date and amount of each; 
 22.8      (3) each expenditure made by the committee, fund, or party 
 22.9   unit, together with the date and amount; 
 22.10     (4) each approved expenditure made on behalf of the 
 22.11  committee, fund, or party unit, together with the date and 
 22.12  amount; and 
 22.13     (5) the name and address of each political committee, 
 22.14  political fund, principal campaign committee, or party unit to 
 22.15  which contributions in excess of $20 have been made, together 
 22.16  with the date and amount. 
 22.17     A person who knowingly violates this subdivision is subject 
 22.18  to a civil penalty imposed by the board of up to $3,000. 
 22.19     Subd. 2.  [RECEIPTS.] The treasurer must obtain a receipted 
 22.20  bill, stating the particulars, for every expenditure over $100 
 22.21  made by, or approved expenditure over $100 made on behalf of, 
 22.22  the committee, fund, or party unit, and for any expenditure or 
 22.23  approved expenditure in a lesser amount if the aggregate amount 
 22.24  of lesser expenditures and approved expenditures made to the 
 22.25  same individual or association during the same year exceeds $100.
 22.26     Sec. 20.  [10B.07] [REGISTRATION.] 
 22.27     Subdivision 1.  [FIRST REGISTRATION.] The treasurer of a 
 22.28  political committee, political fund, conduit fund, principal 
 22.29  campaign committee, or party unit must register with the board 
 22.30  by filing a statement of organization no later than 14 days 
 22.31  after the committee, fund, or party unit has received 
 22.32  contributions or made contributions or expenditures in excess of 
 22.33  $100.  
 22.34     Subd. 2.  [FORM.] The statement of organization must 
 22.35  include: 
 22.36     (1) the name and address of the committee, fund, or party 
 23.1   unit; 
 23.2      (2) the name and address of the chair of a political 
 23.3   committee, principal campaign committee, or party unit; 
 23.4      (3) the name and address of any supporting association of a 
 23.5   political fund or conduit fund; 
 23.6      (4) the name and address of the treasurer and any deputy 
 23.7   treasurers and, for a principal campaign committee, any other 
 23.8   individual authorized to accept contributions on behalf of the 
 23.9   principal campaign committee; 
 23.10     (5) a listing of all depositories or safe deposit boxes 
 23.11  used; and 
 23.12     (6) for the state committee of a political party only, a 
 23.13  list of its party units. 
 23.14     Subd. 3.  [FAILURE TO FILE; PENALTY.] The board must send a 
 23.15  notice by certified mail to any individual who fails to file a 
 23.16  statement required by this section.  If the individual fails to 
 23.17  file a statement within ten business days after the notice was 
 23.18  sent, the board may impose a late filing fee of $5 per day, not 
 23.19  to exceed $100, commencing with the 11th day after the notice 
 23.20  was sent. 
 23.21     The board must send an additional notice by certified mail 
 23.22  to any individual who fails to file a statement within 14 days 
 23.23  after the first notice was sent by the board that the individual 
 23.24  may be subject to a civil penalty for failure to file the 
 23.25  report.  An individual who fails to file the statement within 
 23.26  seven days after the second notice was sent by the board is 
 23.27  subject to a civil penalty imposed by the board of up to $3,000. 
 23.28     Sec. 21.  [10B.08] [CONTRIBUTIONS.] 
 23.29     Subdivision 1.  [ANONYMOUS CONTRIBUTIONS.] A political 
 23.30  committee, political fund, conduit fund, principal campaign 
 23.31  committee, or party unit may not retain an anonymous 
 23.32  contribution in excess of $20, but must forward it to the board 
 23.33  for deposit in the general fund. 
 23.34     Subd. 2.  [SOURCE; AMOUNT; DATE.] An individual who 
 23.35  receives a contribution in excess of $20 for a political 
 23.36  committee, political fund, conduit fund, principal campaign 
 24.1   committee, or party unit must, on demand of the treasurer, 
 24.2   inform the treasurer of the name and, if known, the address of 
 24.3   the source of the contribution, the amount of the contribution, 
 24.4   and the date it was received. 
 24.5      Subd. 3.  [DEPOSIT.] All contributions received by or on 
 24.6   behalf of a candidate, principal campaign committee, political 
 24.7   committee, political fund, conduit fund, or party unit must be 
 24.8   deposited in an account designated "Campaign Fund of ....... 
 24.9   (name of candidate, committee, fund, or party unit)."  All 
 24.10  contributions must be deposited promptly upon receipt and, 
 24.11  except for contributions received during the last three days of 
 24.12  a reporting period as described in section 10B.12, must be 
 24.13  deposited during the reporting period in which they were 
 24.14  received.  A contribution received during the last three days of 
 24.15  a reporting period must be deposited within 72 hours after 
 24.16  receipt and must be reported as received during the reporting 
 24.17  period whether or not it was deposited within that period.  A 
 24.18  candidate, principal campaign committee, political committee, 
 24.19  political fund, conduit fund, or party unit may refuse to accept 
 24.20  a contribution.  A deposited contribution may be returned to the 
 24.21  contributor within 60 days after deposit.  A contribution 
 24.22  deposited and not returned within 60 days after that deposit 
 24.23  must be reported as accepted. 
 24.24     Subd. 4.  [EXCESS.] A treasurer of a principal campaign 
 24.25  committee of a candidate may not deposit a contribution that on 
 24.26  its face exceeds the limit on contributions to the candidate 
 24.27  prescribed by section 10B.13 unless, at the time of deposit, the 
 24.28  treasurer issues a check to the source for the amount of the 
 24.29  excess. 
 24.30     Subd. 5.  [ATTRIBUTABLE CONTRIBUTIONS.] Contributions made 
 24.31  to a candidate or principal campaign committee that are directed 
 24.32  to the candidate or principal campaign committee by a political 
 24.33  fund, committee, or party unit must be reported as attributable 
 24.34  to the political fund, committee, or party unit and count toward 
 24.35  the contribution limits of that fund, committee, or political 
 24.36  party specified in section 10B.13, if the fund, committee, or 
 25.1   party was organized or is operated primarily to direct 
 25.2   contributions other than from its own money to one or more 
 25.3   candidates or principal campaign committees.  The treasurer of 
 25.4   the political fund, committee, or party unit must advise the 
 25.5   candidate or the candidate's principal campaign committee if the 
 25.6   contribution or contributions are not from the money of the 
 25.7   fund, committee, or party unit and the original source of the 
 25.8   money.  As used in this subdivision, "direct" includes, but is 
 25.9   not limited to, order, command, control, or instruct.  A 
 25.10  violation of this subdivision is a violation of section 10B.15. 
 25.11     Subd. 6.  [RELATED COMMITTEES.] An individual, association, 
 25.12  political committee, political fund, or party unit may 
 25.13  establish, finance, maintain, or control a political committee, 
 25.14  political fund, or party unit.  One who does this is a 
 25.15  "parent."  The political committee, fund, or party unit so 
 25.16  established, financed, maintained, or controlled is a 
 25.17  "subsidiary."  If the parent is an association, the association 
 25.18  must create a political committee or political fund to serve as 
 25.19  the parent for reporting purposes.  A subsidiary must report its 
 25.20  contribution to a candidate or principal campaign committee as 
 25.21  attributable to its parent, and the contribution is counted 
 25.22  toward the contribution limits in section 10B.13 of the parent 
 25.23  as well as of the subsidiary. 
 25.24     Subd. 7.  [PENALTY.] A person who knowingly violates this 
 25.25  section is subject to a civil penalty imposed by the board of up 
 25.26  to $3,000. 
 25.27     Subd. 8.  [REGISTRATION NUMBER ON CHECKS.] A contribution 
 25.28  made to a candidate by a lobbyist, political committee, 
 25.29  political fund, conduit fund, or party unit must show the name 
 25.30  of the lobbyist, political committee, political fund, conduit 
 25.31  fund, or party unit and the number under which it is registered 
 25.32  with the board. 
 25.33     Sec. 22.  [10B.09] [EARMARKING CONTRIBUTIONS PROHIBITED.] 
 25.34     An individual, political committee, political fund, 
 25.35  principal campaign committee, or party unit may not solicit or 
 25.36  accept a contribution from any source with the express or 
 26.1   implied condition that the contribution or any part of it be 
 26.2   directed to a particular candidate other than the initial 
 26.3   recipient.  A person who knowingly accepts an earmarked 
 26.4   contribution is guilty of a gross misdemeanor and subject to a 
 26.5   civil penalty imposed by the board of up to $3,000. 
 26.6      Sec. 23.  [10B.10] [EXPENDITURES.] 
 26.7      Subdivision 1.  [AUTHORIZATION.] A political committee, 
 26.8   political fund, conduit fund, principal campaign committee, or 
 26.9   party unit may not expend money unless the expenditure is 
 26.10  authorized by the treasurer or deputy treasurer of that 
 26.11  committee, fund, or party unit. 
 26.12     Subd. 2.  [WRITTEN AUTHORIZATION.] An individual or 
 26.13  association may not make an approved expenditure of more than 
 26.14  $20 without receiving written authorization from the treasurer 
 26.15  of the principal campaign committee of the candidate who 
 26.16  approved the expenditure stating the amount that may be spent 
 26.17  and the purpose of the expenditure. 
 26.18     Subd. 3.  [PETTY CASH.] The treasurer or deputy treasurer 
 26.19  of a political committee, principal campaign committee, or party 
 26.20  unit may sign vouchers for petty cash of up to $100 per week for 
 26.21  statewide elections or $20 per week for legislative elections, 
 26.22  to be used for miscellaneous expenditures. 
 26.23     Subd. 4.  [PERSONAL LOANS.] A principal campaign committee, 
 26.24  political committee, political fund, or party unit may not lend 
 26.25  money it has raised to anyone for purposes not related to the 
 26.26  conduct of a campaign.  
 26.27     Subd. 5.  [INDEPENDENT EXPENDITURES.] An individual, 
 26.28  political committee, political fund, principal campaign 
 26.29  committee, or party unit that independently solicits or accepts 
 26.30  contributions or makes independent expenditures on behalf of a 
 26.31  candidate must publicly disclose that the expenditure is an 
 26.32  independent expenditure.  All written communications with those 
 26.33  from whom contributions are independently solicited or accepted 
 26.34  or to whom independent expenditures are made on behalf of a 
 26.35  candidate must contain a statement in conspicuous type that the 
 26.36  activity is an independent expenditure and is not approved by 
 27.1   the candidate nor is the candidate responsible for it.  Similar 
 27.2   language must be included in all oral communications, in 
 27.3   conspicuous type on the front page of all literature and 
 27.4   advertisements published or posted, and at the end of all 
 27.5   broadcast advertisements made by that individual, political 
 27.6   committee, political fund, principal campaign committee, or 
 27.7   party unit on the candidate's behalf. 
 27.8      Subd. 6.  [PENALTY.] A person who knowingly violates 
 27.9   subdivision 2 is subject to a civil penalty imposed by the board 
 27.10  of up to $3,000. 
 27.11     Sec. 24.  [10B.11] [TIME FOR RENDERING BILLS, CHARGES, OR 
 27.12  CLAIMS; PENALTY.] 
 27.13     A person who has a bill, charge, or claim against a 
 27.14  political committee, political fund, principal campaign 
 27.15  committee, or party unit for an expenditure must render in 
 27.16  writing to the treasurer of the committee, fund, or party unit 
 27.17  the bill, charge, or claim within 60 days after the material or 
 27.18  service is provided.  A person who knowingly violates this 
 27.19  section is subject to a civil penalty imposed by the board of up 
 27.20  to $3,000. 
 27.21     Sec. 25.  [10B.12] [CAMPAIGN REPORTS.] 
 27.22     Subdivision 1.  [FIRST FILING; DURATION.] The treasurer of 
 27.23  a political committee, political fund, conduit fund, principal 
 27.24  campaign committee, or party unit must begin to file the reports 
 27.25  required by this section in the first year it receives 
 27.26  contributions or makes contributions or expenditures in excess 
 27.27  of $100 and must continue to file until the committee, fund, or 
 27.28  party unit is terminated.  If the position of treasurer of a 
 27.29  principal campaign committee, political committee, political 
 27.30  fund, or party unit is vacant, the candidate, chair of a 
 27.31  political committee or party unit, or association officer of a 
 27.32  political fund is responsible for filing reports required by 
 27.33  this section.  
 27.34     Subd. 2.  [TIME FOR FILING.] (a) The reports must be filed 
 27.35  with the board on or before January 31 of each year and 
 27.36  additional reports must be filed as required and in accordance 
 28.1   with paragraphs (b) to (d).  
 28.2      (b) In each year in which the name of the candidate is on 
 28.3   the ballot, the reports of the principal campaign committee must 
 28.4   be filed by April 30, July 31, and November 30, and 15 days 
 28.5   before a primary and ten days before a general election, seven 
 28.6   days before a special primary and a special election, and ten 
 28.7   days after a special election cycle.  
 28.8      (c) In each general election year, a political committee, 
 28.9   political fund, conduit fund, or party unit must file reports by 
 28.10  April 30, July 31, and November 30, and 15 days before a primary 
 28.11  and ten days before a general election. 
 28.12     (d) A political committee, political fund, conduit fund, or 
 28.13  party unit that makes contributions or expenditures related to a 
 28.14  special election must file reports on the contributions or 
 28.15  expenditures seven days before the special primary and special 
 28.16  election and ten days after the special election cycle. 
 28.17     Subd. 3.  [ELECTRONIC FILING; PUBLICATION.] When 
 28.18  contributions or expenditures exceed $5,000 in a year, the 
 28.19  report must be filed with the board in an electronic format 
 28.20  approved by the board.  Regardless of whether the report is 
 28.21  filed electronically, the board must publish the report on its 
 28.22  Web site within seven days after the date it was due.  The 
 28.23  publication must be in a form that permits a user of the Web 
 28.24  site to search the reports and prepare comparisons and 
 28.25  cross-tabulations among the various candidates, contributors, 
 28.26  vendors, and committees. 
 28.27     Subd. 4.  [CONTENTS OF REPORT; POLITICAL COMMITTEES AND 
 28.28  POLITICAL FUNDS.] (a) The report by a political committee or 
 28.29  political fund must disclose the amount of liquid assets on hand 
 28.30  at the beginning of the reporting period.  
 28.31     (b) The report must disclose the name, address, and 
 28.32  employer, or occupation if self-employed, of each individual or 
 28.33  association that has made one or more contributions to the 
 28.34  reporting entity, including the purchase of tickets for a 
 28.35  fund-raising effort, that in aggregate within the year exceed 
 28.36  $50, together with the amount and date of each contribution, and 
 29.1   the aggregate amount of contributions within the year from each 
 29.2   source so disclosed.  A donation in kind must be disclosed at 
 29.3   its fair market value.  An approved expenditure must be listed 
 29.4   as a donation in kind.  A donation in kind is considered 
 29.5   consumed in the reporting period in which it is received.  The 
 29.6   names of contributors must be listed in alphabetical order.  
 29.7   Contributions from the same contributor must be listed under the 
 29.8   same name.  When a contribution received from a contributor in a 
 29.9   reporting period is added to previously reported unitemized 
 29.10  contributions from the same contributor and the aggregate 
 29.11  exceeds the disclosure threshold of this paragraph, the name, 
 29.12  address, and employer, or occupation if self-employed, of the 
 29.13  contributor must then be listed on the report. 
 29.14     (c) The report must disclose the sum of contributions to 
 29.15  the reporting entity and the sum of all contributions received 
 29.16  through each conduit fund and through all conduit funds during 
 29.17  the reporting period.  The report must include the name and 
 29.18  registration number of each conduit fund from which a 
 29.19  contribution was received.  
 29.20     (d) The report must disclose each loan made or received by 
 29.21  the reporting entity within the year in aggregate in excess of 
 29.22  $50, continuously reported until repaid or forgiven, together 
 29.23  with the name, address, occupation, and principal place of 
 29.24  business, if any, of the lender and any endorser, and the date 
 29.25  and amount of the loan.  If a loan made to the principal 
 29.26  campaign committee of a candidate is forgiven or is repaid by an 
 29.27  entity other than that principal campaign committee, it must be 
 29.28  reported as a contribution for the year in which the loan was 
 29.29  made.  
 29.30     (e) The report must disclose each receipt over $50 during 
 29.31  the reporting period not otherwise listed under paragraphs (b) 
 29.32  to (d).  
 29.33     (f) The report must disclose the sum of all receipts of the 
 29.34  reporting entity during the reporting period.  
 29.35     (g) The report must disclose the name and address of each 
 29.36  individual or association to whom aggregate expenditures, 
 30.1   including approved expenditures, have been made by or on behalf 
 30.2   of the reporting entity within the year in excess of $100, 
 30.3   together with the amount, date, and purpose of each expenditure 
 30.4   and the name and address of, and office sought by, each 
 30.5   candidate on whose behalf the expenditure was made, 
 30.6   identification of the ballot question that the expenditure was 
 30.7   intended to promote or defeat, and in the case of independent 
 30.8   expenditures made in opposition to a candidate, the candidate's 
 30.9   name, address, and office sought.  A reporting entity making an 
 30.10  expenditure on behalf of more than one candidate for state or 
 30.11  legislative office must allocate the expenditure among the 
 30.12  candidates on a reasonable cost basis and report the allocation 
 30.13  for each candidate. 
 30.14     (h) The report must disclose the sum of all expenditures 
 30.15  made by or on behalf of the reporting entity during the 
 30.16  reporting period.  
 30.17     (i) The report must disclose the amount and nature of an 
 30.18  advance of credit incurred by the reporting entity, continuously 
 30.19  reported until paid or forgiven.  If an advance of credit 
 30.20  incurred by the principal campaign committee of a candidate is 
 30.21  forgiven by the creditor or paid by an entity other than that 
 30.22  principal campaign committee, it must be reported as a donation 
 30.23  in kind for the year in which the advance of credit was made. 
 30.24     (j) The report must disclose the name and address of each 
 30.25  political committee, political fund, principal campaign 
 30.26  committee, or party unit to which contributions have been made 
 30.27  that aggregate in excess of $100 within the year and the amount 
 30.28  and date of each contribution. 
 30.29     (k) The report must disclose the sum of all contributions 
 30.30  made by the reporting entity during the reporting period.  
 30.31     (l) The report must disclose the name and address of each 
 30.32  individual or association to whom noncampaign disbursements have 
 30.33  been made that aggregate in excess of $100 within the year by or 
 30.34  on behalf of the reporting entity and the amount, date, and 
 30.35  purpose of each noncampaign disbursement.  
 30.36     (m) The report must disclose the sum of all noncampaign 
 31.1   disbursements made within the year by or on behalf of the 
 31.2   reporting entity.  
 31.3      (n) The report must disclose the name and address of a 
 31.4   nonprofit corporation that provides administrative assistance to 
 31.5   a political committee or political fund as authorized by section 
 31.6   211B.15, subdivision 17, the type of administrative assistance 
 31.7   provided, and the aggregate fair market value of each type of 
 31.8   assistance provided to the political committee or political fund 
 31.9   during the reporting period.  
 31.10     Subd. 5.  [CONTENTS OF REPORT; CONDUIT FUNDS.] A report by 
 31.11  a conduit fund under this section must disclose the sum of all 
 31.12  contributions received by the fund and the sum of all 
 31.13  contributions made to each political committee, political fund, 
 31.14  principal campaign committee, or party unit and to all of them 
 31.15  together during the reporting period.  The report must include 
 31.16  the registration number of each recipient of contributions from 
 31.17  the conduit fund.  
 31.18     Subd. 6.  [PERIOD OF REPORT.] A report must cover the 
 31.19  period from the last day covered by the previous report to seven 
 31.20  days before the filing date, except that the report due on 
 31.21  January 31 must cover the period from the last day covered by 
 31.22  the previous report to December 31. 
 31.23     Subd. 7.  [REPORT OF EXCESS CONTRIBUTIONS.] (a) The 
 31.24  treasurer of the principal campaign committee of a candidate who 
 31.25  has not signed a spending limit agreement under section 10B.20 
 31.26  must file with the board within seven days after the committee 
 31.27  has received aggregate contributions in excess of the 
 31.28  expenditure limit for any participating opponent of the 
 31.29  candidate a report disclosing the sum of the excess 
 31.30  contributions.  The treasurer must file an additional report 
 31.31  each Monday if the committee received additional contributions 
 31.32  during the week ending the previous Friday. 
 31.33     (b) During the last three weeks before the primary or 
 31.34  general election, and during the last two weeks before a special 
 31.35  primary or special election, the treasurer must file the report 
 31.36  within 48 hours after the aggregate contributions received since 
 32.1   the last report exceed the limit for a single contribution to 
 32.2   the candidate.  
 32.3      Subd. 8.  [REPORT WHEN NO COMMITTEE.] A candidate who does 
 32.4   not designate and cause to be formed a principal campaign 
 32.5   committee and an individual who makes independent expenditures 
 32.6   or expenditures expressly advocating the approval or defeat of a 
 32.7   ballot question in aggregate in excess of $100 in a year must 
 32.8   file with the board a report containing the information required 
 32.9   by subdivision 4.  Reports required by this subdivision must be 
 32.10  filed on the dates on which reports by committees, funds, and 
 32.11  party units are filed. 
 32.12     Subd. 9.  [AFFIDAVIT OF INDEPENDENCE.] An individual, 
 32.13  political committee, political fund, or party unit filing a 
 32.14  report or statement disclosing an independent expenditure under 
 32.15  subdivision 4, 8, or 10 must file with the report an affidavit 
 32.16  naming the candidate whose nomination, election, or defeat the 
 32.17  independent expenditure was intended to advocate and stating 
 32.18  that the disclosed expenditures were not made with the 
 32.19  authorization or expressed or implied consent of, or in 
 32.20  cooperation or in concert with, or at the request or suggestion 
 32.21  of any candidate or any candidate's principal campaign committee 
 32.22  or agent. 
 32.23     Subd. 10.  [INDEPENDENT EXPENDITURES; NOTICE; REPORT.] (a) 
 32.24  Within 48 hours after an individual, political committee, 
 32.25  political fund, or party unit causes to be disseminated a 
 32.26  communication that has been or will be paid for in whole or in 
 32.27  part by one or more independent expenditures that in aggregate 
 32.28  within the election cycle exceed $500, the individual, political 
 32.29  committee, political fund, or party unit must file with the 
 32.30  board a notice of the intent to make the independent expenditure.
 32.31     (b) The notice must contain the information with respect to 
 32.32  the expenditures that is required to be reported under 
 32.33  subdivision 4, paragraph (g), except that if an expenditure is 
 32.34  reported before it is made, the notice must include a reasonable 
 32.35  estimate of the anticipated amount.  Each additional expenditure 
 32.36  requires a new notice. 
 33.1      (c) The notice must also include a description of the 
 33.2   content of the communication for which the expenditure was or 
 33.3   will be made, including a copy of any printed advertisement or a 
 33.4   transcript of any broadcast advertisement.  If the advertisement 
 33.5   was printed or broadcast more than once in the same form, the 
 33.6   description must include a list of the date, time, and location 
 33.7   of each printing or broadcast.  If the advertisement was printed 
 33.8   or broadcast in substantially the same form for more than one 
 33.9   candidate, the description need include only a copy of the 
 33.10  standard form, a description of the content that was different 
 33.11  for different candidates, and a list of the candidates on whose 
 33.12  behalf it was printed or broadcast.  A complaint alleging a 
 33.13  violation of this paragraph must be brought no later than three 
 33.14  months after the notice was due. 
 33.15     (d) During the last three weeks before the primary or 
 33.16  general election, and during the last two weeks before a special 
 33.17  primary or special election, the notice must be filed within 24 
 33.18  hours after the communication is disseminated. 
 33.19     (e) An individual or association may file a complaint with 
 33.20  the board that a required notice was not filed or that a notice 
 33.21  filed under this subdivision was false.  The board must 
 33.22  determine the complaint promptly.  If the board determines that 
 33.23  a notice was false and the board has distributed a public 
 33.24  subsidy to a candidate based on the false notice, the candidate 
 33.25  must return the subsidy to the board. 
 33.26     Subd. 11.  [STATEMENT OF INACTIVITY.] If a reporting entity 
 33.27  has no receipts or expenditures during a reporting period, the 
 33.28  treasurer must file with the board at the time required by this 
 33.29  section a statement to that effect. 
 33.30     Subd. 12.  [EXEMPTION FROM DISCLOSURE.] The board must 
 33.31  exempt a member of or contributor to an association, or any 
 33.32  other individual, from the requirements of this section if the 
 33.33  member, contributor, or other individual demonstrates by clear 
 33.34  and convincing evidence that disclosure would expose the member 
 33.35  or contributor to economic reprisals, loss of employment, or 
 33.36  threat of physical coercion. 
 34.1      An association may seek an exemption for all of its members 
 34.2   or contributors if it demonstrates by clear and convincing 
 34.3   evidence that a substantial number of its members or 
 34.4   contributors would suffer a restrictive effect on their freedom 
 34.5   of association if members were required to seek exemptions 
 34.6   individually. 
 34.7      Subd. 13.  [EXEMPTION PROCEDURE.] An individual or 
 34.8   association seeking an exemption under subdivision 12 must 
 34.9   submit a written application for exemption to the board.  The 
 34.10  board, without hearing, must grant or deny the exemption within 
 34.11  30 days after receiving the application and must issue a written 
 34.12  order stating the reasons for its action.  The board must 
 34.13  publish its order in the State Register and give notice to all 
 34.14  parties known to the board to have an interest in the matter.  
 34.15  If the board receives a written objection to its action from any 
 34.16  party within 20 days after publication of its order and 
 34.17  notification of interested parties, the board must hold a 
 34.18  contested case hearing on the matter.  Upon the filing of a 
 34.19  timely objection from the applicant, an order denying an 
 34.20  exemption is suspended pending the outcome of the contested 
 34.21  case.  If no timely objection is received, the exemption 
 34.22  continues in effect until a written objection is filed with the 
 34.23  board in a succeeding election year.  The board must adopt rules 
 34.24  establishing a procedure so that an individual seeking an 
 34.25  exemption may proceed anonymously if the individual would be 
 34.26  exposed to the reprisals listed in subdivision 12 if the 
 34.27  individual's identity were to be revealed for the purposes of 
 34.28  the notice or a hearing. 
 34.29     Subd. 14.  [FAILURE TO FILE; PENALTY.] The board must send 
 34.30  a notice by certified mail to any individual who fails to file a 
 34.31  report required by this section.  If an individual fails to file 
 34.32  a report due January 31 within ten business days after the 
 34.33  notice was sent, the board may impose a late filing fee of $10 
 34.34  per day, not to exceed $500, commencing on the 11th day after 
 34.35  the notice was sent.  If an individual fails to file any other 
 34.36  report due during an election year within three days after the 
 35.1   date due, regardless of whether the individual has received any 
 35.2   notice, the board may impose a late filing fee of $50 per day, 
 35.3   not to exceed $500, commencing on the fourth day after the date 
 35.4   the report was due.  
 35.5      The board must send an additional notice by certified mail 
 35.6   to an individual who fails to file a statement within 14 days 
 35.7   after the first notice was sent by the board that the individual 
 35.8   may be subject to a civil penalty for failure to file a 
 35.9   statement.  An individual who fails to file the statement within 
 35.10  seven days after the second notice was sent by the board is 
 35.11  subject to a civil penalty imposed by the board of up to $3,000. 
 35.12     Subd. 15.  [THIRD-PARTY REIMBURSEMENT.] An individual or 
 35.13  association filing a report disclosing an expenditure or 
 35.14  noncampaign disbursement that must be reported and itemized 
 35.15  under subdivision 4, paragraph (g) or (l), that is a 
 35.16  reimbursement to a third party must report the purpose of each 
 35.17  expenditure or disbursement for which the third party is being 
 35.18  reimbursed.  An expenditure or disbursement is a reimbursement 
 35.19  to a third party if it is for goods or services that were not 
 35.20  directly provided by the individual or association to whom the 
 35.21  expenditure or disbursement is made.  Third-party reimbursements 
 35.22  include payments to credit card companies and reimbursement of 
 35.23  individuals for expenses they have incurred. 
 35.24     Subd. 16.  [REPORTS BY SOLICITORS.] An individual or 
 35.25  association, other than a candidate or the members of a 
 35.26  candidate's principal campaign committee, that directly solicits 
 35.27  and causes others to make contributions to candidates or a party 
 35.28  unit in a house of the legislature, that aggregate more than 
 35.29  $5,000 between January 1 of a general election year and the end 
 35.30  of the reporting period must file with the board a report 
 35.31  disclosing the amount of each contribution, the names of the 
 35.32  contributors, and to whom the contributions were given.  The 
 35.33  report must be filed 15 days before a primary and ten days 
 35.34  before a general election.  The report for each calendar year 
 35.35  must be filed with the board by January 31 of the following year.
 35.36     Subd. 17.  [EQUITABLE RELIEF.] A candidate whose opponent 
 36.1   does not timely file the report due 15 days before the primary, 
 36.2   the report due ten days before the general election, or the 
 36.3   notice required under section 10B.17, subdivision 6, may 
 36.4   petition the district court for immediate equitable relief to 
 36.5   enforce the filing requirement.  A prevailing party under this 
 36.6   subdivision may be awarded attorney fees and costs by the court. 
 36.7      Sec. 26.  [10B.13] [CONTRIBUTION LIMITS.] 
 36.8      Subdivision 1.  [CONTRIBUTION LIMITS.] (a) Except as 
 36.9   provided in paragraph (b), a candidate must not permit the 
 36.10  candidate's principal campaign committee to accept aggregate 
 36.11  contributions made or delivered by an individual, political 
 36.12  committee, or political fund in excess of the following: 
 36.13     (1) to candidates for governor and lieutenant governor 
 36.14  running together, $2,000 in an election cycle; 
 36.15     (2) to a candidate for attorney general, secretary of 
 36.16  state, or state auditor, $1,000 in an election cycle; 
 36.17     (3) to a candidate for state senator, $500 in an election 
 36.18  cycle; and 
 36.19     (4) to a candidate for state representative, $500 in an 
 36.20  election cycle. 
 36.21     (b) A candidate who accepts a public subsidy must not 
 36.22  permit the candidate's principal campaign committee to accept 
 36.23  aggregate contributions made or delivered by an individual, 
 36.24  political committee, or political fund in excess of $50 in an 
 36.25  election cycle. 
 36.26     (c) The following deliveries are not subject to the 
 36.27  bundling limitation in this subdivision: 
 36.28     (1) delivery of contributions collected by a member of the 
 36.29  candidate's principal campaign committee who was registered with 
 36.30  the board to accept contributions on behalf of the committee 
 36.31  before the contributions were accepted; and 
 36.32     (2) a delivery made by an individual on behalf of the 
 36.33  individual's spouse.  
 36.34     (d) A political committee or political fund must not make a 
 36.35  contribution a candidate is prohibited from accepting. 
 36.36     Subd. 2.  [POLITICAL PARTY AND DISSOLVING PRINCIPAL 
 37.1   CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE LIMIT.] A nonparticipating candidate must not 
 37.2   permit the candidate's principal campaign committee to accept 
 37.3   contributions, including approved expenditures, from any 
 37.4   political party units in aggregate in excess of ten times the 
 37.5   amount that may be contributed to that candidate under 
 37.6   subdivision 1.  
 37.7      Subd. 3.  [EXCESS LOANS PROHIBITED.] A candidate must not 
 37.8   permit the candidate's principal campaign committee to accept a 
 37.9   loan from other than a financial institution for an amount in 
 37.10  excess of the contribution limits imposed by this section.  A 
 37.11  candidate must not permit the candidate's principal campaign 
 37.12  committee to accept a loan from a financial institution for 
 37.13  which the financial institution may hold an endorser of the loan 
 37.14  liable to pay an amount in excess of the amount that the 
 37.15  endorser may contribute to that candidate. 
 37.16     Subd. 4.  [CONTRIBUTIONS TO AND FROM OTHER CANDIDATES.] (a) 
 37.17  A candidate or the treasurer of a candidate's principal campaign 
 37.18  committee must not accept a contribution from another 
 37.19  candidate's principal campaign committee or from any other 
 37.20  committee bearing the contributing candidate's name or title or 
 37.21  otherwise authorized by the contributing candidate, unless the 
 37.22  contributing candidate's principal campaign committee is being 
 37.23  dissolved.  A candidate's principal campaign committee must not 
 37.24  make a contribution to another candidate's principal campaign 
 37.25  committee, except when the contributing committee is being 
 37.26  dissolved.  
 37.27     (b) A principal campaign committee that makes a 
 37.28  contribution to another principal campaign committee must 
 37.29  provide with the contribution a written statement of the 
 37.30  committee's intent to dissolve and terminate its registration 
 37.31  within 12 months after the contribution was made.  If the 
 37.32  committee fails to dissolve and terminate its registration by 
 37.33  that time, the board may levy a civil penalty up to four times 
 37.34  the size of the contribution against the contributing 
 37.35  committee.  A contribution from a terminating principal campaign 
 37.36  committee that is not accepted by another principal campaign 
 38.1   committee must be forwarded to the board for deposit in the 
 38.2   state treasury and credit to the general fund.  
 38.3      (c) A candidate's principal campaign committee must not 
 38.4   accept a contribution from, or make a contribution to, a 
 38.5   committee associated with a person who seeks nomination or 
 38.6   election to the office of president, senator, or representative 
 38.7   in Congress of the United States. 
 38.8      (d) A candidate or the treasurer of a candidate's principal 
 38.9   campaign committee must not accept a contribution from a 
 38.10  candidate for political subdivision office in any state, unless 
 38.11  the contribution is from the personal funds of the candidate for 
 38.12  political subdivision office.  A candidate or the treasurer of a 
 38.13  candidate's principal campaign committee must not make a 
 38.14  contribution from the principal campaign committee to a 
 38.15  candidate for political subdivision office in any state. 
 38.16     Subd. 5.  [LIMITED PERSONAL CONTRIBUTIONS.] A participating 
 38.17  candidate may not contribute to the candidate's own campaign 
 38.18  more than $500 in an election cycle. 
 38.19     Subd. 6.  [CONTRIBUTIONS FROM CERTAIN TYPES OF 
 38.20  CONTRIBUTORS.] A candidate must not permit the candidate's 
 38.21  principal campaign committee to accept a contribution from a 
 38.22  political committee, political fund, lobbyist, or large 
 38.23  contributor, if the contribution will cause the aggregate 
 38.24  contributions from those types of contributors to exceed an 
 38.25  amount equal to 20 percent of the expenditure limits for the 
 38.26  office sought by the candidate, provided that the 20 percent 
 38.27  limit must be rounded to the nearest $100.  For purposes of this 
 38.28  subdivision, "large contributor" means an individual, other than 
 38.29  the candidate, who contributes an amount that is more than $100 
 38.30  and more than one-half the amount an individual may contribute. 
 38.31     Subd. 7.  [UNREGISTERED ASSOCIATION LIMIT; STATEMENT; 
 38.32  PENALTY.] (a) The treasurer of a political committee, political 
 38.33  fund, principal campaign committee, or party unit must not 
 38.34  accept a contribution of more than $100 from an association not 
 38.35  registered under this chapter unless the contribution is 
 38.36  accompanied by a written statement that meets the disclosure and 
 39.1   reporting period requirements imposed by section 10B.12.  This 
 39.2   statement must be certified as true and correct by an officer of 
 39.3   the contributing association.  The committee, fund, or party 
 39.4   unit that accepts the contribution must include a copy of the 
 39.5   statement with the report that discloses the contribution to the 
 39.6   board.  
 39.7      (b) An unregistered association may provide the written 
 39.8   statement required by this subdivision to no more than three 
 39.9   committees, funds, or party units in a calendar year.  Each 
 39.10  statement must cover at least the 30 days immediately preceding 
 39.11  and including the date on which the contribution was made.  An 
 39.12  unregistered association or an officer of it is subject to a 
 39.13  civil penalty imposed by the board of up to $3,000 if the 
 39.14  association or its officer: 
 39.15     (1) fails to provide a written statement as required by 
 39.16  this subdivision; or 
 39.17     (2) fails to register after giving the written statement 
 39.18  required by this subdivision to more than three committees, 
 39.19  funds, or party units in a calendar year. 
 39.20     (c) The treasurer of a political committee, political fund, 
 39.21  principal campaign committee, or party unit who accepts a 
 39.22  contribution in excess of $100 from an unregistered association 
 39.23  without the required written disclosure statement is subject to 
 39.24  a civil penalty up to four times the amount in excess of $100. 
 39.25     Subd. 8.  [CONTRIBUTIONS TO POLITICAL COMMITTEES OR FUNDS.] 
 39.26  The treasurer of a political committee or political fund must 
 39.27  not permit the political committee or political fund to accept 
 39.28  aggregate contributions from an individual in an amount more 
 39.29  than $1,000 in a calendar year or from another political 
 39.30  committee or political fund in any amount. 
 39.31     Subd. 9.  [CONTRIBUTIONS TO POLITICAL PARTIES.] (a) An 
 39.32  individual or association must not give and the treasurer of the 
 39.33  state committee of a political party must not permit the 
 39.34  political party to accept aggregate contributions for any 
 39.35  purpose from an individual, or from an association that makes 
 39.36  contributions to candidates, in an amount more than $10,000 in 
 40.1   an election cycle.  
 40.2      (b) A political party unit may not accept a transfer from 
 40.3   its national party organization, nor from a party unit in any 
 40.4   other state, unless the transfer is from a separate and 
 40.5   segregated fund that contains only contributions from 
 40.6   individuals and associations that would have been permitted 
 40.7   under the law of this state if they had been made directly to 
 40.8   the political party unit.  
 40.9      Subd. 10.  [AGGREGATE LIMIT ON INDIVIDUALS.] An individual 
 40.10  may not contribute more than $10,000 in aggregate contributions 
 40.11  for any purpose to all candidates, political parties, political 
 40.12  committees, and political funds in an election cycle. 
 40.13     Sec. 27.  [10B.14] [CONTRIBUTIONS AND SOLICITATIONS DURING 
 40.14  LEGISLATIVE SESSION.] 
 40.15     Subdivision 1.  [CONTRIBUTIONS DURING LEGISLATIVE SESSION.] 
 40.16  (a) A candidate for the legislature or for constitutional 
 40.17  office, the candidate's principal campaign committee, or a 
 40.18  political committee or party unit established by all or a part 
 40.19  of the party organization within a house of the legislature, 
 40.20  must not solicit or accept a contribution from a registered 
 40.21  lobbyist, political committee, political fund, or dissolving 
 40.22  principal campaign committee, or from a party unit established 
 40.23  by the party organization within a house of the legislature, 
 40.24  during a regular session of the legislature. 
 40.25     (b) A registered lobbyist, political committee, political 
 40.26  fund, or dissolving principal campaign committee, or a party 
 40.27  unit established by the party organization within a house of the 
 40.28  legislature, must not make a contribution to a candidate for the 
 40.29  legislature or for constitutional office, the candidate's 
 40.30  principal campaign committee, or a political committee or party 
 40.31  unit established by all or a part of the party organization 
 40.32  within a house of the legislature during a regular session of 
 40.33  the legislature. 
 40.34     Subd. 2.  [PARTY UNIT SOLICITATIONS.] A political party 
 40.35  unit must not solicit or receive at an event hosted by a 
 40.36  candidate for the legislature or by a candidate for 
 41.1   constitutional office a contribution from a lobbyist, political 
 41.2   committee, political fund, or party unit during a regular 
 41.3   session of the legislature. 
 41.4      Subd. 3.  [DEFINITION.] For purposes of this section, 
 41.5   "regular session" does not include a special session or the 
 41.6   interim between the two annual sessions of a biennium.  
 41.7      Subd. 4.  [CIVIL PENALTY.] A candidate, political 
 41.8   committee, party unit, political fund, principal campaign 
 41.9   committee, or registered lobbyist that violates this section is 
 41.10  subject to a civil penalty imposed by the board of up to 
 41.11  $3,000.  If the board makes a public finding that there is 
 41.12  probable cause to believe a violation of this section has 
 41.13  occurred, the board must bring an action, or transmit the 
 41.14  finding to a county attorney who must bring an action, in the 
 41.15  district court of Ramsey county, to collect the civil penalty as 
 41.16  imposed by the board.  Penalties paid under this section must be 
 41.17  deposited in the general fund in the state treasury. 
 41.18     Subd. 5.  [SPECIAL ELECTION.] This section does not apply 
 41.19  in a legislative special election during the period beginning 
 41.20  when the person becomes a candidate in the special election and 
 41.21  ending on the day of the special election. 
 41.22     Sec. 28.  [10B.15] [CIRCUMVENTION PROHIBITED.] 
 41.23     An individual or association that attempts to circumvent 
 41.24  this chapter by redirecting a contribution through, or making a 
 41.25  contribution on behalf of, another individual or association is 
 41.26  guilty of a gross misdemeanor and subject to a civil penalty 
 41.27  imposed by the board of up to $3,000. 
 41.28     Sec. 29.  [10B.16] [POLITICAL CONTRIBUTION REFUND.] 
 41.29     Subdivision 1.  [DEFINITION.] (a) The definition in this 
 41.30  subdivision applies to this section. 
 41.31     (b) "Contribution" means a gift of money.  
 41.32     Subd. 2.  [CLAIM; RECEIPT FORM.] (a) A taxpayer may claim a 
 41.33  refund equal to the amount of the taxpayer's contributions made 
 41.34  in the calendar year to a political party or party unit, if the 
 41.35  state chair of the political party has signed and filed with the 
 41.36  board an agreement not to make independent expenditures as 
 42.1   provided in section 10B.19, and the agreement has not been 
 42.2   rescinded.  The refund for an individual must not exceed $50 and 
 42.3   for a married couple, filing jointly, must not exceed $100.  
 42.4      (b) A refund of a contribution is allowed only if the 
 42.5   taxpayer files a form required by the commissioner of revenue 
 42.6   and attaches to the form a copy of an official refund receipt 
 42.7   form issued by the party and signed by the party chair, after 
 42.8   the contribution was received.  For a taxpayer who files a claim 
 42.9   for refund via the Internet or other electronic means, the 
 42.10  commissioner may accept the number on the official receipt as 
 42.11  documentation that a contribution was made rather than the 
 42.12  actual receipt.  The board must make available to a political 
 42.13  party, on request, a supply of official refund receipt forms 
 42.14  that state in boldface type that a contributor who is given a 
 42.15  receipt form is eligible to claim a refund as provided in this 
 42.16  section and that the political party has signed an agreement not 
 42.17  to make independent expenditures.  The forms must provide 
 42.18  duplicate copies of the receipt to be attached to the 
 42.19  contributor's claim.  The receipt forms must be numbered, and 
 42.20  the data on the receipt that are not public must be made 
 42.21  available to the board upon its request.  A party unit must 
 42.22  return to the board with its termination report or destroy any 
 42.23  official receipt forms that have not been issued.  
 42.24     (c) If the state chair of a political party has not signed 
 42.25  an agreement under section 10B.19, or has rescinded the 
 42.26  agreement, and the chair or treasurer of a party unit willfully 
 42.27  issues an official refund receipt form or a facsimile of one to 
 42.28  any of the party's contributors, the issuer of the receipt is 
 42.29  guilty of a misdemeanor. 
 42.30     (d) A claim must be filed with the commissioner of revenue 
 42.31  no sooner than March 4 of each odd-numbered year in which the 
 42.32  contribution was made and no sooner than January 1 of each 
 42.33  even-numbered year in which the contribution was made and no 
 42.34  later than April 15 of the calendar year following the calendar 
 42.35  year in which the contribution was made.  A taxpayer may file 
 42.36  only one claim per calendar year.  Amounts paid by the 
 43.1   commissioner after June 15 of the calendar year following the 
 43.2   calendar year in which the contribution was made must include 
 43.3   interest at the rate specified in section 270.76. 
 43.4      Subd. 3.  [COPIES OF FORM.] The commissioner shall make 
 43.5   copies of the form available to political party units upon 
 43.6   request. 
 43.7      Subd. 4.  [DATA PRIVACY.] The following data collected or 
 43.8   maintained by the commissioner under this subdivision are 
 43.9   private:  the identities of individuals claiming a refund and 
 43.10  the amount of each contribution.  
 43.11     Subd. 5.  [REPORT.] The commissioner shall report to the 
 43.12  campaign finance and public disclosure board by each August 1 a 
 43.13  summary showing the total number and aggregate amount of 
 43.14  political contribution refunds made on behalf of each political 
 43.15  party.  These data are public. 
 43.16     Subd. 6.  [APPROPRIATION.] The amount necessary to pay 
 43.17  claims for the refund provided in this section is appropriated 
 43.18  from the general fund to the commissioner of revenue. 
 43.19     Sec. 30.  [10B.17] [SPENDING LIMITS.] 
 43.20     Subdivision 1.  [LIMITS ARE VOLUNTARY.] The expenditure 
 43.21  limits imposed by this section on a candidate apply only to a 
 43.22  candidate who has signed an agreement under section 10B.19 to be 
 43.23  bound by them as a condition of receiving a public subsidy for 
 43.24  the candidate's campaign.  The prohibition imposed by this 
 43.25  section on a political party applies only to a political party 
 43.26  that has signed and not rescinded an agreement under section 
 43.27  10B.19 to be bound by it as a condition of receiving a public 
 43.28  subsidy for the party's activities. 
 43.29     Subd. 2.  [AMOUNTS.] (a) The principal campaign committee 
 43.30  of a candidate must not make campaign expenditures nor permit 
 43.31  approved expenditures to be made on behalf of the candidate 
 43.32  during an election cycle that result in aggregate expenditures 
 43.33  in excess of the sums authorized in this subdivision. 
 43.34     (b) The principal campaign committee of a candidate may 
 43.35  make expenditures or permit approved expenditures to be made on 
 43.36  behalf of the candidate during an election cycle and before the 
 44.1   candidate files an affidavit of qualifying contributions under 
 44.2   section 10B.20 in the following amounts: 
 44.3      (1) for governor and lieutenant governor, running together, 
 44.4   $50,000; 
 44.5      (2) for attorney general, secretary of state, and state 
 44.6   auditor, separately, $25,000; 
 44.7      (3) for state senator, $8,000; and 
 44.8      (4) for state representative, $4,000. 
 44.9      (c) The principal campaign committee of a candidate may 
 44.10  spend the public subsidy as authorized under section 10B.24. 
 44.11     (d) If a special election cycle occurs during a general 
 44.12  election cycle, expenditures by or on behalf of a candidate in 
 44.13  the special election do not count as expenditures by or on 
 44.14  behalf of the candidate in the general election. 
 44.15     Subd. 3.  [AGGREGATED EXPENDITURES.] If a candidate makes 
 44.16  expenditures from more than one principal campaign committee for 
 44.17  nomination or election to statewide office in the same election 
 44.18  cycle, the amount of expenditures from all of the candidate's 
 44.19  principal campaign committees for statewide office for that 
 44.20  election cycle must be aggregated for purposes of applying the 
 44.21  limits on expenditures under subdivision 2. 
 44.22     Subd. 4.  [GOVERNOR AND LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR AS A SINGLE 
 44.23  CANDIDATE.] For the purposes of this chapter, a candidate for 
 44.24  governor and a candidate for lieutenant governor, running 
 44.25  together, are considered a single candidate.  All expenditures 
 44.26  made by or all approved expenditures made on behalf of the 
 44.27  candidate for lieutenant governor are considered to be 
 44.28  expenditures by or approved expenditures on behalf of the 
 44.29  candidate for governor. 
 44.30     Subd. 5.  [INDEPENDENT EXPENDITURES.] The principal 
 44.31  campaign committee of a candidate must not make independent 
 44.32  expenditures. 
 44.33     Subd. 6.  [RELEASE FROM EXPENDITURE LIMITS.] (a) After the 
 44.34  deadline for filing a spending limit agreement under section 
 44.35  10B.19, a candidate who has agreed to be bound by the 
 44.36  expenditure limits imposed by this section as a condition of 
 45.1   receiving a public subsidy for the candidate's campaign may 
 45.2   choose to be released from the expenditure limits but remain 
 45.3   eligible to receive a public subsidy if the candidate has an 
 45.4   opponent who has not agreed to be bound by the limits and who 
 45.5   has received contributions during that election cycle in excess 
 45.6   of the sum of: 
 45.7      (1) the amounts listed in subdivision 2, paragraph (b), 
 45.8   that the candidate is allowed to spend before filing an 
 45.9   affidavit of contributions; 
 45.10     (2) the limit set in section 10B.13, subdivision 2, 
 45.11  paragraph (a), for contributions from political party units to 
 45.12  the candidate; and 
 45.13     (3) the public subsidy the participating candidate has 
 45.14  received through that part of the election cycle. 
 45.15     Before the primary election, a candidate's "opponents" are 
 45.16  only those who will appear on the ballot of the same party in 
 45.17  the primary election. 
 45.18     (b) A candidate who has not agreed to be bound by 
 45.19  expenditure limits, or the candidate's principal campaign 
 45.20  committee, must file written notice with the board and provide 
 45.21  written notice to any opponent of the candidate for the same 
 45.22  office within seven days after exceeding the limit in paragraph 
 45.23  (a).  The notice must state only that the candidate or 
 45.24  candidate's principal campaign committee has received 
 45.25  contributions in excess of the limit in paragraph (a).  
 45.26     (c) Upon receipt of the notice, the candidate who had 
 45.27  agreed to be bound by the limits may file with the board a 
 45.28  notice that the candidate chooses to be no longer bound by the 
 45.29  expenditure limits.  A notice of a candidate's choice not to be 
 45.30  bound by the expenditure limits that is based on the conduct of 
 45.31  an opponent in the state primary election may not be filed more 
 45.32  than one day after the state canvassing board has declared the 
 45.33  results of the state primary. 
 45.34     (d) A candidate who has agreed to be bound by the 
 45.35  expenditure limits imposed by this section and whose opponent in 
 45.36  the general election has chosen, as provided in paragraph (c), 
 46.1   not to be bound by the expenditure limits because of the conduct 
 46.2   of an opponent in the primary election is no longer bound by the 
 46.3   limits but remains eligible to receive a public subsidy. 
 46.4      Subd. 7.  [INDEPENDENT EXPENDITURES BY POLITICAL 
 46.5   PARTIES.] A political party or party unit must not make an 
 46.6   independent expenditure. 
 46.7      Sec. 31.  [10B.18] [MULTICANDIDATE POLITICAL PARTY 
 46.8   EXPENDITURES.] 
 46.9      Notwithstanding other provisions of this chapter, the 
 46.10  following expenditures by a party unit, or two or more party 
 46.11  units acting together, with at least one party unit being either 
 46.12  the state committee or the party organization within a 
 46.13  congressional district, county, or legislative district, are not 
 46.14  considered contributions to or expenditures on behalf of a 
 46.15  candidate for the purposes of section 10B.13 or 10B.17 and must 
 46.16  not be allocated to candidates under section 10B.12, subdivision 
 46.17  4, paragraph (g): 
 46.18     (1) expenditures not on behalf of any candidate; 
 46.19     (2) expenditures on behalf of candidates of that party 
 46.20  generally without referring to any of them specifically by name 
 46.21  or image in a published, posted, or broadcast advertisement; or 
 46.22     (3) expenditures for the preparation, display, mailing, or 
 46.23  other distribution of an official party sample ballot listing 
 46.24  the names of three or more individuals whose names are to appear 
 46.25  on the ballot.  
 46.26     Sec. 32.  [10B.19] [SPENDING LIMIT AGREEMENT.] 
 46.27     Subdivision 1.  [AGREEMENT BY CANDIDATE.] (a) As a 
 46.28  condition of receiving a public subsidy, a candidate must sign 
 46.29  and file with the board a written agreement in which the 
 46.30  candidate agrees that the candidate will comply with sections 
 46.31  10B.13, subdivisions 1, 2, and 5; 10B.17; and 10B.25. 
 46.32     (b) Before the first day of filing for office, the board 
 46.33  must forward agreement forms to all filing officers.  The board 
 46.34  must also provide agreement forms to candidates on request at 
 46.35  any time.  The candidate must file the agreement with the board 
 46.36  no sooner than January 1 in the general election year and no 
 47.1   later than the day after the candidate files the affidavit of 
 47.2   candidacy for the office.  An agreement may not be filed with 
 47.3   the board after that date.  An agreement once filed may not be 
 47.4   rescinded. 
 47.5      (c) The board must notify the commissioner of revenue of 
 47.6   any agreement filed under this subdivision. 
 47.7      Subd. 2.  [HOW LONG AGREEMENT IS EFFECTIVE.] The agreement, 
 47.8   insofar as it relates to the expenditure limits in section 
 47.9   10B.17 and the contribution limit in section 10B.13, subdivision 
 47.10  5, remains effective for candidates until the dissolution of the 
 47.11  principal campaign committee of the candidate or the end of the 
 47.12  first election cycle completed after the agreement was filed, 
 47.13  whichever occurs first. 
 47.14     Subd. 3.  [AGREEMENT BY POLITICAL PARTY.] (a) As a 
 47.15  condition of receiving a public subsidy, the chair of the state 
 47.16  committee of a political party must sign and file with the board 
 47.17  before the first March 1 of a general election cycle a written 
 47.18  agreement in which the state committee agrees that the political 
 47.19  party and all its party units will comply with section 10B.17.  
 47.20  An agreement once filed may not be rescinded after the first 
 47.21  March 4 of a general election cycle. 
 47.22     (b) The board must provide agreement forms to political 
 47.23  parties on request at any time. 
 47.24     (c) The agreement not to make independent expenditures 
 47.25  remains in effect until it is rescinded, or the end of the first 
 47.26  general election cycle completed after the agreement was filed, 
 47.27  or the dissolution of the political party, whichever occurs 
 47.28  first. 
 47.29     (d) The board must notify the commissioner of revenue of 
 47.30  any agreement filed or rescinded under this subdivision. 
 47.31     Sec. 33.  [10B.20] [QUALIFYING CONTRIBUTIONS.] 
 47.32     Subdivision 1.  [AMOUNTS.] In addition to the requirements 
 47.33  of section 10B.19, to be eligible to receive a public subsidy 
 47.34  under section 10B.24, a candidate must receive qualifying 
 47.35  contributions from individuals eligible to vote in this state 
 47.36  and, in the case of a legislative candidate, at least one-half 
 48.1   from individuals eligible to vote for the candidate, in the 
 48.2   amount indicated for the office sought, counting only the first 
 48.3   $5 received from each contributor: 
 48.4      (1) candidates for governor and lieutenant governor, 
 48.5   running together, $22,000; 
 48.6      (2) candidates for attorney general, secretary of state, 
 48.7   and state auditor, separately, $12,500; 
 48.8      (3) candidates for the senate, $1,800; and 
 48.9      (4) candidates for the house of representatives, $900.  
 48.10     A candidate for statewide office must receive at least five 
 48.11  percent of the qualifying amount from residents of each 
 48.12  congressional district. 
 48.13     The amounts in clauses (3) and (4) must be adjusted 
 48.14  following each decennial federal census to represent the ideal 
 48.15  population of a senate or house district, respectively, times 
 48.16  .025, rounded to the nearest $100. 
 48.17     Subd. 2.  [STATEMENT OF INTENT TO PARTICIPATE.] A candidate 
 48.18  who intends to participate in the public subsidy program must 
 48.19  file with the board, in a form approved by the board, a 
 48.20  statement of intent to participate.  The statement may not be 
 48.21  filed before the beginning of the election cycle.  
 48.22     Subd. 3.  [RECEIPT.] The board must make available to each 
 48.23  candidate who has filed a statement of intent to participate in 
 48.24  the public subsidy program copies of the official contribution 
 48.25  receipt form designed by the board.  The receipt must state that 
 48.26  the contributor understands that the purpose of the contribution 
 48.27  is to help the candidate qualify for a public subsidy.  The form 
 48.28  must include space for the contributor's printed name, 
 48.29  signature, and home address, and the name of the candidate on 
 48.30  whose behalf the contribution was made.  The candidate or the 
 48.31  treasurer of the candidate's principal campaign committee must 
 48.32  provide to the contributor a receipt, which must be properly 
 48.33  completed and signed by the contributor and returned to the 
 48.34  candidate.  The candidate must keep one copy of the receipt and 
 48.35  file a second copy with the board, along with the affidavit of 
 48.36  contributions required by subdivision 4 and a list, in an 
 49.1   electronic format approved by the board, of the names and home 
 49.2   addresses of the contributors and indicating whether the 
 49.3   contributor is eligible to vote for the candidate. 
 49.4      Subd. 4.  [AFFIDAVIT.] No sooner than January 1 in the 
 49.5   general election year and no later than the day after the 
 49.6   candidate files the affidavit of candidacy for the office, a 
 49.7   candidate who intends to participate in the public subsidy 
 49.8   program, or the treasurer of the candidate's principal campaign 
 49.9   committee, must file with the board an affidavit stating that, 
 49.10  since January 1 in the year before the general election year, 
 49.11  the candidate's principal campaign committee has received 
 49.12  qualifying contributions in the amount specified in subdivision 
 49.13  1.  
 49.14     Subd. 5.  [SPECIAL ELECTIONS.] A candidate for a vacancy to 
 49.15  be filled at a special election must receive qualifying 
 49.16  contributions in one-third the amounts specified in subdivision 
 49.17  1.  If the filing period for the special election does not 
 49.18  coincide with the filing period for the general election, the 
 49.19  candidate must submit the affidavit required by this section to 
 49.20  the board within five days after filing the affidavit of 
 49.21  candidacy. 
 49.22     Sec. 34.  [10B.21] [STATE ELECTIONS CAMPAIGN FUND.] 
 49.23     Subdivision 1.  [ESTABLISHED.] An account is established in 
 49.24  the special revenue fund of the state known as the "state 
 49.25  elections campaign fund." 
 49.26     Subd. 2.  [SPENDING CAP.] The board must not spend from the 
 49.27  state elections campaign fund during a calendar year more than 
 49.28  $5 times the number of Minnesota residents who filed personal 
 49.29  income tax returns during the previous calendar year.  The board 
 49.30  may exceed this limit during a calendar year, provided it is 
 49.31  offset by an equal reduction of the limit during another 
 49.32  calendar year during the same gubernatorial election cycle. 
 49.33     Subd. 3.  [EXCESS MONEY.] At least once each year the 
 49.34  commissioner of finance must forecast the amount of revenue the 
 49.35  state elections campaign fund will collect over the next four 
 49.36  years and the time the revenue will be available.  Whenever the 
 50.1   commissioner determines that the balance in the fund is greater 
 50.2   than will be needed to meet current debts plus anticipated 
 50.3   expenses, taking into account the revenue forecast, the 
 50.4   commissioner must transfer the excess balance to the general 
 50.5   fund.  The amount transferred is appropriated from the general 
 50.6   fund to the Board of Public Defense. 
 50.7      Subd. 4.  [DEFICIENCY.] At least once each year, the board 
 50.8   must forecast the amount of public subsidy from the state 
 50.9   elections campaign fund for which all candidates will qualify 
 50.10  for the following calendar year.  By the end of each year, the 
 50.11  board must announce whether the amount that will be needed the 
 50.12  following year for public subsidies from the state elections 
 50.13  campaign fund will exceed the amount that will be available.  If 
 50.14  the board determines that the fund will be deficient, the board 
 50.15  may include in the announcement decreases in the amounts of 
 50.16  public subsidies that will be paid, in the following order: 
 50.17     (1) first, the board may announce a decrease in the rate at 
 50.18  which a public subsidy will be paid to match excess 
 50.19  contributions under section 10B.24, subdivision 7, and 
 50.20  independent expenditures under section 10B.24, subdivision 8; 
 50.21  and 
 50.22     (2) second, the board may announce a reduction in the 
 50.23  percentage of a candidate's spending limit that will be paid as 
 50.24  a public subsidy under section 10B.24, subdivisions 4 to 6. 
 50.25     Subd. 5.  [EMERGENCY.] If a deficiency arises in the state 
 50.26  elections campaign fund that cannot be met by reductions under 
 50.27  subdivision 4, the board must declare an emergency and reduce 
 50.28  public subsidy payments proportionately among all candidates 
 50.29  entitled to them. 
 50.30     Sec. 35.  [10B.22] [STATE ELECTIONS CAMPAIGN CHECKOFF.] 
 50.31     An individual resident of this state who files an income 
 50.32  tax return or a renter and homeowner property tax refund return 
 50.33  with the commissioner of revenue may designate on their original 
 50.34  return that $1 or more be added to the tax or deducted from the 
 50.35  refund that would otherwise be payable by or to that individual 
 50.36  and paid into the state elections campaign fund.  The 
 51.1   commissioner of revenue must provide on the first page of the 
 51.2   income tax form and the renter and homeowner property tax refund 
 51.3   return a space for the individual to indicate a wish to pay $1 
 51.4   or more into the state elections campaign fund. 
 51.5      Sec. 36.  [10B.23] [STATE ELECTIONS CAMPAIGN SURCHARGE.] 
 51.6      Subdivision 1.  [SURCHARGE IMPOSED.] (a) The court must 
 51.7   impose a surcharge of one percent on every judgment for the 
 51.8   payment of money.  The surcharge is payable to the court 
 51.9   administrator at the time the judgment is recorded as having 
 51.10  been satisfied. 
 51.11     (b) If the court fails to impose a surcharge as required by 
 51.12  this subdivision, the court administrator must show the 
 51.13  imposition of the surcharge, collect the surcharge, and correct 
 51.14  the record. 
 51.15     (c) The court may not waive payment of the surcharge 
 51.16  required under this subdivision.  Upon a showing of indigency or 
 51.17  undue hardship upon the judgment debtor, the court may authorize 
 51.18  payment of the surcharge in installments. 
 51.19     Subd. 2.  [PAYMENT TO STATE.] The court administrator or 
 51.20  other entity collecting a surcharge must forward it to the 
 51.21  commissioner of revenue, who must deposit it in the state 
 51.22  treasury and credit it to the state elections campaign fund. 
 51.23     Sec. 37.  [10B.24] [PUBLIC SUBSIDY.] 
 51.24     Subdivision 1.  [PAYMENT TO PARTICIPATING CANDIDATES.] Upon 
 51.25  determining that a candidate has met all the requirements for 
 51.26  receiving a public subsidy, the board must designate the 
 51.27  candidate as "participating."  The board must pay each 
 51.28  participating candidate a public subsidy as provided in this 
 51.29  section.  The payment must be in the form of a check made 
 51.30  "payable to the campaign fund of ...... (name of candidate)."  
 51.31  An amount sufficient to make the payment is appropriated to the 
 51.32  board from the state elections campaign fund.  
 51.33     Subd. 2.  [PUBLIC SUBSIDY BASE.] (a) The public subsidy 
 51.34  base for each candidate is as follows: 
 51.35     (1) for governor and lieutenant governor, running together, 
 51.36  $1,520,000; 
 52.1      (2) for attorney general, secretary of state, and state 
 52.2   auditor, separately, $300,000; 
 52.3      (3) for state senator, $37,000; and 
 52.4      (4) for state representative, $18,500. 
 52.5      (b) The public subsidy base in paragraph (a) is increased 
 52.6   by ten percent for a candidate who is running for that office 
 52.7   for the first time and who has not run previously for any other 
 52.8   office whose territory now includes a population that is more 
 52.9   than one-third of the population in the territory of the new 
 52.10  office. 
 52.11     Subd. 3.  [ADJUSTMENT BY CONSUMER PRICE INDEX.] (a) The 
 52.12  dollar amounts in subdivision 2 must be adjusted for general 
 52.13  election years as provided in this subdivision.  In the year 
 52.14  before each general election year, the executive director of the 
 52.15  board must determine the percentage increase in the Consumer 
 52.16  Price Index from December of the second preceding general 
 52.17  election year to December of the last general election year.  
 52.18  The dollar amounts used for the preceding general election year 
 52.19  must be multiplied by that percentage.  The product of the 
 52.20  calculation, rounded up to the next highest $100 increment, must 
 52.21  be added to each dollar amount to produce the dollar limitations 
 52.22  to be in effect for the next general election.  The index used 
 52.23  must be the revised Consumer Price Index for all urban consumers 
 52.24  for the St. Paul-Minneapolis metropolitan area prepared by the 
 52.25  United States Department of Labor. 
 52.26     (b) By April 1 of the year before each election year, the 
 52.27  board must publish in the State Register the public subsidy base 
 52.28  for each office for that calendar year under subdivision 2 as 
 52.29  adjusted by this subdivision.  The revisor of statutes must code 
 52.30  the adjusted amounts of the public subsidy base in the next 
 52.31  edition of Minnesota Statutes.  
 52.32     Subd. 4.  [PAYMENT UPON QUALIFYING.] Within one week after 
 52.33  it has designated a candidate as participating, the board must 
 52.34  pay to the participating candidate an amount equal to 20 percent 
 52.35  of the participating candidate's public subsidy base. 
 52.36     Subd. 5.  [PAYMENT UPON FILING FOR OFFICE.] Within one week 
 53.1   after the close of filings for office, the board must pay a 
 53.2   participating candidate who has an opponent in either the 
 53.3   primary or the general election an amount equal to 20 percent of 
 53.4   the candidate's public subsidy base. 
 53.5      Subd. 6.  [PAYMENT FOR GENERAL ELECTION.] As soon as the 
 53.6   board has obtained from the secretary of state the results of 
 53.7   the primary election, but no later than one week after the state 
 53.8   canvassing board has certified the results of the primary, the 
 53.9   board must pay to each participating candidate whose name will 
 53.10  appear on the ballot in the general election an amount equal to 
 53.11  60 percent of the candidate's public subsidy base, except that a 
 53.12  candidate who has no opponent in the general election must be 
 53.13  paid an amount equal to six percent of the candidate's public 
 53.14  subsidy base. 
 53.15     Subd. 7.  [PAYMENT TO MATCH EXCESS CONTRIBUTIONS.] Upon 
 53.16  receipt of a report of excess contributions under section 
 53.17  10B.12, subdivision 7, the board must notify any participating 
 53.18  opponent of the nonparticipating candidate of the amount of the 
 53.19  excess.  Upon receipt of the first report, the board must pay 
 53.20  the participating candidate an additional public subsidy equal 
 53.21  to the participating candidate's public subsidy base.  The 
 53.22  additional subsidy may only be spent in an amount equal to the 
 53.23  excess contributions reported for that election cycle. 
 53.24     Subd. 8.  [PAYMENT TO MATCH INDEPENDENT EXPENDITURES.] (a) 
 53.25  Within 24 hours after receipt of a notice of independent 
 53.26  expenditures under section 10B.12, subdivision 10, the board 
 53.27  must notify each participating candidate in the affected race of 
 53.28  the amount of the independent expenditure.  Along with the first 
 53.29  notice under this subdivision, the board must pay to each 
 53.30  participating candidate who is adversely affected by the 
 53.31  independent expenditure an additional public subsidy in an 
 53.32  amount equal to the participating candidate's public subsidy 
 53.33  base, to be spent only as provided in this subdivision.  A 
 53.34  candidate is "adversely affected" if the independent expenditure 
 53.35  is made to defeat the candidate or to nominate or elect an 
 53.36  opponent of the candidate.  Before the primary election, an 
 54.1   "opponent" includes the candidates whose names are on the ballot 
 54.2   for the primary of the same major party or, if there is none, 
 54.3   the candidates whose names will be on the ballot for the general 
 54.4   election.  
 54.5      (b) If the independent expenditure is made to defeat a 
 54.6   participating candidate, the additional subsidy may be spent in 
 54.7   an amount equal to the independent expenditures made to defeat 
 54.8   the participating candidate reported for that election cycle. 
 54.9      (c) If the independent expenditure is made to nominate or 
 54.10  elect a candidate and the sum of assets carried forward, 
 54.11  contributions received as of the last reporting date, public 
 54.12  subsidy received, and independent expenditures made to elect the 
 54.13  candidate exceeds 120 percent of the spending limit for a 
 54.14  participating opponent candidate for the legislature or 110 
 54.15  percent of the spending limit for a participating opponent 
 54.16  candidate for constitutional officer, the participating opponent 
 54.17  may spend the additional public subsidy in an amount equal to 
 54.18  one-half the excess independent expenditures to nominate or 
 54.19  elect the candidate reported for that election cycle.  
 54.20     (d) If an individual, political committee, political fund, 
 54.21  or party unit has made expenditures to nominate or elect a 
 54.22  candidate, any expenditure by the spender during the same 
 54.23  election cycle to defeat the candidate or to nominate or elect 
 54.24  an opponent of the candidate does not authorize the candidate to 
 54.25  spend matching money under paragraph (b) or (c). 
 54.26     Subd. 9.  [PAYMENT FOR SPECIAL ELECTION.] The board must 
 54.27  pay each participating candidate for legislative office in a 
 54.28  special election an amount equal to the candidate's public 
 54.29  subsidy base within 48 hours after the candidate has been 
 54.30  designated as participating, but the candidate may spend only an 
 54.31  amount equal to 20 percent of the candidate's public subsidy 
 54.32  base upon being designated as participating.  A candidate who 
 54.33  has an opponent in either the primary or general election may 
 54.34  spend an additional amount equal to 20 percent of the 
 54.35  participating candidate's public subsidy base upon filing for 
 54.36  office, and a candidate whose name has been certified to appear 
 55.1   on the ballot for the general election may spend an additional 
 55.2   amount equal to 60 percent of the candidate's public subsidy 
 55.3   base.  Any amount not spent by the candidate must be returned to 
 55.4   the board under section 10B.25. 
 55.5      Subd. 10.  [PAYMENT WITHHELD.] If a candidate has not yet 
 55.6   filed a campaign finance report required by section 10B.12, or 
 55.7   the candidate owes money to the board, the board must withhold 
 55.8   the candidate's public subsidy until the report has been filed 
 55.9   or the debt has been paid, whichever applies.  If the report has 
 55.10  not been filed or the debt has not been paid to the board by the 
 55.11  end of the fiscal year, the subsidy must be applied to the debts 
 55.12  owed by the candidate to the board and any remaining amount must 
 55.13  be canceled to the general fund. 
 55.14     Sec. 38.  [10B.25] [RETURN OF PUBLIC SUBSIDY.] 
 55.15     Subdivision 1.  [WHEN RETURN REQUIRED.] A candidate must 
 55.16  return all or a portion of the public subsidy received under 
 55.17  section 10B.24 under the circumstances in this section or 
 55.18  section 10B.26, subdivision 1. 
 55.19     To the extent that the amount of public subsidy received 
 55.20  exceeds the actual expenditures made by the principal campaign 
 55.21  committee of the candidate, the treasurer of the candidate's 
 55.22  principal campaign committee must return an amount equal to the 
 55.23  difference to the board.  The cost of postage that was not used 
 55.24  during an election cycle and payments that created credit 
 55.25  balances at vendors at the close of an election cycle are not 
 55.26  considered expenditures for purposes of determining the amount 
 55.27  to be returned.  Expenditures in excess of the candidate's 
 55.28  spending limit do not count in determining aggregate 
 55.29  expenditures under this paragraph. 
 55.30     Subd. 2.  [HOW RETURN DETERMINED.] Whether or not a 
 55.31  candidate is required under subdivision 1 to return all or a 
 55.32  portion of the public subsidy must be determined from the report 
 55.33  required to be filed with the board by that candidate by January 
 55.34  31 of the year following an election.  An amount required to be 
 55.35  returned must be submitted in the form of a check or money order 
 55.36  and must accompany the report filed with the board.  The board 
 56.1   must deposit the check or money order in the state treasury for 
 56.2   credit to the general fund.  The amount returned must not exceed 
 56.3   the amount of public subsidy received by the candidate. 
 56.4      Sec. 39.  [10B.26] [CARRYFORWARD.] 
 56.5      Subdivision 1.  [UNUSED FUNDS.] After all campaign 
 56.6   expenditures and noncampaign disbursements for an election cycle 
 56.7   have been made, a principal campaign committee may carry forward 
 56.8   assets equal to the amount that the candidate may spend in the 
 56.9   next election cycle before being designated a participating 
 56.10  candidate for the same office, as set forth in section 10B.17, 
 56.11  subdivision 2, paragraph (b).  Any remaining assets up to the 
 56.12  total amount of the public subsidy received under section 10B.24 
 56.13  must be returned to the state treasury for credit to the general 
 56.14  fund under section 10B.25.  Any remaining assets in excess of 
 56.15  the total public subsidy must be contributed to the general 
 56.16  fund, a public school, or a charity, or to a political party. 
 56.17     Subd. 2.  [UNUSED POSTAGE AND CREDIT BALANCES CARRIED 
 56.18  FORWARD.] Postage that is purchased but not used during an 
 56.19  election cycle and credit balances at vendors that exceed a 
 56.20  combined total of $500 must be carried forward and counted as 
 56.21  expenditures during the election cycle during which they are 
 56.22  used. 
 56.23     Sec. 40.  [10B.27] [PENALTY FOR EXCEEDING LIMITS.] 
 56.24     Subdivision 1.  [EXCEEDING CONTRIBUTION LIMITS.] (a) A 
 56.25  candidate who permits the candidate's principal campaign 
 56.26  committee, or the treasurer of a political committee, political 
 56.27  fund, or party unit who permits the committee, fund, or party 
 56.28  unit to accept contributions in excess of the limits imposed by 
 56.29  section 10B.13, is subject to a civil penalty of up to ten times 
 56.30  the amount by which the contribution exceeds the limits.  
 56.31     (b) The board may order a candidate who has permitted the 
 56.32  candidate's principal campaign committee to accept contributions 
 56.33  in excess of the limits imposed by section 10B.13 to return any 
 56.34  public subsidy the candidate has received.  The board must 
 56.35  deposit the amount returned in the state treasury and credit it 
 56.36  to the general fund.  
 57.1      (c) The board may recommend that a candidate who was 
 57.2   nominated or elected to office after violating section 10B.13 
 57.3   should forfeit the nomination or office.  
 57.4      (d) A political committee, political fund, or principal 
 57.5   campaign committee that makes a contribution in excess of the 
 57.6   limits imposed by section 10B.13 is subject to a civil penalty 
 57.7   of up to ten times the amount by which the contribution exceeds 
 57.8   the limits. 
 57.9      Subd. 2.  [EXCEEDING EXPENDITURE LIMITS.] (a) A candidate 
 57.10  subject to the expenditure limits in section 10B.17 who permits 
 57.11  the candidate's principal campaign committee to make 
 57.12  expenditures or permits approved expenditures to be made on the 
 57.13  candidate's behalf in excess of the limits imposed by section 
 57.14  10B.17 is subject to a civil penalty imposed by the board of up 
 57.15  to ten times the amount by which the expenditures exceed the 
 57.16  limit. 
 57.17     (b) The board may order a candidate subject to the 
 57.18  expenditure limits in section 10B.17 who has permitted the 
 57.19  candidate's principal campaign committee to make expenditures or 
 57.20  has permitted approved expenditures to be made on the 
 57.21  candidate's behalf in excess of the limits imposed by section 
 57.22  10B.17 to return to the board any public subsidy the candidate 
 57.23  has received.  The board must deposit the amount returned in the 
 57.24  state treasury and credit it to the general fund.  
 57.25     (c) The board may recommend that a candidate who was 
 57.26  nominated or elected after violating the limits in section 
 57.27  10B.17 should forfeit the nomination or office.  
 57.28     (d) The chair of a political party or party unit subject to 
 57.29  the prohibition in section 10B.17 that makes expenditures in 
 57.30  violation of section 10B.17 is subject to a civil fine of up to 
 57.31  ten times the amount of the expenditures. 
 57.32     Subd. 3.  [CONCILIATION AGREEMENT.] If the board finds that 
 57.33  there is reason to believe that excess contributions have been 
 57.34  accepted contrary to section 10B.13 or excess expenditures made 
 57.35  contrary to section 10B.17, the board must make every effort for 
 57.36  a period of at least 14 days after its finding to correct the 
 58.1   matter by informal methods of conference and conciliation and to 
 58.2   enter a conciliation agreement with the person involved.  A 
 58.3   conciliation agreement under this subdivision is a matter of 
 58.4   public record.  Unless violated, a conciliation agreement is a 
 58.5   bar to any civil proceeding under subdivision 4. 
 58.6      Subd. 4.  [CIVIL ACTION.] (a) If the board is unable after 
 58.7   a reasonable time to correct by informal methods a matter that 
 58.8   constitutes probable cause to believe that excess contributions 
 58.9   have been accepted contrary to section 10B.13 or excess 
 58.10  expenditures made contrary to section 10B.17, the board must 
 58.11  make a public finding of probable cause in the matter.  After 
 58.12  making a public finding, the board must bring an action, or 
 58.13  transmit the finding to a county attorney who must bring an 
 58.14  action, in the district court of Ramsey county or, in the case 
 58.15  of a legislative candidate, the district court of a county 
 58.16  within the legislative district, to collect a civil penalty 
 58.17  imposed by the board, to demand the return of any public subsidy 
 58.18  paid to the candidate, or to have the nomination or office 
 58.19  declared forfeited.  All money recovered under this section must 
 58.20  be deposited in the state treasury and credited to the general 
 58.21  fund. 
 58.22     (b) If a candidate is judged to have violated section 
 58.23  10B.13 or 10B.17, the court, after entering the judgment, may 
 58.24  enter a supplemental judgment declaring that the candidate has 
 58.25  forfeited the nomination or office, except as provided in 
 58.26  paragraph (c).  If the court enters the supplemental judgment, 
 58.27  it must transmit to the filing officer a transcript of the 
 58.28  supplemental judgment, the nomination or office becomes vacant, 
 58.29  and the vacancy must be filled as provided by law. 
 58.30     (c) If the candidate has been elected to the legislature, 
 58.31  the court, after entering the judgment that the candidate has 
 58.32  violated section 10B.13 or 10B.17, must transmit a transcript of 
 58.33  the judgment to the secretary of the senate or the chief clerk 
 58.34  of the house of representatives, as appropriate, for further 
 58.35  consideration by the house to which the candidate was elected. 
 58.36     Sec. 41.  [10B.28] [DISSOLUTION OF INACTIVE COMMITTEES AND 
 59.1   FUNDS.] 
 59.2      Subdivision 1.  [DISSOLUTION REQUIRED.] A political 
 59.3   committee, political fund, or principal campaign committee must 
 59.4   be dissolved within 60 days after receiving notice from the 
 59.5   board that the committee or fund has become inactive.  The 
 59.6   assets of the committee or fund must be spent for the purposes 
 59.7   authorized by section 211B.12 and other applicable law or 
 59.8   liquidated and deposited in the general fund within 60 days 
 59.9   after the board notifies the committee or fund that it has 
 59.10  become inactive.  
 59.11     Subd. 2.  [INACTIVITY DEFINED.] (a) A principal campaign 
 59.12  committee becomes inactive on the later of the following dates: 
 59.13     (1) when six years have elapsed since the last election in 
 59.14  which the person was a candidate for the office sought or held 
 59.15  at the time the principal campaign committee registered with the 
 59.16  board; or 
 59.17     (2) when six years have elapsed since the last day on which 
 59.18  the individual for whom it exists served in an elective office 
 59.19  subject to this chapter. 
 59.20     (b) A political committee or fund becomes inactive when two 
 59.21  years have elapsed since the end of a reporting period during 
 59.22  which the political committee or fund made an expenditure or 
 59.23  disbursement requiring disclosure under this chapter. 
 59.24     Subd. 3.  [REMAINING DEBTS.] If a committee or fund becomes 
 59.25  inactive when it still has unpaid debts, the committee or fund 
 59.26  must liquidate available assets to pay the debts.  If 
 59.27  insufficient assets exist to pay the debts, the board may set up 
 59.28  a payment schedule and allow the committee or fund to defer 
 59.29  dissolution until all debts are paid.  This section does not 
 59.30  extinguish debts incurred by the committee or fund. 
 59.31     Sec. 42.  [10B.29] [DISSOLUTION OR TERMINATION.] 
 59.32     Subdivision 1.  [TERMINATION REPORT.] A political 
 59.33  committee, political fund, principal campaign committee, or 
 59.34  party unit may not dissolve until it has settled all of its 
 59.35  debts and disposed of all its assets in excess of $100 and filed 
 59.36  a termination report.  "Assets" include credit balances at 
 60.1   vendors and physical assets such as computers and postage 
 60.2   stamps.  Physical assets must be listed at their fair market 
 60.3   value.  The termination report may be made at any time and must 
 60.4   include all information required in periodic reports.  
 60.5      Subd. 2.  [TERMINATION ALLOWED.] Notwithstanding 
 60.6   subdivision 1, a committee, fund, or party unit that has debts 
 60.7   incurred more than six years previously, has disposed of all its 
 60.8   assets, and has met the requirements of section 10B.12, 
 60.9   subdivision 11, may notify any remaining creditors by certified 
 60.10  mail and then file a termination report. 
 60.11     Sec. 43.  [10B.30] [TRANSFER OF DEBTS.] 
 60.12     Notwithstanding section 10B.29, a candidate may terminate 
 60.13  the candidate's principal campaign committee for one state 
 60.14  office by transferring any debts of that committee to the 
 60.15  candidate's principal campaign committee for another state 
 60.16  office if all outstanding unpaid bills or loans from the 
 60.17  committee being terminated are assumed and continuously reported 
 60.18  by the committee to which the transfer is being made until paid 
 60.19  or forgiven.  A loan that is forgiven is covered by section 
 60.20  10B.12 and, for purposes of section 10B.25, is a contribution to 
 60.21  the principal campaign committee from which the debt was 
 60.22  transferred under this section. 
 60.23     Sec. 44.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 129D.13, is 
 60.24  amended by adding a subdivision to read: 
 60.25     Subd. 5.  [FREE TIME FOR POLITICAL CANDIDATES.] A station 
 60.26  that receives a grant under this section must make available 
 60.27  free time to each political candidate who has been designated by 
 60.28  the campaign finance and public disclosure board as 
 60.29  participating in the public subsidy program under section 
 60.30  10B.24.  The amount of free time is 30 minutes each election 
 60.31  cycle for a candidate for state constitutional officer and 60 
 60.32  seconds each election cycle for a candidate for the 
 60.33  legislature.  The free time for a candidate for state 
 60.34  constitutional officer or video clip must be broadcast time.  
 60.35  The free time for a candidate for the legislature may be either 
 60.36  broadcast time or an archived video clip on the station's Web 
 61.1   site.  The broadcast or video clip must include only the 
 61.2   candidate speaking in the candidate's own voice. 
 61.3      Sec. 45.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 129D.14, is 
 61.4   amended by adding a subdivision to read: 
 61.5      Subd. 7.  [FREE TIME FOR POLITICAL CANDIDATES.] A station 
 61.6   that receives a grant under this section must make available 
 61.7   free time to each political candidate who has been designated by 
 61.8   the campaign finance and public disclosure board as 
 61.9   participating in the public subsidy program under section 
 61.10  10B.24.  The amount of free time is 30 minutes each election 
 61.11  cycle for a candidate for state constitutional officer and 60 
 61.12  seconds each election cycle for a candidate for the 
 61.13  legislature.  The free time for a candidate for state 
 61.14  constitutional officer or audio clip must be broadcast time.  
 61.15  The free time for a candidate for the legislature may be either 
 61.16  broadcast time or an archived audio clip on the station's Web 
 61.17  site.  The broadcast or audio clip must include only the 
 61.18  candidate speaking in the candidate's own voice. 
 61.19     Sec. 46.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 204B.11, 
 61.20  subdivision 1, is amended to read: 
 61.21     Subdivision 1.  [AMOUNT; DISHONORED CHECKS; CONSEQUENCES.] 
 61.22  Except as provided by subdivision 2, a filing fee shall be paid 
 61.23  by each candidate who files an affidavit of candidacy.  The fee 
 61.24  shall be paid at the time the affidavit is filed.  The amount of 
 61.25  the filing fee shall vary with the office sought as follows: 
 61.26     (a) for the office of governor, lieutenant governor, 
 61.27  attorney general, state auditor, state treasurer, secretary of 
 61.28  state, representative in Congress, judge of the supreme court, 
 61.29  judge of the court of appeals, or judge of the district court, 
 61.30  $300; 
 61.31     (b) for the office of senator in Congress, $400; 
 61.32     (c) for office of senator or representative in the 
 61.33  legislature, $100; 
 61.34     (d) for a county office, $50; and 
 61.35     (e) for the office of soil and water conservation district 
 61.36  supervisor, $20. 
 62.1      For a candidate who has raised the necessary qualifying 
 62.2   contributions and been designated by the campaign finance and 
 62.3   public disclosure board under section 10B.24 as participating in 
 62.4   the public subsidy program, no filing fee is required. 
 62.5      For the office of presidential elector, and for those 
 62.6   offices for which no compensation is provided, no filing fee is 
 62.7   required. 
 62.8      The filing fees received by the county auditor shall 
 62.9   immediately be paid to the county treasurer.  The filing fees 
 62.10  received by the secretary of state shall immediately be paid to 
 62.11  the state treasurer. 
 62.12     When an affidavit of candidacy has been filed with the 
 62.13  appropriate filing officer and the requisite filing fee has been 
 62.14  paid, the filing fee shall not be refunded.  If a candidate's 
 62.15  filing fee is paid with a check, draft, or similar negotiable 
 62.16  instrument for which sufficient funds are not available or that 
 62.17  is dishonored, notice to the candidate of the worthless 
 62.18  instrument must be sent by the filing officer via registered 
 62.19  mail no later than immediately upon the closing of the filing 
 62.20  deadline with return receipt requested.  The candidate will have 
 62.21  five days from the time the filing officer receives proof of 
 62.22  receipt to issue a check or other instrument for which 
 62.23  sufficient funds are available.  The candidate issuing the 
 62.24  worthless instrument is liable for a service charge pursuant to 
 62.25  section 604.113.  If adequate payment is not made, the name of 
 62.26  the candidate must not appear on any official ballot and the 
 62.27  candidate is liable for all costs incurred by election officials 
 62.28  in removing the name from the ballot. 
 62.29     Sec. 47.  [204B.275] [VOTER'S GUIDE.] 
 62.30     Subdivision 1.  [GUIDE REQUIRED.] At least 21 days before 
 62.31  the state primary and the state general election, the secretary 
 62.32  of state shall publish a voter's guide.  The secretary of state 
 62.33  shall mail the voter's guide to every household in the state and 
 62.34  then publish the guide on the secretary of state's Web site.  
 62.35     Subd. 2.  [GENERAL INFORMATION.] The voter's guide must 
 62.36  include general voter information, including:  requirements for 
 63.1   voter eligibility; procedures for voter registration; day and 
 63.2   date of election and hours to vote; information on how to find 
 63.3   the location of the voter's correct polling place; information 
 63.4   on procedures for obtaining application forms for voting by 
 63.5   absentee ballot; information on assistance available to persons 
 63.6   with disabilities and the right to time off from work to vote; 
 63.7   maps of election districts and telephone numbers of state and 
 63.8   county election officials; information about the political 
 63.9   contribution refund program; and street address, telephone 
 63.10  number, and Web site for the campaign finance and public 
 63.11  disclosure board.  
 63.12     Subd. 3.  [POLITICAL PARTY INFORMATION.] The voter's guide 
 63.13  must include political party information, including:  the name 
 63.14  of each political party that has a candidate on the ballot in 
 63.15  any partisan state or federal race; a summary of each party's 
 63.16  basic purpose, written and authorized by the party in 250 words 
 63.17  or less; and mailing address, telephone number, and Web site of 
 63.18  each state party headquarters.  
 63.19     Subd. 4.  [ELECTED OFFICE INFORMATION.] The voter's guide 
 63.20  must include elected office information, including:  each state 
 63.21  and federal office to which candidates are to be nominated or 
 63.22  elected at the current election; requirements and procedures to 
 63.23  get on the ballot for each office; eligibility requirements and 
 63.24  salary for each office; duties and responsibilities of each 
 63.25  office; length of term for each office and number of terms 
 63.26  allowed; street address, telephone number, and Web site of the 
 63.27  office (if available); and name of current office holder and 
 63.28  number of terms served.  
 63.29     Subd. 5.  [CANDIDATE INFORMATION.] The voter's guide must 
 63.30  include candidate information for all state and federal offices 
 63.31  to which candidates are to be nominated or elected, including 
 63.32  the following:  
 63.33     (1) candidates listed in alphabetical order after the 
 63.34  description of the office they are seeking; 
 63.35     (2) biographical information on each candidate provided by 
 63.36  the candidate, not to exceed 50 words, and including political 
 64.1   party affiliation (if running for partisan office), date of 
 64.2   birth, number of years living in this state, current city or 
 64.3   town of residence, current occupation, occupational background, 
 64.4   educational background, experience with civic organizations, 
 64.5   awards, and prior government experience; 
 64.6      (3) a candidate photo if provided by the candidate; 
 64.7      (4) a candidate statement for partisan offices only, if 
 64.8   provided by the candidate and not to exceed 250 words; and 
 64.9      (5) address, telephone number, and Web site for the 
 64.10  candidate's campaign.  
 64.11     Subd. 6.  [CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS.] The voter's guide 
 64.12  must include proposed constitutional amendment information, 
 64.13  including:  requirements and procedures to get an amendment on 
 64.14  the ballot; a summary of each proposed amendment written by the 
 64.15  chief house and senate authors of the legislation proposing the 
 64.16  amendment and not to exceed 100 words; the estimated cost of the 
 64.17  proposed amendment determined by an independent financial 
 64.18  analyst secured by the secretary of state; one statement in 
 64.19  favor of and one statement against the amendment, not to exceed 
 64.20  250 words each, and names of individuals or organizations 
 64.21  writing or supporting those arguments; and the full text of the 
 64.22  proposed amendment.  To obtain arguments for and against an 
 64.23  amendment, the secretary of state shall request the arguments 
 64.24  from the public 120 days before the general election.  The 
 64.25  amendment's legislative authors may write a statement in support 
 64.26  of their amendment, or may select from those submitted to the 
 64.27  secretary of state.  The secretary of state shall select the 
 64.28  most persuasive statement against the amendment.  
 64.29     Subd. 7.  [FORMS.] The secretary of state or county auditor 
 64.30  shall provide each person filing an affidavit of candidacy for 
 64.31  state or federal office with blank forms and instructions to be 
 64.32  used by the candidates to submit information for the voter's 
 64.33  guide.  Candidates must submit information for the voter's guide 
 64.34  to the secretary of state no later than six weeks before the 
 64.35  state primary election.  The secretary of state shall not edit 
 64.36  any of the material submitted by a candidate.  The secretary of 
 65.1   state shall provide the candidates an opportunity to review 
 65.2   their own submitted material before publication.  
 65.3      Subd. 8.  [REJECTION OF STATEMENT.] The secretary of state 
 65.4   must reject and immediately return to the candidate any 
 65.5   statement that exceeds the word limit provided in this section 
 65.6   or that contains obscene or defamatory language, or contains any 
 65.7   language that may not be legally circulated through the mail.  
 65.8   No later than five business days after the rejection of any 
 65.9   material submitted by a candidate, an appeal of the decision of 
 65.10  the secretary of state may be made to the board of review.  The 
 65.11  board of review consists of one member appointed by each of the 
 65.12  following:  the governor, speaker of the house, house minority 
 65.13  leader, senate majority leader, and senate minority leader.  The 
 65.14  decision of the board in any appeal made as provided in this 
 65.15  subdivision is final.  Nothing in this section exempts the 
 65.16  author of the material submitted to the secretary of state from 
 65.17  any civil or criminal action for defamation or fraud.  The 
 65.18  person writing, signing, or offering a statement to the 
 65.19  secretary of state is deemed its author and publisher. 
 65.20     Subd. 9.  [COST.] The cost of producing the voter's guide 
 65.21  must be paid from appropriations made to the secretary of state 
 65.22  from the state elections campaign fund. 
 65.23     Sec. 48.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 211A.13, is 
 65.24  amended to read: 
 65.25     211A.13 [PROHIBITED TRANSFERS.] 
 65.26     A candidate for political subdivision office must not 
 65.27  accept contributions from the principal campaign committee of a 
 65.28  candidate as defined in section 10A.01 10B.01, subdivision 5 8.  
 65.29  A candidate for political subdivision office must not make 
 65.30  contributions to a principal campaign committee, unless the 
 65.31  contribution is made from the personal funds of the candidate 
 65.32  for political subdivision office. 
 65.33     Sec. 49.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 211B.12, is 
 65.34  amended to read: 
 65.35     211B.12 [LEGAL EXPENDITURES.] 
 65.36     Use of money collected for political purposes is prohibited 
 66.1   unless the use is reasonably related to the conduct of election 
 66.2   campaigns, or is a noncampaign disbursement as defined in 
 66.3   section 10A.01 10B.01, subdivision 26 20.  The following are 
 66.4   permitted expenditures when made for political purposes: 
 66.5      (1) salaries, wages, and fees; 
 66.6      (2) communications, mailing, transportation, and travel; 
 66.7      (3) campaign advertising; 
 66.8      (4) printing; 
 66.9      (5) office and other space and necessary equipment, 
 66.10  furnishings, and incidental supplies; 
 66.11     (6) charitable contributions of not more than $50 to any 
 66.12  charity annually; and 
 66.13     (7) other expenses, not included in clauses (1) to (6), 
 66.14  that are reasonably related to the conduct of election campaigns.
 66.15  In addition, expenditures made for the purpose of providing 
 66.16  information to constituents, whether or not related to the 
 66.17  conduct of an election, are permitted expenses.  Money collected 
 66.18  for political purposes and assets of a political committee or 
 66.19  political fund may not be converted to personal use. 
 66.20     Sec. 50.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 211B.15, 
 66.21  subdivision 16, is amended to read: 
 66.22     Subd. 16.  [EMPLOYEE POLITICAL FUND SOLICITATION.] Any 
 66.23  solicitation of political contributions by an employee must be 
 66.24  in writing, informational and nonpartisan in nature, and not 
 66.25  promotional for any particular candidate or group of 
 66.26  candidates.  The solicitation must consist only of a general 
 66.27  request on behalf of an independent political committee (a 
 66.28  conduit fund), and as defined in section 10B.01, subdivision 9, 
 66.29  and must state that there is no minimum contribution, that a 
 66.30  contribution or lack thereof will in no way impact the 
 66.31  employee's employment, that the employee must direct the 
 66.32  contribution to candidates of the employee's choice, and that 
 66.33  any response by the employee shall remain confidential and shall 
 66.34  not be directed to the employee's supervisors or managers.  
 66.35  Questions from an employee regarding a solicitation may be 
 66.36  answered orally or in writing consistent with the above 
 67.1   requirements.  Nothing in this subdivision authorizes a 
 67.2   corporate donation of an employee's time prohibited under 
 67.3   subdivision 2.  
 67.4      Sec. 51.  [211B.22] [PARTICIPATING CANDIDATE CAMPAIGN 
 67.5   MATERIAL.] 
 67.6      A candidate may not claim in any campaign material or 
 67.7   communication to be a "participating candidate" unless the 
 67.8   candidate has been designated a participating candidate by the 
 67.9   campaign finance and public disclosure board under section 
 67.10  10B.24 for participating in the public subsidy program. 
 67.11     Sec. 52.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 340A.404, 
 67.12  subdivision 10, is amended to read: 
 67.13     Subd. 10.  [TEMPORARY ON-SALE LICENSES.] The governing body 
 67.14  of a municipality may issue to (1) a club or charitable, 
 67.15  religious, or other nonprofit organization in existence for at 
 67.16  least three years, (2) a political committee registered under 
 67.17  section 10A.14 10B.07, or (3) a state university, a temporary 
 67.18  license for the on-sale of intoxicating liquor in connection 
 67.19  with a social event within the municipality sponsored by the 
 67.20  licensee.  The license may authorize the on-sale of intoxicating 
 67.21  liquor for not more than four consecutive days, and may 
 67.22  authorize on-sales on premises other than premises the licensee 
 67.23  owns or permanently occupies.  The license may provide that the 
 67.24  licensee may contract for intoxicating liquor catering services 
 67.25  with the holder of a full-year on-sale intoxicating liquor 
 67.26  license issued by any municipality.  The licenses are subject to 
 67.27  the terms, including a license fee, imposed by the issuing 
 67.28  municipality.  Licenses issued under this subdivision are 
 67.29  subject to all laws and ordinances governing the sale of 
 67.30  intoxicating liquor except sections 340A.409 and 340A.504, 
 67.31  subdivision 3, paragraph (d), and those laws and ordinances 
 67.32  which by their nature are not applicable.  Licenses under this 
 67.33  subdivision are not valid unless first approved by the 
 67.34  commissioner of public safety. 
 67.35     A county under this section may issue a temporary license 
 67.36  only to a premises located in the unincorporated or unorganized 
 68.1   territory of the county. 
 68.2      Sec. 53.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 353.03, 
 68.3   subdivision 1, is amended to read: 
 68.4      Subdivision 1.  [MANAGEMENT; COMPOSITION; ELECTION.] The 
 68.5   management of the public employees retirement fund is vested in 
 68.6   an 11-member board of trustees consisting of ten members and the 
 68.7   state auditor who may designate a deputy auditor with expertise 
 68.8   in pension matters as the auditor's representative on the 
 68.9   board.  The governor shall appoint five trustees to four-year 
 68.10  terms, one of whom shall be designated to represent school 
 68.11  boards, one to represent cities, one to represent counties, one 
 68.12  who is a retired annuitant, and one who is a public member 
 68.13  knowledgeable in pension matters.  The membership of the 
 68.14  association, including recipients of retirement annuities and 
 68.15  disability and survivor benefits, shall elect five trustees, one 
 68.16  of whom must be a member of the police and fire fund and one of 
 68.17  whom must be a former member who met the definition of public 
 68.18  employee under section 353.01, subdivisions 2 and 2a, for at 
 68.19  least five years prior to terminating membership or a member who 
 68.20  receives a disability benefit, for terms of four years.  Except 
 68.21  as provided in this subdivision, trustees elected by the 
 68.22  membership of the association must be public employees and 
 68.23  members of the association.  For seven days beginning October 1 
 68.24  of each year preceding a year in which an election is held, the 
 68.25  association shall accept at its office filings in person or by 
 68.26  mail of candidates for the board of trustees.  A candidate shall 
 68.27  submit at the time of filing a nominating petition signed by 25 
 68.28  or more members of the fund.  No name may be withdrawn from 
 68.29  nomination by the nominee after October 15.  At the request of a 
 68.30  candidate for an elected position on the board of trustees, the 
 68.31  board shall mail a statement of up to 300 words prepared by the 
 68.32  candidate to all persons eligible to vote in the election of the 
 68.33  candidate.  The board may adopt policies to govern form and 
 68.34  length of these statements, timing of mailings, and deadlines 
 68.35  for submitting materials to be mailed.  These policies must be 
 68.36  approved by the secretary of state.  The secretary of state 
 69.1   shall resolve disputes between the board and a candidate 
 69.2   concerning application of these policies to a particular 
 69.3   statement.  A candidate who: 
 69.4      (1) receives contributions or makes expenditures in excess 
 69.5   of $100; or 
 69.6      (2) has given implicit or explicit consent for any other 
 69.7   person to receive contributions or make expenditures in excess 
 69.8   of $100 for the purpose of bringing about the candidate's 
 69.9   election, shall file a report with the campaign finance and 
 69.10  public disclosure board disclosing the source and amount of all 
 69.11  contributions to the candidate's campaign.  The campaign finance 
 69.12  and public disclosure board shall prescribe forms governing 
 69.13  these disclosures.  Expenditures and contributions have the 
 69.14  meaning defined in section 10A.01 10B.01.  These terms do not 
 69.15  include the mailing made by the association board on behalf of 
 69.16  the candidate.  A candidate shall file a report within 30 days 
 69.17  from the day that the results of the election are announced.  
 69.18  The campaign finance and public disclosure board shall maintain 
 69.19  these reports and make them available for public inspection in 
 69.20  the same manner as the board maintains and makes available other 
 69.21  reports filed with it.  By January 10 of each year in which 
 69.22  elections are to be held the board shall distribute by mail to 
 69.23  the members ballots listing the candidates.  No member may vote 
 69.24  for more than one candidate for each board position to be 
 69.25  filled.  A ballot indicating a vote for more than one person for 
 69.26  any position is void.  No special marking may be used on the 
 69.27  ballot to indicate incumbents.  The last day for mailing ballots 
 69.28  to the fund is January 31.  Terms expire on January 31 of the 
 69.29  fourth year, and positions are vacant until newly elected 
 69.30  members are qualified.  The ballot envelopes must be so designed 
 69.31  and the ballots counted in a manner that ensures that each vote 
 69.32  is secret.  
 69.33     The secretary of state shall supervise the elections.  The 
 69.34  board of trustees and the executive director shall undertake 
 69.35  their activities consistent with chapter 356A. 
 69.36     Sec. 54.  Minnesota Statutes 2002, section 383B.042, 
 70.1   subdivision 5, is amended to read: 
 70.2      Subd. 5.  "Candidate" means an individual, not within the 
 70.3   definition of candidate of section 10A.01 10B.01, subdivision 10 
 70.4   8, who seeks nomination or election to any county office in 
 70.5   Hennepin county, to any city office in any home rule charter 
 70.6   city or statutory city located wholly within Hennepin county and 
 70.7   having a population of 75,000 or more or to the school board of 
 70.8   special school district No. 1, Minneapolis. 
 70.9      Sec. 55.  [TRANSITION.] 
 70.10     Subdivision 1.  [ELECTION CYCLE.] Notwithstanding Minnesota 
 70.11  Statutes, section 10B.01, subdivision 14, the first election 
 70.12  cycle begins on the effective date of Minnesota Statutes, 
 70.13  section 10B.13, and concludes on December 31 following the next 
 70.14  general election for the office. 
 70.15     Subd. 2.  [CONTRIBUTION LIMITS.] Contributions to a 
 70.16  candidate that were made before the effective date of Minnesota 
 70.17  Statutes, section 10B.13, and were lawful when made need not be 
 70.18  refunded, even though they exceed the new limits on 
 70.19  contributions in Minnesota Statutes, section 10B.13. 
 70.20     Subd. 3.  [EXPENDITURE LIMITS.] All spending limit 
 70.21  agreements filed with the campaign finance and public disclosure 
 70.22  board before the effective date of Minnesota Statutes, section 
 70.23  10B.19, become void on that date and all eligibility for 
 70.24  continued public subsidies under Minnesota Statutes, chapter 10A 
 70.25  or 290, is ended on that date.  The new expenditure limits and 
 70.26  eligibility for a public subsidy under this act apply to 
 70.27  candidates who sign and file with the campaign finance and 
 70.28  public disclosure board a new spending limit agreement under 
 70.29  Minnesota Statutes, section 10B.19, on or after its effective 
 70.30  date. 
 70.31     Subd. 4.  [CARRYFORWARD.] The carryforward limitations in 
 70.32  Minnesota Statutes, section 10B.26, apply to assets on hand on 
 70.33  the effective date of that section, except that capital assets 
 70.34  of a principal campaign committee acquired more than 90 days 
 70.35  before the effective date of Minnesota Statutes, section 10B.26, 
 70.36  may be carried forward to the first election cycle under this 
 71.1   act without limit on their value. 
 71.2      Sec. 56.  [REPEALER.] 
 71.3      Minnesota Statutes 2002, sections 10A.01, subdivisions 3, 
 71.4   4, 6, 7, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 15, 16, 17, 18, 20, 23, 25, 26, 27, 
 71.5   28, 29, 30, 32, 34, and 36; 10A.105; 10A.11; 10A.12; 10A.13; 
 71.6   10A.14; 10A.15; 10A.16; 10A.17; 10A.18; 10A.20; 10A.24; 10A.241; 
 71.7   10A.242; 10A.25; 10A.255; 10A.257; 10A.27; 10A.273; 10A.275; 
 71.8   10A.28; 10A.29; 10A.30; 10A.31; 10A.315; 10A.321; 10A.322; 
 71.9   10A.323; 10A.324; and 290.06, subdivision 23, are repealed. 
 71.10     Sec. 57.  [INSTRUCTION TO REVISOR.] 
 71.11     In the next edition of Minnesota Statutes, the revisor of 
 71.12  statutes must note that the sections of Minnesota Statutes 
 71.13  listed in column A have been reenacted, as amended, as the 
 71.14  sections of Minnesota Statutes listed in column B, as follows: 
 71.15         Column A                          Column B
 71.16         10A.01, subd. 3                   10B.01, subd. 2
 71.17                 subd. 4                           subd. 3
 71.18                 subd. 6                           subd. 4
 71.19                 subd. 7                           subd. 5
 71.20                 subd. 9                           subd. 7
 71.21                 subd. 10                          subd. 8
 71.22                 subd. 10a                         subd. 9
 71.23                 subd. 11                          subd. 10
 71.24                 subd. 12                          subd. 11
 71.25                 subd. 13                          subd. 12
 71.26                 subd. 15                          subd. 13
 71.27                 subd. 16                          subd. 14
 71.28                 subd. 17                          subd. 15
 71.29                 subd. 18                          subd. 16
 71.30                 subd. 20                          subd. 17
 71.31                 subd. 23                          subd. 18
 71.32                 subd. 25                          subd. 19
 71.33                 subd. 26                          subd. 20
 71.34                 subd. 27                          subd. 21
 71.35                 subd. 28                          subd. 22
 71.36                 subd. 29                          subd. 23
 72.1                  subd. 30                          subd. 24
 72.2                  subd. 32                          subd. 25
 72.3                  subd. 34                          subd. 26
 72.4                  subd. 36                          subd. 27
 72.5          10A.105                           10B.02
 72.6          10A.11                            10B.03
 72.7          10A.12                            10B.04
 72.8          10A.13                            10B.06
 72.9          10A.14                            10B.07
 72.10         10A.15                            10B.08
 72.11         10A.16                            10B.09
 72.12         10A.17                            10B.10
 72.13         10A.18                            10B.11
 72.14         10A.20                            10B.12
 72.15         10A.24                            10B.29
 72.16         10A.241                           10B.30
 72.17         10A.242                           10B.28
 72.18         10A.25                            10B.17
 72.19         10A.255                           10B.24, subd. 3
 72.20         10A.257                           10B.26
 72.21         10A.27                            10B.13
 72.22         10A.273                           10B.14
 72.23         10A.275                           10B.19
 72.24         10A.28, subd. 1                   10B.27, subd. 2
 72.25                 subd. 2                           subd. 1
 72.26                 subd. 3                           subd. 3
 72.27                 subd. 4                           subd. 4
 72.28         10A.29                            10B.15
 72.29         10A.315                           10B.24, subd. 6
 72.30         10A.322                           10B.19
 72.31         10A.323                           10B.20
 72.32         10A.324                           10B.25
 72.33         290.06, subd. 23                  10B.16
 72.34     Sec. 58.  [EFFECTIVE DATE.] 
 72.35     This act is effective August 1, 2003.