On 15 May, Common Cause of Minnesota filed complaints with the Minnesota Attorney General and the Minnesota Campaign Finance and Public Disclosure Board alleging the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC)—a secretive right-wingnut corporate bill mill—is violating lobbying and charitable activities laws.
The complaint to the attorney general alleges that ALEC “operates as a corporate lobby group masquerading as a public charity.”
The complaint to the state’s Campaign Finance and Public Disclosure Board alleges ALEC failed to register as a lobbyist in Minnesota. Common Cause provided evidence of email from ALEC to Minnesota legislators “advocating for support of ALEC drafted legislation.”
The action by Common Cause of Minnesota grew out of a national action by Common Cause when it filed a complaint with the US Internal Revenue Service (IRS). The Common Cause complaint requests an investigation into “ALEC’s lobbying activities, the collection of unpaid taxes, and assessment of appropriate penalties” and is based on more than 4,000 pages of ALEC’s documents.
For more than 40 years, ALEC has consistently maintained that it doesn’t lobby; rather it claims it’s an educational group that sponsors public policy meetings between state legislators and corporate representatives. Corporate members pay dues—ranging from US$7,000 to US$25,000—to ALEC annually. State legislators pay annual dues of US$50 and receive “scholarships” to cover their attendance at the ALEC educational meetings that mostly take place at luxury resorts and include their families. The state legislators that attend ALEC’s educational meetings are provided with draft legislation that have included support for the castle doctrine and voter identification initiatives.
ALEC’s attorney, Alan Dye, told Minnesota Public Radio’s Catharine Richert, “the group abides by legal lobbying limits, but that the organization is free to communicate with state lawmakers in ways not covered by those definitions, such as sending out research and analysis.”
