Analysis
Congress has collectively spent 94 years fundraising since 2015
Since 2015, our elected leaders have had to spend hours fundraising, instead of doing their jobs. One of the biggest problems with our campaign finance system is that the…
Analysis
Even before the coronavirus crisis upended the lives of millions of Americans and the operations of countless government agencies, the Federal Election Commission (FEC) was struggling.
Today, in fact, marks the start of the ninth month since the nation’s campaign finance watchdog lost its ability to do its job due to the resignation of one commissioner in August. That resignation left three seats on the six-member commission vacant — one person short of the quorum necessary to conduct most of the agency’s official business.
The FEC is now enduring the longest period in the agency’s history without a quorum, without which it cannot craft new rules, give legal advice to candidates, or fine those who break the law. Last year, a report from the FEC’s Inspector General called the lack of a quorum at the FEC the “most significant management and performance challenge” facing the agency.
It’s up to the president to nominate, and the Senate to confirm, new commissioners. So far, President Donald Trump has nominated just one new commissioner, Texas attorney Trey Trainor, for whom the Senate Rules Committee held a confirmation hearing in March and whose qualifications Issue One has repeatedly raised concerns about.
As Issue One Executive Director Meredith McGehee has said: “Senators from both parties should have serious doubts about Trey Trainor’s ability to be the effective campaign finance cop the American people need. Reopening the Federal Election Commission with a commissioner who does not think we should enforce the nation’s campaign finance laws will only make matters worse.
Against this backdrop, here are five numbers that show how the FEC is missing in action at this critical time.
244: Number of days — and counting — that the FEC has been without enough members to conduct official business such as promulgating new rules, issuing legal advice, or fining those who break campaign finance laws.
300: Approximate number of cases on the FEC’s enforcement docket that cannot be resolved until the FEC regains a quorum. About three dozen of these cases involve alleged illegal foreign interference in U.S. elections.
68: Number of pending enforcement cases for which the statute of limitations could expire if the FEC does not soon regain a quorum.
8: Number of public meetings that the FEC had to cancel in 2019 because it lacked the quorum necessary to conduct official business. No public meetings will be held in 2020 until the FEC regains a quorum.
100%: Portion of the FEC’s three currently serving commissioners who are serving on expired terms. While a term on the FEC is designed to be six years, the most junior FEC commissioner has been serving for nearly 12 years (roughly double a normal term) and the longest-serving FEC commissioner has been serving for more than 17 years (roughly three times a normal term).
Learn more about what can be done to fix the FEC at FECMIA.com, a project of Issue One.
Issue: Federal Election Commission