A new majority on the state’s campaign watchdog will be in place when Secretary of State Debra Bowen appoints a new member to the Fair Political Practices Commission sometime next week.
Bowen’s appointment will mark the third new appointment this
year to the five-member commission, and could tip the political balance
of the commission, say some campaign watchdog groups.
Earlier this year, Attorney General Jerry Brown picked
Democrat Lynn Montgomery to serve on the commission.
Controller John Chiang tapped Republican Ronald Rotunda
to serve on the panel.
“The last two appointments have been, on their face,
disappointing,” said Kathay Feng, executive director of California
Common Cause. “Bowen’s appointment is going to be absolutely critical. Hopefully,
she will do the right thing and appoint somebody who
understands what the mission of the FPPC is, and believes
there is an important function in serving as the watchdog
for political campaign activities.”
Bowen has told advocates that she has made her decision,
but will not announce the pick until next week. Bowen
did not talk to Capitol Weekly for this story.
The new members could alter the direction of a commission
that, under Republican Ross Johnson’s leadership, has become more aggressive in cracking
down on political committees designed to make an end-run around campaign contribution and spending limits.
Johnson’s commission has also been an aggressive enforcer,
levying large fines against violators of state rules,
and bringing aggressive legal action against political
groups.
“Ross has been an excellent chairman,” says Bob Stern, president of the Center for Governmental
Studies. “I think it’s refreshing, and frankly, it’s been somewhat surprising. Ross is a former legislator,
and the first chairman to be a former legislator. You
might expect maybe a little bit of more sympathy toward
the Legislature, but Ross is very aggressive and been
a real regulator in action and deed.”
Johnson said he does not expect the infusion of new blood to alter the direction of the commission. “I honestly don’t expect any changes. I think that in the two-and-a-half years that I’ve been here, we’ve worked to develop consensus, and we’ve done that pretty successfully,” he said.
Feng, who also had nice words for Johnson’s tenure as chairman, was more skeptical about the
future direction of the commission. “On the two most recent appointments, we can only hope
that they will also turn out to be surprises,” she said. “However, Lynn Montgomery’s resume suggests she’s the embodiment of a political insider. Ron Rotunda
is a traditional anti-regulation conservative who has, in a previous life,
been a consultant for the CATO Institute, which has
a long record of opposing campaign finance regulation.”
Under state law, the governor appoints two members
to the commission from different political parties.
The state attorney general, controller and secretary
of state all get to make one appointment to the commission.
If all three Constitutional officers are of the same
party (as they are now), the controller must make an appointment from a list
provided by the opposing political party.
Earlier this year, Brown appointed Montgomery to the
commission. Montgomery is a Democratic campaign veteran,
having worked as director of the Assembly’s political arm, the Speaker’s Office of Member Services. She was also a top lieutenant
for former Lt. Gov Cruz Bustamante. Ironically, Montgomery
was part of Bustamante’s campaign, which was fined $263,000 by the commission, which was, at the time, the largest
fine in commission history.
Montgomery says she has some problems with limits on
political contributions, because they have created
the rise of independent expenditure committees and
self-funded candidates. “That’s not something I’ve been very fond of,” she said. “I don’t know that it’s good for the public. There’s less accountability. I don’t necessarily think that’s where it should have gone.”
But as a commissioner, she said, her focus will be
on educating campaigns about how to navigate the minefield
of paperwork that is required. “I’ve always been a strong believer in disclosure,” she said. “And also education – going into the public and making sure our forms and
manuals are clear.”
Montgomery also brings years of FPPC experience to
the job, having served as a consultant and spokeswoman
for the commission before her work in the Assembly.
Johnson said he is confident Montgomery will be a strong
FPPC commissioner.
“Commissioner Montgomery is a former employee here at
the commission. She has a history of working to enforce
the political reform act,” Johnson said. “And she was appointed by Jerry Brown, who was the author
of Prop 9, the original ballot measure (that created the FPPC). I’ve seen nothing that would indicate to me that she
will be anything but supportive of the efforts that
we’ve implemented over the last couple of years.”
Rotunda is a California political outsider. A former
assistant majority council for the Watergate Committee,
he has served as a professor at the University of Illinois
and George Mason University in Virginia before landing
a job at Chapman University’s Law School in Orange County.
His appointment was heralded by the state Republican
Party when it was announced. State Party Chairman Ron
Nehring called Rotunda “a world class expert in a number of key legal fields
and we are confident he will serve as a powerful voice
for reason on the commission.”
Reason seems to be a driving force in Rotunda’s political philosophy. On his George Mason University
home page, he is seen posing with a cardboard cutout
of Leonard Nemoy’s Star Trek character, Spock. His Champan University
bio page is a bit more conservative, featuring a headshot
of Rotunda in a bowtie and wire-framed glasses.
Johnson said he “knows of nothing in (Rotunda’s) background that would indicate” he won’t be an aggressive enforcer of campaign rules.
When it comes to campaign finance issues, the divisions
often have less to do with party affiliation than with
philosophies over the role of money in politics. Both
major political parties have resisted efforts to crack
down on limits of their campaign spending.
In fact, a bipartisan group, the California Political
Attorneys Association, is a common presence at commission
hearings, often challenging new rules under consideration.
Johnson said that while groups like CPAA may lobby
for less stringent rules, most who fall under the FPPC’s regulatory shadow simply want clarity.
“I believe that most people who have reporting responsibilities
want to obey the law,” said Johnson. “Tell me what the rules are, and I’ll play by them. Folks appear before the commission
to argue the rules, and they argue for the most liberal
interpretation of those rules at times. And that tends
to be without reference to any party affiliation.”
Indeed Hodson and Johnson, who are from different political
parties, have voted in lock-step with each other since both joined the commission
in 2007. Since that time, the commission has cracked down
on ballot-measure committees controlled by political candidates,
and levied heavy fines against those who have run afoul
of state campaign finance laws.
Though the name of Bowen’s appointee will not yet be released to the public
until the formal announcement by the FPPC and Bowen’s office, speculation has been made that Bowen has
already decided on the person to replace commissioner
Eugene Hugeunin, whose official term expired January
31, 2009.
Hugeunin will serve as a commissioner until Bowen’s appointment is made.
The FPPC was created as part of the Political Reform
Act of 1974, passed by voters as Proposition 9, to ensure regulations on topics such as campaign
financing and conflicts of interests, lobbyist’s registration, and gifts to public officials and candidates.
