Pubdate: Sun, 25 Jan 2015 Source: Washington Post (DC) Copyright: 2015 The Washington Post Company Contact: http://mapinc.org/url/mUgeOPdZ Website: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/491 Author: Eric Wang Note: The writer is a lawyer and a senior fellow at the Center for Competitive Politics. THE COST OF A POLITICAL OPINION Civic-minded citizens of the District: Think twice the next time you write a blog entry, post on Facebook or Twitter or attend a meeting or rally to support or oppose a ballot initiative. You could be required to register and report with the city or else pay a large fine. The Office of Campaign Finance (OCF) at the D.C. Board of Elections dropped this end-of-the-year bombshell in an enforcement proceeding arising from November's election, in which District residents voted to legalize marijuana. In the run-up to the vote on Initiative 71, District resident William V. Jones III created the Web site "Two. Is. Enough. D.C." Under the premise that having two legal recreational substances (alcohol and tobacco) was enough, the Web site provided opinions and information opposing marijuana legalization. According to the OCF, Mr. Jones also invoked the "Two Is Enough" slogan when he "participated in various meetings and demonstrations" in the D.C. community. After leaders of the pro-legalization D.C. Cannabis Campaign suggested that Jones was violating campaign finance laws by not registering and reporting as a "political committee," Mr. Jones registered "No On Initiative 71" to engage in activities opposing the initiative. The D.C. Cannabis Campaign nonetheless filed a complaint with the OCF against the purported group known as "Two Is Enough." The OCF acknowledged that Two Is Enoug hwas separate from the No On Initiative 71 committee. It concluded that Two Is Enough was required to register and report because D.C. law defines a political committee as any "individual, committee (including a principal campaign committee), club, organization, association, or other group of individuals organized for the purpose of, or engaged in promoting or opposing, the nomination or election of an individual to office, a political party, or any initiative, referendum, or recall measure." For his civic participation, Mr. Jones was fined $2,000. The OCF pointed out that Mr. Jones's Web site asked for donations and likely made expenditures to pay for its operation. But, under the broad language of the municipal code and OCF's broad application, he would have been required to register and report even if he had received no contributions and made no expenditures. The District is not alone in approving marijuana legalization, having joined Alaska, Colorado, Oregon and Washington state. Unfortunately, other jurisdictions also have draconian campaign finance laws that have made a mockery of the direct democracy that voter initiatives are supposed to provide citizens. Like Mr. Jones, citizens in Colorado and Arizona have been punished under comparable laws and circumstances, but federal courts recently found those states' laws unconstitutional. The District's law is similarly unconstitutional, and D.C. Council members shouldn't wait for a judge to fix it. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom