1 Texas Administrative Code § 24.19 – Affidavit Required by a Political Committee Making a Direct Campaign Expenditure from a Political Contribution Accepted from a Corporation or Labor Organization A political committee, including a direct campaign expenditure-only committee, must include in its campaign treasurer appointment the affidavit described by section 252.003(a)(4) (relating to contents of…
1 Texas Administrative Code § 24.18 – Designation of Contribution for Administrative Purposes (a) Any of the following will serve to designate a political expenditure in the form of a political contribution made by a corporation or labor organization as restricted to the establishment, administration, maintenance, or operation of a general-purpose committee: (1) A contemporaneous…
1 Texas Administrative Code § 24.17 – Corporate Expenditures for Get-Out-the-Vote Campaigns Permitted (a) An expenditure to finance a voter registration or get-out-the-vote drive is not a political expenditure if the drive encourages voting in general but does not encourage voting for or against a measure, candidate, officeholder, or political party. (b) A corporation or…
1 Texas Administrative Code § 24.15 – Payments to a Corporation of the Candidate or Officeholder (a) If a corporation charges a candidate, officeholder, or specific-purpose committee for supporting or assisting a candidate or officeholder less than fair market value for goods or services in order to comply with § RSA 253.041(b) of the Election…
1 Texas Administrative Code § 24.5 – Corporate Loans (a) A corporation may not make a loan to a candidate, officeholder, or political committee for campaign or officeholder purposes unless: (1) the corporation has been legally and continuously engaged in the business of lending money for at least one year before the loan is made;…
1 Texas Administrative Code § 24.1 – Corporations and Certain Associations Covered (a) This chapter applies to:(1) labor organizations; (2) corporations that are organized under the Texas Business Corporation Act, the Texas For-Profit Corporation Law, the Texas Non-Profit Corporation Act, the Texas Non-Profit Corporation Law, federal law, or the laws of another state or nation;…
1 Texas Administrative Code § 22.37 – Virtual Currency Contributions (a) Virtual currency contributions are considered “in-kind” contributions. (b) A candidate, officeholder, or political committee must report a gain from the sale of virtual currency contributions on the appropriate schedule if the gain exceeds the reporting threshold set by Section 254.031(9) of the Election Code…
1 Texas Administrative Code § 22.35 – Corporate Contributions to Certain Political Committees (a) A political committee that accepts a monetary political contribution from a corporation or labor organization shall maintain the contribution in a separate account for political contributions from corporations and labor organizations. (b) A political committee that accepts a political contribution from…
1 Texas Administrative Code § 22.31 – Restrictions on Foreign Nationals Federal law prohibits contributions from foreign nationals who have not been granted permanent residence in the United States. See United States Code, Title 2, §441(e).
1 Texas Administrative Code § 22.29 – Activity after Death or Incapacity of Candidate or Officeholder (a) The legal representative of a candidate or officeholder who has died or become incapacitated may accept political contributions and make or authorize expenditures only for the following purposes: (1) payment of debts or expenses in connection with a…