Bill Requiring Campaign Ads Disclosures Passed

The city council passed two pieces of legislation on Thursday that will require more transparency on who pays for political candidates’ campaign ads.
Bill Requiring Campaign Ads Disclosures Passed
City Councilman Brad Lander in an undated file photo. Steven Wang/NTD
Annie Wu
Updated:

The city council passed two pieces of legislation on Thursday that will require more transparency on who pays for political candidates’ campaign ads.

The bills, sponsored by Council members Dan Garodnick and Brad Lander, require candidates for city office to disclose that their campaign ads were paid for or authorized by the candidate, and for outside groups who pay for campaign ads to disclose their three biggest donors, as well as the group’s chief executive officer.

The council will also set up a new website, nyc.gov/FollowTheMoney, which will display data on the groups and their donors. Campaign advertisements would be required to direct the viewer or listener to the new website. 

“If your name is on the ballot, you have to own up to your communications,” said Council member Garodnick at a press conference prior to the council’s vote.

Council member Lander pointed out that in the most recent election season for city council seats, funding from many outside groups surpassed the candidate’s own spending. Some hid under vague names such as Jobs For New York and United for the Future.

Annie Wu
Annie Wu
Author
Annie Wu joined the full-time staff at the Epoch Times in July 2014. That year, she won a first-place award from the New York Press Association for best spot news coverage. She is a graduate of Barnard College and the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism.
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