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FEC finds partisan film group immune from disclosure rules
A little-noticed Federal Election Commission ruling that expands the definition of "media'' to include a partisan film production group is the latest in a series of actions eroding legislative limits on the influence of money in politics.
We're really returning, seemingly inexorably, toward an entirely deregulated system,'' said Thomas Mann, who studies campaign finance at the Brookings Institution, a Washington think tank. "It was a rather breathtaking decision.''
The commission voted June 10 to designate the filmmaker Citizens United a "press entity,'' equating its often highly partisan work–including films attacking Democrats Hillary Rodham Clinton and President Obama–with the work of nightly newscasts.
The result, analysts say, is that the group is not required to disclose its role in sponsoring political projects or activities, or reveal the source of its funding. Thus, it becomes impossible to discern its influence in the political process.