Brad Sherman manager files FEC Super-PAC coordination complaint against Howard Berman on slate mail vendor activity
When the U.S. Supreme Court set the stage for the creation of so-called “Super-PACs” – independent groups that can spend unlimited money and raise corporate and union dollars in unlimited amounts to affect Federal elections – it did not mean that existing regulations of the Federal Election Commission banning “coordinated communications” between independent groups and official campaigns were set aside. In fact, the legality of the activities of such groups are absolutely founded on the notion of independence from control or coordination with official federal candidate campaign committees, according to the Supreme Court. So the FEC’s “non-coordination” regulations are a very important consideration in the realm of “Super-PACs.”
Last week, the campaign manager for Congressman Brad Sherman, Scott Abrams, filed a complaint against 30th Congressional District rival Congressman Howard Berman, and his campaign committee, alleging illegal coordinated communications between those Respondents and the independent Super-PAC supporting Berman, through Mr. Jerry Seedborg, a Long Beach-based political consultant and… Read More