10/19: States consider Internet rules for campaign fundraising
AP: States consider Internet rules for campaign fundraising
Florida mayoral candidate Scott Wagman bought an ad that popped up online when anyone ran a Google search for his opponents' names. The Florida Elections Commission ordered Wagman to remove it and pay a $250 fine, even though the required disclaimer was longer than the 68 characters allowed in the text of the ad, which wasn't "paid for" until someone clicked on it.
An ongoing debate is raging about how "old media" rules governing campaign spending should apply to the "new media" of the Internet age. When does a blog connected to a campaign need to disclose its allegiance? Does a candidate's personal Facebook page need a disclaimer if it is updated by a staffer? Can a campaign-related tweet - a message posted on social media site Twitter - even be regulated?
"Policing this is going to be a tremendously difficult thing, let alone writing the rules," said Edwin Bender, executive director of the National Institute on Money in State Politics, a nonprofit group in Helena, Mont.
Also in the South:
ALABAMA: If health care overhaul fails, 46,000 Alabamians will lose health benefits says report
ARKANSAS: GOP hopes to unseat Democrat Vic Snyder, the state's lone liberal voice
FLORIDA: Files full of personal information found in mortgage company's trash
GEORGIA: U.S. Dept. of Justice rejects Georgia's voter tracking system
KENTUCKY: Gov. Beshear to tour state this week holding education press conferences
LOUISIANA: Cancer rate hits alarming numbers in Louisiana
MISSISSIPPI: State's harvest ruined by excessive rain, costing farmers $377 million
NORTH CAROLINA: Economic summit on education and economy at NCCU today
SOUTH CAROLINA: Coastal alliance formed by SC, GA, FL, NC to handle regional issues
TENNESSEE: State may have to cut total of $1.1 billion from 2010 budget
VIRGINIA: Judge rules for second time that VA violated voting rights of military personnel
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Labels: Beshear, budget, cancer, coastal, harvest, health, liberal, voting


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