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Bill

Bill

S 525

Relates to the metropolitan commuter transportation authority establishing and implementing a vegetation management policy

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Shelley Mayer

Bans political spending by foreign-influenced corporations, requires CEO-certified compliance within 7 business days, and adds ad disclosures if funds may come from such entities.

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Bill Summary · S 525

Summary — S.525 (2025): "An Act to limit political spending by foreign-influenced corporations"

Note on source material
- The package you provided includes multiple, inconsistent items (a federal transfer of Food for Peace authorities, a title about vegetation management, and a detailed Massachusetts Senate docket No. 525). The bill text summarized below follows the Massachusetts Senate docket No. 525 (filed 1/15/2025) addressing limits on political spending by “foreign‑influenced corporations.” If you intended a different bill, tell me which version and I’ll summarize that instead.

Purpose and intent
- To restrict and increase transparency around political spending by for‑profit entities that are substantially owned by, controlled by, or influenced by foreign persons or entities, with the intent of preventing foreign influence over state ballot measures, candidate elections and related political communications.

Key provisions
1. New definitions added to Chapter 55 (Elections)
- “Chief executive officer”: highest-ranking officer with authority over corporate affairs.
- “Corporation”: broadly defined to include for‑profit companies, LLCs, LPs, trusts, etc.
- “Foreign investor”: includes foreign governments, foreign political parties, organizations organized under foreign law, or non‑U.S. individuals who are not citizens or permanent residents.
- “Foreign owner”: either a foreign investor, or a corporation in which a foreign investor directly/indirectly owns ≥50% equity/voting shares.
- “Foreign‑influenced corporation”: three alternative triggers:
1. Single foreign owner holds ≥1% beneficial ownership; or
2. Two or more foreign owners collectively hold ≥5% beneficial ownership; or
3. Any foreign owner participates (directly or indirectly) in the corporation’s decision‑making regarding its U.S. political activities.

  1. Prohibition on political expenditures by foreign‑influenced corporations

    • A foreign‑influenced corporation may not:
      • Make independent expenditures;
      • Make electioneering communication expenditures;
      • Contribute to independent‑expenditure PACs or ballot question committees;
      • Spend to promote or oppose charter changes, referenda, constitutional amendments, or other voter‑submitted questions.
  2. Certification and reporting requirement

    • If a corporation makes any of the listed expenditures (contrary to the prohibition), it must file within 7 business days a certification with the director (signed by the CEO under penalty of perjury) stating that, after due inquiry, the corporation was not a foreign‑influenced corporation on the date the expenditure was made.
  3. Disclosure language for third‑party ads

    • If top contributors to an independent expenditure or electioneering communication have not provided certifications affirming their funds were not obtained from foreign‑influenced corporations, the ad must include the statement: “Some of the funds used to pay for this message may have been provided by foreign‑influenced corporations.”
    • Recipients of certifications may rely on them unless they have actual knowledge the certification is false.

Who is affected
- For‑profit corporations and business entities doing political spending in the state.
- Foreign investors, foreign owners and entities with cross‑border ownership.
- Independent expenditure committees, PACs, ballot question committees, media/advertisers running electioneering communications.
- Corporate chief executives (required to sign certifications) and state election enforcement/administrative officials responsible for compliance and enforcement.

Procedural and timeline notes (as provided)
- Filed as Senate Docket No. 525 (1/15/2025). Legislative actions in your materials are inconsistent (references to multiple committees and dates). Included entries show referral to Election Laws and hearings scheduled 10/21/2025; committee reported favorably 11/24/2025 and was referred to Senate Ways & Means. Confirm the authoritative legislative history if needed.

Potential impacts and issues to consider
- Compliance complexity: ownership thresholds (1%, 5%, 50%) and “participation in decision‑making” can be hard to determine for entities with layered or indirect ownership.
- Administrative burden: corporations will need due‑diligence processes and recordkeeping to support certifications.
- Transparency: could increase public awareness of foreign‑linked financing of political messages.
- Legal risks: raises possible First Amendment/constitutional challenges and disputes over definitions and enforcement.
- Enforcement practicality: verifying whether funds originated from foreign‑influenced corporations may require cross‑border financial tracing.

If you want, I can:
- Produce a one‑page fact sheet for voters or corporate legal counsel.
- Extract and compare this bill’s definitions and thresholds with similar laws in other states or the federal level.
- Clarify the inconsistent metadata and provide a timeline based on official legislative records.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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