Bill
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BILL • US HOUSE

HR 8912

To prohibit the use of campaign funds for prediction-market transactions, and for other purposes.

119th Congress
Introduced by Ritchie Torres,

Prohibits using campaign funds to engage in prediction-market transactions or related financial instruments.

Introduced in House
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Bill Summary · HR 8912

Summary of HR 8912 (119th Congress)

Purpose and intent

HR 8912 seeks to prohibit the use of campaign funds for prediction-market transactions. In practical terms, the bill would bar political campaigns, political committees, and related campaign-finance entities from using any money in their accounts to participate in prediction-market markets or to purchase, sell, or trade securities or contracts tied to predictions about future events. The underlying goal is to prevent campaign funds from being diverted to financial or speculative activities that are unrelated to political campaigns and to reduce potential conflicts of interest and perceived misuse of campaign resources.

Key provisions and changes

  • Prohibition on campaign funds: Campaign accounts and funds may not be used to engage in prediction-market transactions. This includes direct purchases or sales of prediction-market shares, contracts, or similar financial instruments that provide a payoff based on the outcome of future events.
  • Scope of applicability: Applies to all entities that handle campaign funds, such as candidate committees, political action committees (PACs), super PACs, and any other groups subject to federal campaign-finance laws.
  • Compliance requirements: Likely to require financial officers and treasurers of campaigns to ensure expenditures are not used for prediction-market activities, with explicit language defining “prediction-market transactions” and related financial instruments.
  • Penalties and enforcement: While the exact penalties are not specified in the summary provided, typical enforcement could involve civil penalties, disgorgement of illicit proceeds, and potential reporting adjustments. The bill would presumably be enforced by the appropriate election-oversight or ethics authorities.
  • Reporting and transparency: The bill may require enhanced disclosure or documentation to demonstrate that campaign expenditures have not been used for prohibited transactions, potentially affecting how disbursements are categorized and reported.

Who would be affected

  • Primary: Individuals and entities that manage federal campaign funds, including candidates’ committees, PACs, super PACs, party committees, and any other entities subject to federal campaign-finance regulations.
  • Secondary: Vendors and service providers that process campaign expenditures, as they would need to ensure that disbursement categories do not inadvertently include prediction-market activity.

Procedural and timeline aspects

  • Introduction: The bill was introduced in the House.
  • Referral: Referred to the House Committee on House Administration (as of the action history).
  • Sponsor: Co-sponsored by Rep. Ritchie Torres.
  • Timeline: No further actions (e.g., passage by committee, floor consideration, or Senate action) are listed in the provided record; thus, progress beyond referral to committee is not indicated here.

Potential impact and considerations

  • Alignment with campaign-finance ethics: The bill reinforces the principle that campaign funds should be used for political activities and related administrative costs, not for speculative financial activity.
  • Administrative burden: Campaign treasurers would need to review disbursement practices to ensure compliance, potentially requiring new internal controls and accounting categorization.
  • Market implications: If enacted, prediction markets or related platforms would see a reduction in participation through political campaign channels, although non-campaign individuals could still participate in prediction markets with their personal funds.

For readers seeking more detail, the exact statutory language would clarify definitions (e.g., what constitutes a “prediction-market transaction”) and specify penalties, enforcement mechanisms, and any exceptions.

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