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Ask Governor Kotek to Veto HB 4018:
the Campaign Finance Destruction Bill


Clock on the heading above for more information on how to easily request a veto by sending email to [email protected].  Be sure to put Veto HB 4018 in the subject line.​

Send Email to the Governor
        
or phone the Governor at 503-378-4582

Tell her now to veto it. She has to announce all vetoes by April 11.

​Update March 8, 2026


The Oregon Legislature on March 5 passed HB 4018, the bill to destroy campaign finance reform in Oregon.

The vote in the House was 39-19.
  • Of the 37 Democrats, only 13 voted "no", and all of the Democratic Leadership voted "yes" for the bad bill.
  • Of the 23 Republicans, 6 voted "no," with Republican Leadership voting "yes."

The vote in the Senate was 20-9.
  • Of the 18 Democrats, only 6 voted "no", and all of the Democratic Leadership voted "yes" for the bad bill.
  • Of the 12 Republicans, 3 voted "no" and Christine Drazan was excused.

Here is the full vote tabulation (scroll down to Measure History 3-5).

Governor Tina Kotek has until April 16 to veto the bad bill.  Oregon's good government groups have urged her to veto it.  Even the national experts on campaign finance, the Campaign Legal Center, has urged her to veto it.

If the Governor does not veto HB 4018, Honest Elections Oregon will proceed to draft an amendment to the Oregon Constitution to enact campaign finance reforms that the Oregon Legislature cannot destroy.

Get Involved!

The Oregonian on March 8 issued another scathing editorial against what the Legislature did.
  • Here you can see all of the editorials.

For more information, we have created these additional folders: 
  • Testimonies and explanatory documents
  • News articles​ ​
Update March 4, 2026

HB 4018A, the bill to destroy campaign finance reform in Oregon, will be voted on in both the Oregon Senate and Oregon House on March 4. It was written in secret by big money lobbyists and politicians, without any campaign finance reform organizations. The Oregonian editors agree that Oregon voters are being completely betrayed.
​

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​​​League of Women Voters of Oregon 
Common Cause
Honest Elections Oregon
Consolidated Oregon Indivisible Network (COIN) 

​Independent Party of Oregon 
Pacific Green Party  
Oregon Progressive Party 
Alliance for Democracy
Portland Forward
. . . and many others

The Democratic Leadership in the House of Representatives bypassed the Senate Rules Committee (where Senator Jeff Golden sits) by sending the bill to the Joint Ways & Means Committee, which advanced it to the floor of both the House and the Senate with no public hearings whatever.

There is ample documentation for the huge loopholes in HB 4018 A:​
​
Good Government Groups Summary of HB 4018 A Defects

Good Government Groups Point-by-Point Refutation of Big Money Lobbyists

Testimony of Daniel Meek on HB 4018 -8
​
HB 4018A dismantles key aspects of campaign finance law and delays others. This bill is being described as minor technical fixes by some of the largest political spenders in Oregon politics, but in reality the changes are deep, substantive, and destructive, as confirmed by all involved good government groups in Oregon and nationwide.
 
The League of Women Voters of Oregon said it’s “a complete betrayal of the deal made in 2024.” Common Cause Oregon says the Legislature is acting “in bad faith” and “creating loopholes for big money, reducing transparency, and undermining enforcement.”
 
The Campaign Legal Center, the nation's leading experts on campaign finance regulation, stated that HB 4018 contains “nonsensical” provisions; “would weaken laws intended to prevent corruption and provide voters with information about who is spending big money to influence their vote”; and would create “a glaring loophole in all of the contribution limits.”
 
Here are some examples of some of the huge policy changes in the bill (details in table):
 
1. Allows big spenders to evade the limits by creating multiple entities, with each allowed to make contributions, as long as evading the contribution limits is not “the sole purpose” of the entity. This effectively eliminates the contribution limits for big spenders.

2. Creates two new categories of totally unregulated campaign spending, neither of which are subject to contribution limits or required reporting in ORESTAR:

● Removes “coordinated expenditures" from the definition of “contribution,” which eliminates all limits on coordinated expenditures supporting candidates.

● Deems some coordinated in-kinds as not coordinated, and therefore not a “contribution,” as the Campaign Legal Center confirms.
 
3. Removes all penalties for contributors giving unlawfully large contributions during years 2027-2030, no matter how large the violations.
 
4. Repeals the requirement that entities making over $50,000 in independent expenditures per year disclose the real sources of their funds, if they spend less than $50,000 per candidate per year.

5. Increases the special limits on in-kind contributions from an aggregate limit per candidate per year to a limit per contributor per candidate per year. So if a candidate has 100 contributors, the in-kind contribution limit becomes 100 times higher than the current $2,500 per year in food and beverages and $2,500 per year in transportation services.
 
6. Newly allows massive in-kind contributions by membership organizations to any candidate for any local government office, including over 2,000 hours of staff time per year to each candidate from each organization.

7. Doubles the limits on contributions into multicandidate committees by changing the denominator from “per election cycle” (2 years) to “per year.”

8. Cuts in half the allowable contributions to minor party candidates. HB 4018A deletes the provision allowing minor party candidates to receive contributions during the primary election, which cuts in half their allowable contributions and allows major party candidates to receive double the contributions for the same offices.
 
9. Allows political parties to transfer unlimited amounts from their federal PACs to their state political party committees, regardless of Oregon limits on contributions into those committees.

10. Changes transparency requirements so that independent spenders that are not political committees permissibly “may” disclose the true source of their funds.
​

Click here for earlier updates on the 2026 Oregon Legislature
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More Charts about Spending in the 2022 Oregon Candidate Elections
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Our Current Slide Show

​Current News
about Our Campaigns

​
See the remarkable 2019 Oregonian series:

​Polluted by Money: How Corporate Cash Corrupted One of the Greenest States in America, by Rob Davis.
​

The series is available at two places at The Oregonian:  HERE and HERE.  The first piece documents how Oregon legislators depend on corporate cash and how they reward their donors with lax environmental laws and policies.  It includes this powerful 4-minute video-minute video but also much, much more.


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