Posted 10 days ago
FIRST ON FOX: A Republican congresswoman’s new bill would ban nonprofits from donating to election organizations – after accusations Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg used big bucks to pedal political influence in 2020.
Republican New York Rep. Claudia Tenney will introduce the "End Zuckerbucks Act" on Wednesday, which would change Internal Revenue Code to block 501(c)(3) tax-exempt organizations from directly funding official organizations, she told Fox News Digital.
"This kind of influence operation by a third party in America’s elections undermines public confidence in the democratic process," Tenney said.
"It puts private donors in charge of dictating to government agencies what should and should not be done. We cannot allow organizations like this to flout the law or continue their partisan, private funding of our elections."
The congresswoman said the bill comes in response to Zuckerberg and his wife's $250 million donation to the Center for Tech and Civic Life, which aimed to fund grants to local election boards across the country ahead of the 2020 elections.
That funding came with the stated goal of helping jurisdictions deal with the coronavirus pandemic through measures such as paying for ballot drop boxes, voting equipment, additional manpower, protective gear for poll workers and public education campaigns on new voting methods.
Republicans across the country have contended that the funding from Zuckerberg, which ultimately topped $400 million, was used for "just about everything" but coronavirus materials and was instead a means to pedal influence on election boards.
"It turned out that 99% of it was spent on other things and 92% of it was spent on Democrat leaning districts, particularly in swing states, with really disproportionate numbers where they can drive up the vote and use it for electioneering and ballot harvesting and other things to really just try to prime the pump in the election," Tenney told Fox News Digital. "And it worked because the election of 2020 was basically decided by about 42,000 votes. If you just look at those swing states, had they gone the other way, we could have had a different result."
Following the 2020 election, states like Georgia and Florida have enacted laws banning private money from being used to pay for local elections in response to outrage over the funding from the Zuckerberg-linked organization and other groups.
Since then, the same group has been accused of trying to circumvent those laws. Georgia officials told Fox News Digital last month that an investigation had been launched into a $2 million donation from the group that benefited the DeKalb County Board of Registration and Elections.... (Read more)