The Government Operations & Military Affairs Committee on April 22 spent an extended portion of testimony debating whether the Voter Protections Act draft should explicitly list campaign security spending and whether to limit those expenditures with a dollar cap.
Elections Director Sean said the draft’s definition-language was intended to clarify that costs incurred for candidate safety—protective detail, monitoring systems and cybersecurity—are allowable campaign expenditures when necessary. “We thought it was sufficient. We thought it would be helpful for giving that guidance to candidates,” he said.
Several lawmakers urged adding a numeric cap to prevent excessive spending on personal security items. One member said, “I would like to see something…not more than $2,000,” citing examples from other states. The Secretary of State’s office and other witnesses countered that inserting category-specific caps would mark a substantive change to campaign finance rules and that the bill’s wording (“may include”) was intentionally permissive; they recommended postponing dollar‑cap decisions until after the election cycle so policymakers can study real‑world expenditures.
Committee members accepted that tradeoff as a practical compromise for the moment: members suggested collecting data in the coming election cycle and returning to the subject later if widespread or unusual expenditures show a need for statutory caps.
No vote was held; committee staff and the Secretary of State’s office agreed to revisit the issue in follow‑up sessions.