The House voted to concur in the Senate’s strike‑all amendment to House Bill 686, which broadens the definition and reporting obligations for lobbying advertisements.
The member from Cambridge walked the chamber through the strike‑all language: the bill removes a session‑only limitation so that any paid communication intended to influence legislative or administrative action must contain language identifying the payer. It also requires a brief description for campaigns costing $1,000 or more detailing the bill or issue featured, persons shown and whether the ad expresses support, opposition or neutrality.
Committee testimony came from legislative counsel, the director of elections and campaign finance, the secretary of state’s office, and outside consultants; the committee asked the House to concur in the Senate amendment and the House did so on voice vote as announced by the Chair.
Why it matters: supporters said the changes close a reporting gap and prevent duplicative filings during election campaigns, while ensuring the public can identify who paid to influence policy debate.
What’s next: With the House concurrence the amended bill proceeds toward final enactment steps.