1 Tex. Admin. Code § 22.11 - Prohibition on Contributions during Regular Session
(a) During the period that begins on the 30th
day before the date a regular legislative session convenes and continuing
through the 20th day after the date of final adjournment, a person may not
knowingly make a political contribution to:
(1) a statewide officeholder or
officer-elect;
(2) a member of the
legislature or member-elect; or
(3)
a specific-purpose committee for supporting, opposing, or assisting a statewide
officeholder or officer-elect or member or member-elect of the
legislature.
(b) An
individual or committee described in subsection (a) of this section may not
knowingly accept a political contribution, and shall refuse a political
contribution that is received, during the period prescribed by subsection (a)
of this section.
(c) A political
contribution that is received and refused pursuant to this section shall be
returned to the contributor not later than the 30th day after the date of
receipt.
(d) A contribution made by
United States mail or by common or contract carrier is not considered received
during the period prescribed by subsection (a) of this section if it was
deposited into an official repository of the United States Postal Service or
delivered to a common or contract carrier with postage prepaid and properly
addressed before the beginning of the period. The date of the postmark or
common or contact carrier documents is considered to be the date the
contribution was placed in the mail or delivered to the common or contract
carrier unless proven otherwise.
(e) This section does not apply to a
political contribution that was made and accepted with the intent that it be
used:
(1) in an election held or ordered
during the period prescribed by subsection (a) of this section in which the
person accepting the contribution is a candidate if the contribution was made
after the person appointed a campaign treasurer with the appropriate authority
and before the person was sworn in for that office;
(2) to defray expenses incurred in connection
with an election contest; or
(3) by
a person who holds a statewide office or a member of the legislature, if the
person or member was defeated at the general election held immediately before
the session is convened, or by a specific-purpose political committee that
supports or assists only that person or member.
Notes
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