51. The House bill also would ban the practice of making customers pay taxes in both the resident state and the state from which the good arrived. 52. The McCain-Feingold bill would ban soft money to parties and extend federal regulations to money raised by independent groups for campaign ads two months before an election. 53. The McCain-Feingold bill would ban unlimited campaign donations to parties by corporations, unions and rich individuals. 54. The McCain-Feingold bill would ban unlimited, unregulated donations to political parties. 55. The original bill would have banned such imports. 56. The Shays-Meehan bill would ban soft money, except for limited amounts given to state and local party committees. 57. The Shays-Meehan bill would ban such unlimited contributions to national political parties from corporations, unions and wealthy individuals. 58. The proposed bill would ban the use of so-called soft money by the national political parties and curtail the activities of political action committees. 59. The Senate bill would ban eight different kinds of consulting services, severely restricting the outside functions a firm could provide for a company whose books it audits. 60. The Shays-Meehan bill would ban campaign donations of unregulated soft money from corporations, unions and rich individuals. |