Legis Daily

Stand By Every Ad Act

USA117th CongressHR-1171| House 
| Updated: 2/18/2021
David E. Price

David E. Price

Democratic Representative

North Carolina

Committee on House Administration

  • Introduced
  • In Committee
  • On Floor
  • Passed Chamber
  • Enacted
Stand By Every Ad Act This bill generally revises disclosure requirements for political advertisements. First, the bill applies political advertising disclosure requirements currently applicable to candidates (also known as stand by your ad requirements) to entities such as corporations and certain political committees. Political advertisements made by these entities must generally disclose the top funders of the entity, with specified exceptions. In addition, the bill revises the classification of certain media, including audio and visual media, for purposes of disclaimer requirements. It also expands the definition of communication to include prerecorded telephone calls. Finally, the bill creates additional readability and audio requirements for communications.
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Timeline

Bill from Previous Congress

HR 116-4054
Stand By Every Ad Act
Feb 18, 2021
Introduced in House
Feb 18, 2021
Referred to the House Committee on House Administration.
  • Bill from Previous Congress

    HR 116-4054
    Stand By Every Ad Act


  • February 18, 2021
    Introduced in House


  • February 18, 2021
    Referred to the House Committee on House Administration.

Government Operations and Politics

Related Bills

  • S 117-4822: DISCLOSE Act of 2022
  • S 117-443: DISCLOSE Act of 2021
  • HR 117-1: For the People Act of 2021
  • S 117-1: For the People Act of 2021
  • HR 117-1334: DISCLOSE Act of 2021
  • S 117-2093: For the People Act of 2021
Broadcasting, cable, digital technologiesBusiness recordsCongressional electionsDigital mediaElections, voting, political campaign regulationInternet and video servicesInternet, web applications, social mediaJudgesMarketing and advertisingPolitical advertisingPolitical parties and affiliationTelephone and wireless communication

Stand By Every Ad Act

USA117th CongressHR-1171| House 
| Updated: 2/18/2021
Stand By Every Ad Act This bill generally revises disclosure requirements for political advertisements. First, the bill applies political advertising disclosure requirements currently applicable to candidates (also known as stand by your ad requirements) to entities such as corporations and certain political committees. Political advertisements made by these entities must generally disclose the top funders of the entity, with specified exceptions. In addition, the bill revises the classification of certain media, including audio and visual media, for purposes of disclaimer requirements. It also expands the definition of communication to include prerecorded telephone calls. Finally, the bill creates additional readability and audio requirements for communications.
View Full Text

Suggested Questions

Get AI-generated questions to help you understand this bill better

Timeline

Bill from Previous Congress

HR 116-4054
Stand By Every Ad Act
Feb 18, 2021
Introduced in House
Feb 18, 2021
Referred to the House Committee on House Administration.
  • Bill from Previous Congress

    HR 116-4054
    Stand By Every Ad Act


  • February 18, 2021
    Introduced in House


  • February 18, 2021
    Referred to the House Committee on House Administration.
David E. Price

David E. Price

Democratic Representative

North Carolina

Committee on House Administration

Government Operations and Politics

Related Bills

  • S 117-4822: DISCLOSE Act of 2022
  • S 117-443: DISCLOSE Act of 2021
  • HR 117-1: For the People Act of 2021
  • S 117-1: For the People Act of 2021
  • HR 117-1334: DISCLOSE Act of 2021
  • S 117-2093: For the People Act of 2021
  • Introduced
  • In Committee
  • On Floor
  • Passed Chamber
  • Enacted
Broadcasting, cable, digital technologiesBusiness recordsCongressional electionsDigital mediaElections, voting, political campaign regulationInternet and video servicesInternet, web applications, social mediaJudgesMarketing and advertisingPolitical advertisingPolitical parties and affiliationTelephone and wireless communication