Conservative Solutions Project, an outside group promoting
Republican Marco Rubio's presidential campaign, has spent nearly $8.5
million in TV ads -- making it the second-biggest advertiser in the 2016
Republican race so far. But the group's apparent support for a single
presidential candidate has raised questions about the advertisements'
legality.
The ads, which have aired in the early nominating states of Iowa and New Hampshire, have featured Rubio denouncing the Iran deal and delivering one of his early political speeches in 2015 -- months before Rubio's own campaign started running its first TV ad this week.
And unlike a Super PAC, Conservative Solutions
Project doesn't have to disclose its donors because it exists as a
tax-exempt social welfare group under section 501(c)(4) of the tax code.
But it's precisely that tax-code designation
that has campaign-finance watchdogs alleging the Conservative Solution
Project ads are illegal -- because they are benefitting an individual
presidential candidate rather than advancing the social welfare.
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