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soft money

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Financial, Acronyms, Idioms, Wikipedia 0.03 sec.

soft money

In the U.S., paper money as contrasted with coins, or hard money; also, unregulated monetary donations to political parties or candidates. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, advocates of soft money favoured governmental deficit spending to stimulate consumption and employment. Fiscal conservatives, who put their trust in hard money, maintained that government should not spend beyond its resources. In the late 20th century, strict regulations governed the source, amount, and use of donations to particular candidates (hard money), but few such laws applied to contributions for the general promotion of a political party's message (soft money). In 2002 the U.S. Congress passed legislation that prohibited soft money contributions to the national political parties and strictly limited such contributions to state and local parties.



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Under the policies, all soft money political contributions will be reviewed at the board level on an annual basis.
Even before McCain-Feingold, only about half of the Fortune 100 made soft money contributions.
The Pence-Wynn bill also allows unlimited solicitations from trade associations, increases by 50 percent the amount a political action committee (PAC) can contribute to candidates, repeals restrictions on the use of soft money to fund sham issue ads (broadcast ads promoting or attacking federal candidates close to Election Day), and allows federal candidates to directly control the spending of unlimited sums of soft money on paid advertising campaigns run on the Internet.
 
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