[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 11, Volume 1]
[Revised as of January 1, 2009]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 11CFR113.1]

[Page 206-208]
 
                       TITLE 11--FEDERAL ELECTIONS
 
                 CHAPTER I--FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION
 
PART 113_USE OF CAMPAIGN ACCOUNTS FOR NON-CAMPAIGN PURPOSES--
Table of Contents
 
Sec. 113.1  Definitions (2 U.S.C. 439a).

    When used in this part--
    (a) Funds donated. Funds donated means all funds, including, but not 
limited to, gifts, loans, advances, credits or deposits of money which 
are donated for the purpose of supporting the activities of a Federal or 
State officeholder; but does not mean funds appropriated by Congress, a 
State legislature, or another similar public appropriating body, or 
personal funds of the officeholder donated to an account containing only 
those personal funds.
    (b) Office account. Office account means an account established for 
the purposes of supporting the activities of a Federal or State 
officeholder which contains campaign funds and funds donated, but does 
not include an account used exclusively for funds appropriated by 
Congress, a State legislature, or another similar public appropriating 
body, or an account of the officeholder which contains only the personal 
funds of the officeholder.
    (c) Federal officeholder. Federal officeholder means an individual 
elected to or serving in the office of President or Vice President of 
the United States; or a Senator or a Representative in, or Delegate or 
Resident Commissioner to, the Congress of the United States.
    (d) State officeholder. State officeholder means an individual 
elected to or serving in any elected public office within a State of the 
United States, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico 
or any subdivision thereof.
    (e) [Reserved]
    (f) Qualified Member. Qualified Member means an individual who was 
serving as a Senator or Representative in, or Delegate or Resident 
Commissioner to, Congress, on January 8, 1980.
    (g) Personal use. Personal use means any use of funds in a campaign 
account of a present or former candidate to fulfill a commitment, 
obligation or expense of any person that would exist irrespective of the 
candidate's campaign or duties as a Federal officeholder.
    (1)(i) Personal use includes but is not limited to the use of funds 
in a campaign account for any item listed in paragraphs (g)(1)(i)(A) 
through (J) of this section:
    (A) Household food items or supplies.
    (B) Funeral, cremation or burial expenses except those incurred for 
a candidate (as defined in 11 CFR 100.3) or an employee or volunteer of 
an authorized committee whose death arises out of, or in the course of, 
campaign activity.
    (C) Clothing, other than items of de minimis value that are used in 
the campaign, such as campaign ``T-shirts'' or caps with campaign 
slogans.
    (D) Tuition payments, other than those associated with training 
campaign staff.
    (E) Mortgage, rent or utility payments--
    (1) For any part of any personal residence of the candidate or a 
member of the candidate's family; or
    (2) For real or personal property that is owned by the candidate or 
a member of the candidate's family and used for campaign purposes, to 
the extent the payments exceed the fair market value of the property 
usage.
    (F) Admission to a sporting event, concert, theater or other form of 
entertainment, unless part of a specific campaign or officeholder 
activity.
    (G) Dues, fees or gratuities at a country club, health club, 
recreational facility or other nonpolitical organization, unless they 
are part of the costs of a specific fundraising event that takes place 
on the organization's premises.
    (H) Salary payments to a member of the candidate's family, unless 
the family member is providing bona fide services to the campaign. If a 
family member provides bona fide services to the campaign, any salary 
payment in excess of the fair market value of the services provided is 
personal use.
    (I) Salary payments by a candidate's principal campaign to a 
candidate in excess of the lesser of: the minimum salary paid to a 
Federal officeholder holding the Federal office that the candidate 
seeks; or the earned income that

[[Page 207]]

the candidate received during the year prior to becoming a candidate. 
Any earned income that a candidate receives from salaries or wages from 
any other source shall count against the foregoing limit of the minimum 
salary paid to a Federal officeholder holding the Federal office that 
the candidate seeks. The candidate must provide income tax records from 
the relevant years and other evidence of earned income upon the request 
of the Commission. Salary shall not be paid to a candidate before the 
filing deadline for access to the primary election ballot for the 
Federal office that the candidate seeks, as determined by State law, or 
in those states that do not conduct primaries, on January 1 of each 
even-numbered year. See 11 CFR 100.24(a)(1)(i). If the candidate wins 
the primary election, his or her principal campaign committee may pay 
him or her a salary from campaign funds through the date of the general 
election, up to and including the date of any general election runoff. 
If the candidate loses the primary, withdraws from the race, or 
otherwise ceases to be a candidate, no salary payments may be paid 
beyond the date he or she is no longer a candidate. In odd-numbered 
years in which a special election for a Federal office occurs, the 
principal campaign committee of a candidate for that office may pay him 
or her a salary from campaign funds starting on the date the special 
election is set and ending on the day of the special election. See 11 
CFR 100.24(a)(1)(ii). During the time period in which a principal 
campaign committee may pay a salary to a candidate under this paragraph, 
such payment must be computed on a pro-rata basis. A Federal 
officeholder, as defined in 11 CFR 100.5(f)(1), must not receive salary 
payments as a candidate from campaign funds.
    (J) A vacation.
    (ii) The Commission will determine, on a case-by-case basis, whether 
other uses of funds in a campaign account fulfill a commitment, 
obligation or expense that would exist irrespective of the candidate's 
campaign or duties as a Federal officeholder, and therefore are personal 
use. Examples of such other uses include:
    (A) Legal expenses;
    (B) Meal expenses;
    (C) Travel expenses, including subsistence expenses incurred during 
travel. If a committee uses campaign funds to pay expenses associated 
with travel that involves both personal activities and campaign or 
officeholder-related activities, the incremental expenses that result 
from the personal activities are personal use, unless the person(s) 
benefiting from this use reimburse(s) the campaign account within thirty 
days for the amount of the incremental expenses, and
    (D) Vehicle expenses, unless they are a de minimis amount. If a 
committee uses campaign funds to pay expenses associated with a vehicle 
that is used for both personal activities beyond a de minimis amount and 
campaign or officeholder-related activities, the portion of the vehicle 
expenses associated with the personal activities is personal use, unless 
the person(s) using the vehicle for personal activities reimburse(s) the 
campaign account within thirty days for the expenses associated with the 
personal activities.
    (2) Charitable donations. Donations of campaign funds or assets to 
an organization described in section 170(c) of Title 26 of the United 
States Code are not personal use, unless the candidate receives 
compensation from the organization before the organization has expended 
the entire amount donated for purposes unrelated to his or her personal 
benefit.
    (3) Transfers of campaign assets. The transfer of a campaign 
committee asset is not personal use so long as the transfer is for fair 
market value. Any depreciation that takes place before the transfer must 
be allocated between the committee and the purchaser based on the useful 
life of the asset.
    (4) Gifts. Gifts of nominal value and donations of a nominal amount 
made on a special occasion such as a holiday, graduation, marriage, 
retirement, or death are not personal use, unless made to a member of 
the candidate's family.
    (5) Political or officially connected expenses. The use of campaign 
funds for an expense that would be a political expense under the rules 
of the United States House of Representatives or an officially connected 
expense under the

[[Page 208]]

rules of the United States Senate is not personal use to the extent that 
the expense is an expenditure under subpart D of part 100 or an ordinary 
and necessary expense incurred in connection with the duties of a holder 
of Federal office. Any use of funds that would be personal use under 
paragraph (g)(1) of this section will not be considered an expenditure 
under subpart D of part 100 or an ordinary and necessary expense 
incurred in connection with the duties of a holder of Federal office.
    (6) Third party payments. Notwithstanding that the use of funds for 
a particular expense would be a personal use under this section, payment 
of that expense by any person other than the candidate or the campaign 
committee shall be a contribution under subpart B of part 100 to the 
candidate unless the payment would have been made irrespective of the 
candidacy. Examples of payments considered to be irrespective of the 
candidacy include, but are not limited to, situations where--
    (i) The payment is a donation to a legal expense trust fund 
established in accordance with the rules of the United States Senate or 
the United States House of Representatives;
    (ii) The payment is made from funds that are the candidate's 
personal funds as defined in 11 CFR 110.10(b), including an account 
jointly held by the candidate and a member of the candidate's family;
    (iii) Payments for that expense were made by the person making the 
payment before the candidate became a candidate. Payments that are 
compensation shall be considered contributions unless--
    (A) The compensation results from bona fide employment that is 
genuinely independent of the candidacy;
    (B) The compensation is exclusively in consideration of services 
provided by the employee as part of this employment; and
    (C) The compensation does not exceed the amount of compensation 
which would be paid to any other similarly qualified person for the same 
work over the same period of time.
    (7) Members of the candidate's family. For the purposes of paragraph 
(g) of this section, the candidate's family includes:
    (i) The spouse of the candidate;
    (ii) Any child, step-child, parent, grandparent, sibling, half-
sibling or step-sibling of the candidate or the candidate's spouse;
    (iii) The spouse of any child, step-child, parent, grandparent, 
sibling, half-sibling or step-sibling of the candidate; and
    (iv) A person who shares a residence with the candidate.
    (8) Recordkeeping. For those uses of campaign funds described in 
proposed paragraphs (g)(1)(i) and (g)(1)(ii) of this section that 
involve both personal use and either campaign or office-holder use, a 
contemporaneous log or other record must be kept to document the dates 
and expenses related to the personal use of the campaign funds. The log 
must be updated whenever campaign funds are used for personal expenses, 
as described in paragraph (g)(1) of this section, rather than for 
campaign or office-holder expenses. The log or other record must also be 
maintained and preserved for 3 years after the report disclosing the 
disbursement is filed, pursuant to 11 CFR 102.9 and 104.14(b).

[45 FR 15124, Mar. 7, 1980, as amended at 56 FR 34126, July 25, 1991; 60 
FR 7874, Feb. 9, 1995; 67 FR 38361, June 4, 2002; 67 FR 76978, Dec. 13, 
2002]

    Effective Date Note: At 73 FR 79602, Dec. 30, 2008, Sec. 113.1, 
paragraph (g)(6)(ii) is amended by removing the reference to ``11 CFR 
110.10(b)'' and adding in its place ``11 CFR 100.33'', effective 
February 1, 2009.