The Fair Campaign Practices Act requires the disclosure of persons that contribute $100 or more during a reporting period to a political action committee or principal campaign committee. The original source of funds to a political campaign can remain undisclosed through nonprofit 501(c)(3) and 501(c)(4) corporations that are set up to mask the identity of campaign contribution sources. This is considered dark money. This bill would prohibit a nonprofit organization from making any contributions to a principal campaign committee unless the organization registers with the Secretary of State as a political donor organization and the contributions are made from a separate, segregated fund. This bill would require a political donor organization to submit to the Secretary of State reports that disclose the identity of each contributor to a political spending fund of the organization if the total contributions to the organization's fund amount to $100 or more in a 12-month period. This bill would require a political donor organization that receives a contribution to inform the contributing source that the source's identity will be disclosed if their total contributions amount to $100 or more during a 12-month period. This bill would require the Secretary of State to publish the disclosure reports. This bill would require the political donor organization to keep certain records and make the records available to the Secretary of State or State Ethics Commission upon request. This bill would prohibit a nonprofit organization from making a contribution to or an expenditure on behalf of a political action committee. This bill would also authorize the Secretary of State to enforce this act in the same manner as now provided for other reporting requirements under the Fair Campaign Practices Act.