美国公民自由联盟遭外国资金投诉,新选举法面临重大考验


2026-05-27T08:35:55-04:00 / 福克斯新闻

总部位于瑞士的橡树基金会提供200万美元赠款后,美国公民自由联盟向反对堕胎禁令的委员会捐赠50万美元

作者:罗伯特·施马德,福克斯新闻
发布于2026年5月27日美国东部时间上午8:35

美国公民自由联盟起诉特朗普政府,指控移民海关执法局的大规模逮捕仅基于肤色
福克斯新闻记者比尔·梅尔金在《威尔·凯恩秀》中报道美国公民自由联盟对特朗普政府提起的诉讼。

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独家报道: 据福克斯新闻数字频道获悉,保守派监督组织“美国公共信托”已向密苏里州总检察长提起投诉,要求该州调查美国公民自由联盟基金会和“禁止禁令”组织是否违反了密苏里州的外国影响投票措施法。

据一份财务披露文件显示,总部位于瑞士的橡树基金会在2025年开始的两年内向美国公民自由联盟基金会提供了200万美元的无限制赠款。随后,2026年初的竞选财务记录显示,美国公民自由联盟基金会向“禁止禁令”政治委员会捐赠了50万美元,该委员会旨在反对密苏里州一项将禁止该州大多数堕胎的投票提案。

密苏里州是共和党领导的州之一,这些州在2025年通过了旨在防止外国资金介入政治进程的法律。这项立法举措的灵感来自于一则报道,称与瑞士亿万富翁汉斯约格·怀斯有关的资金流向了一个主要与民主党结盟的非营利组织,该组织花费大量资金影响州级全民公投。

外国亿万富翁向美国倡导团体注入26亿美元以影响政策,监督报告称

密苏里州州长迈克·基在杰斐逊城宣誓就任该州第58任州长后向人群挥手。(艾米丽·库里尔/堪萨斯城星报/论坛新闻服务)

该组织的一名发言人告诉福克斯新闻数字频道:“美国公民自由联盟知晓并遵守密苏里州的这项竞选财务法。”

2025年,一家联邦法院裁定,堪萨斯州一项与密苏里州外国影响法类似的竞选财务法,禁止由外国国民资助的组织向国内非营利组织捐款,而这些国内非营利组织本身又向政治委员会捐款,尽管外国国民与国内非营利组织之间的资金轨迹“仅隔一步”。

橡树基金会的资金主要来自英国亿万富翁艾伦·帕克的财富。他的家族仍在其董事会中占据席位。

美国公共信托(APT)辩称,美国公民自由联盟基金会在收到橡树基金会的资金后不久就向“禁止禁令”组织捐款,这违反了密苏里州2025年8月生效的《外国影响投票措施法》。

该组织在投诉中写道:“美国公民自由联盟基金会已成为外国资金的堡垒,毫不客气地将其金库向数百万瑞士资金敞开,随之而来的是程度未知的影响力。”“至少,美国公民自由联盟基金会和‘禁止禁令’组织表现出对该法案新颁布的要求的鲁莽漠视,最坏的情况是,它们表现出故意规避旨在将外国资金挡在密苏里州政治之外的法律。”

投票站在选举日设置就绪。(保罗·理查兹/法新社)

重磅报告显示:外国慈善机构向美国政治倡导团体投入数十亿美元,‘侵蚀’民主

福克斯新闻数字频道周二联系“禁止禁令”组织和橡树基金会征求评论,但双方均未回应。

密苏里州选民将在2026年选举日就一项拟议的宪法修正案进行表决,该修正案将废除该州2024年的堕胎权利修正案,并允许立法者限制堕胎。该措施将禁止大多数堕胎,但在怀孕12周以下的强奸和乱伦案件、医疗紧急情况和胎儿畸形的情况下允许例外,同时禁止为未成年人提供性别确认治疗。

“禁止禁令”是反对该投票提案的主要委员会。

根据密苏里州法律,向“禁止禁令”等政治委员会捐款的组织必须证明,在捐款前四年内,它们从“禁止来源”获得的捐款不超过1万美元。密苏里州将“禁止来源”定义为“外国国民的捐款或支出,且意图用这些资金影响针对投票措施的选举”。

瑞士亿万富翁汉斯约格·怀斯近期投入逾6000万美元支持左翼团体和事业

前美国检察官凯瑟琳·哈纳韦在密苏里州州长迈克·基2025年8月19日于杰斐逊城的州议会大厦办公室宣布任命她为该州下一任总检察长后向记者发表讲话。(大卫·A·利布/美联社)

同样,“禁止禁令”组织也必须根据州法律证明,在其筹款期间,它没有“直接或间接”从外国国民那里获得财政支持。

除了橡树基金会的资金外,美国公民自由联盟还从与瑞士亿万富翁怀斯有关联的慈善机构获得了数百万美元的捐款。

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美国公共信托要求密苏里州总检察长展开调查,以“调查美国公民自由联盟基金会和‘禁止禁令’组织是否以及在多大程度上可能规避了密苏里州的《外国影响投票措施法》”。

美国公共信托执行董事凯特琳·萨瑟兰告诉福克斯新闻数字频道:“鉴于我们投诉中的大量证据,以及总检察长哈纳韦为结束密苏里州的外国干预所做的工作,我们完全有信心该州将迅速对这两个组织采取行动。”“这再次说明了为什么每个州都应该制定法律禁止外国资金介入投票竞选。”

https://www.foxnews.com/video/6375511197112

ACLU hit with foreign money complaint as new election law faces major test

2026-05-27T08:35:55-04:00 / Fox News

The $2M grant from Switzerland-based Oak Foundation preceded a $500K ACLU donation to a committee opposing an abortion ban

By Robert Schmad, Fox News

Published May 27, 2026 8:35am EDT

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Fox News correspondent Bill Melugin reports on the American Civil Liberties Union’s lawsuit against the Trump administration on ‘The Will Cain Show.’

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FIRST ON FOX: Americans for Public Trust, a conservative watchdog organization, filed a complaint with the Missouri Attorney General asking the state to investigate whether the American Civil Liberties Union Foundation and Stop the Ban violated Missouri’s foreign-influence ballot-measure law, Fox News Digital has learned.

The Switzerland-based Oak Foundation gave the ACLU Foundation a $2 million unrestricted grant to be spent over the course of two years beginning in 2025, according to a financial disclosure. Then, in early 2026, campaign finance records show that the ACLU Foundation donated $500,000 to Stop the Ban, a political committee working to oppose a ballot measure in Missouri that would ban most abortions in the state.

Missouri is part of a slate of GOP-led states that, in 2025, passed laws aimed at preventing foreign funds from making their way into the political process. The legislative effort was inspired by reporting that money linked to Swiss billionaire Hansjörg Wyss had made its way to a major Democratic-aligned nonprofit that was spending large amounts of money to sway state ballot referendums.

FOREIGN BILLIONAIRES FUNNEL $2.6B TO US ADVOCACY GROUPS TO INFLUENCE POLICY, WATCHDOG REPORT CLAIMS

Missouri Gov. Mike Kehoe waves to the crowd after being sworn in as the state’s 58th governor in Jefferson City.(Emily Curiel/Kansas City Star/Tribune News Service)

“The ACLU is aware of and compliant with this Missouri campaign finance law,” a spokesman for the organization told Fox News Digital.

A federal court wrote in 2025 that a Kansas campaign finance law, which is similar to the foreign influence law in Missouri, prevents organizations funded by foreign nationals from donating to domestic nonprofits that themselves donate to political committees, even though the paper trail between foreign nationals and domestic nonprofits is “one step removed.”

The Oak Foundation is primarily funded by the wealth of British billionaire Alan Parker. His family retains seats on its board of trustees.

Americans for Public Trust (APT) argued that the ACLU Foundation donating to Stop the Ban shortly after receiving funds from the Oak Foundation constitutes a violation of Missouri’s Foreign Influence in Ballot Measures Act, which became law in August 2025.

“The ACLU Foundation has become a bastion of foreign money, unceremoniously opening its coffers to millions in Swiss-based funding, and, subsequently, to an unknowable degree of influence that comes along with it,” the group wrote in its complaint. “At a minimum, the ACLU Foundation and Stop the Ban demonstrate reckless disregard for the newly enacted requirements of the Act, and, at worst, they demonstrate willful evasion of a law designed to keep foreign money out of Missouri politics.”

Voting booths are set up inside a polling station on Election Day.(Paul Richards/AFP)

BOMBSHELL REPORT SHOWS FOREIGN CHARITIES DUMPED BILLIONS INTO US POLITICAL ADVOCACY GROUPS, ‘ERODE’ DEMOCRACY’

Stop the Ban and the Oak Foundation did not respond to requests for comment when reached by Fox News Digital on Tuesday.

Missouri voters will decide on a proposed constitutional amendment that would repeal the state’s 2024 abortion-rights amendment and allow lawmakers to restrict access to abortion on election day 2026. The measure would ban most abortions but allow exceptions for rape and incest under 12 weeks, medical emergencies and fetal anomalies, while also prohibiting gender transition procedures for minors.

Stop the Ban is the primary committee opposing the ballot measure.

Under Missouri law, organizations donating to political committees such as Stop the Ban must attest that they received less than $10,000 in the four years prior to their contribution from “prohibited sources.” Missouri defines “prohibited sources” as “contributions from or expenditures by a foreign national made with the intent to use such funds to influence an election on a ballot measure.”

SWISS BILLIONAIRE HANSJÖRG WYSS RECENTLY POURED OVER $60M INTO PROPPING UP LEFT-WING GROUPS AND CAUSES

Former U.S. Attorney Catherine Hanaway speaks to reporters after Missouri Gov. Mike Kehoe announced her appointment as the state’s next attorney general on Aug. 19, 2025, at the governor’s Capitol office in Jefferson City, Mo.(David A. Lieb/AP)

Stop the Ban, similarly, was required by state law to attest that it had not “directly or indirectly” received financial support from a foreign national during its fundraising period.

In addition to funding from the Oak Foundation, the ACLU has also received millions of dollars in donations from philanthropies linked to by Wyss, the Swiss billionaire.

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APT is requesting that Missouri’s attorney general open an investigation to probe “whether, and to what extent, the ACLU Foundation and Stop the Ban may have evaded Missouri’s Foreign Influence in Ballot Measures Act.”

“Given the substantial evidence in our complaint, and Attorney General Hanaway’s work to end foreign interference in Missouri, we have full confidence the state will take swift action against both organizations,” APT executive director Caitlin Sutherland told Fox News Digital. “This is yet another illustration of why every state should have laws on the books banning foreign money in ballot campaigns.”

https://www.foxnews.com/video/6375511197112

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