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Foreign agent

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Aforeign agentis any person or entity actively carrying out the interests of a foreign principal while located in another host country, generally outside theprotectionsoffered to those working in their official capacity for adiplomatic mission.

Foreign agents may becitizensof the host country. In contemporaryEnglish,the term has a generallypejorativeconnotation. A covert foreign agent, also known as asecret agentof a foreign government, may in some countries be presumed to be engaging inespionage.

Legality[edit]

Some countries have formal procedures to legalize the activities of foreign agents acting overtly. Laws covering foreign agents vary widely from country to country, andselective enforcementmay prevail within countries, based on perceivednational interest.

United States[edit]

In theUnited States,theForeign Agents Registration Act(FARA) in 1938 created a wide-ranging and detailed definition of "foreign agent".[1]There are three necessary components to be considered as a foreign agent under FARA. First, to be considered as a foreign agent, alegalornatural personmust act in a capacity of an agent, representative, employee, servant, or any other capacity, at the order, request, or under the direction or control. The conception of "request" is broad and falls between a command and a plea. Second, the activities must be conducted at the order, request, or under the direction or control of foreign principal or a person whose activities are "directly or indirectly supervised, directed, controlled, financed, or subsidized in whole or in major part by a foreign principal". Third, an agent's activities in the United States must include: engaging in political activities (meaning any activity believed or intended to influence the U.S. government or public about U.S. policy or other foreign interests), acting as a publicity agent or political consultant in the interests of the foreign principal, soliciting, collecting, or disbursing money or other things of value in the interests of a foreign principal, or representing the interests of a foreign principal before any agency or official of the U.S. government. The law also contains several exceptions to what activities would lead to classification as a foreign agent.[2][3]

The text of FARA does not explicitly state whether funding is sufficient to establish agency. There were changing positions regarding this issue, which is also mirrored in the case law. In the first report on FARA to the congress, Attorney General stated that an agent includes a person funded by a foreign principal. The two court rulings in 1943 emphasized that where the foreign principal paid for the specific publications registration of the publisher as an agent could be warranted.[4]

However, in 1980, the court ruled that receiving "bona fidesubsidy "from a foreign source does not renders the recipient as a foreign agent unless the foreign direction or control is established. In 1981, in another case, appellate court found that even the identical leadership and the financial connection were not sufficient to grant summary judgement and a full trial was required since mere provision of funds was insufficient and that" [n]o request, order, command, or directive was ever shown ". In 2020,National Wildlife Federationwas ordered to register as a foreign agent because the grants which it received were linked to specific programs it should have carried out, thus, it fell under "request". Thus, mere funding is not necessary and additional "request, order, command, or directive" is required. For it to be established, it must be proved that the recipient acts not completely independently of the donor, therefore proving additional co-ordination is needed.[5]However, foreign funding still can establish necessary agency where the dependency of anNGOon a particular foreign donor is so high that the donor can prescribe much of the work. This can mean donor requirements for funding and ongoing monitoring of use of funds, which will fall under the "request". The requested action must be clear to both sides. Apart from being generally dependent on donors, a particular level of control needs to be established. Besides, even if donors support specific agendas, a question arises whether concrete actions were requested, and, in case these specific activities are funded, it needs to be ascertained when the domestic action ends and when the activity can be described as being on behalf of foreign principal.[6]

Per FARA, the foreign principal must be setting an agenda (not NGOs choosing freely their area of work) and donors must have primary interest in the activities. However, on the other hand, accepting certain requirement can be characterized as nothing more than agreeing with a viewpoint of donor and insufficient to establish agency. Nevertheless, it can be considered that donors exercise considerable influence over a recipient when the foreign funding of an NGO is an economic necessity for it, and it does not really have much of a free choice. Thus, donor's funding policies may warrant the registration of agency.[7]

Therefore, the foreign funding may warrant NGOs to register as agents under FARA. However, the exact threshold of required control leveraged by foreign donors is difficult to properly clarify. Only donor dependency would not be sufficient and a specific relationship between NGO and donor needs to be established.[8]

FARA requires intermediaries to register too, and NGOs can act as "intermediaries" when they receive foreign funding and hire employees. TheSecond Circuithas ruled that to be considered as intermediary much more control is required than to be considered simply as agent, meaning that substantial amounts of funding need to be proven. The intermediary needs to register only when intermediary is sufficiently bound to the principal. Therefore, NGOs can become intermediaries when they have particularly strong connection to a donor. The financing alone can warrant this when the foreign principal can "make or break" organization because of how large a proportion NGO's revenue consists of foreign funding. There is no clear threshold, but the proposed amendment in 1990s suggested 50%. Although it was not passed, the wording of FARA suggests majority of finances, i.e. 50%.[9]

The FARA was enacted in 1938 to counterNazi propaganda.[10]The law is sometimes claimed to be used to target countries out of favor with an administration.[11]In 2021, theAmerican Bar Association(ABA) called for a reform of FARA, including "renam[ing] FARA and otherwise replac[ing] the term 'agent of a foreign principal' with a term that elicits less stigma and causes less confusion".[12]

Russia[edit]

Under theRussian foreign agent lawenacted in 2012,non-governmental organizations,media outlets and private individuals have to designate themselves "foreign agents" in all external communication if they engage in "political activity", a broadly interpreted term, and receive any foreign funding. Specifically, it requires anyone who receives "support" or "influence" from outside Russia to register and declare themselves "foreign agents".[13]The phrase "foreign agent" (Russian: иностранный агент) in Russian has strong associations with Cold War-era espionage.[citation needed]

The law was initially likened to FARA,[14]although its scope has since been expanded significantly to include anyone who has received foreign support of any kind or has ever been "affiliated" with foreign actors;[15]registrants are also prohibited from receiving state funding, teaching at state universities, or working with children.[16] Failure to comply is subject to legal consequences. Still, many human rights organizations resisted the requirement and in 2014 the law was amended to authorize the Justice Ministry to register organizations as foreign agents without their consent.[17]

Georgia[edit]

In 2023,People's PowerandGeorgian Dreamsubmitted a draft of a new foreign agent law to theParliament of Georgia.This caused the2023–2024 Georgian protests.The bill proposed that allnon-governmental organizationsand media outlets should disclose sources of their funding and register themselves as "agents of foreign influence" if they receive more than 20% of their funding from abroad. The president of Georgia,Salome Zurabishvili,supported the protesters and said she would veto the bill.[18][19][20]The parliament withdrew the bill after protests.[21][10]The bill was reintroduced in April 2024, with the ruling party headMamuka Mdinaradzeciting "the continued circulation of slush funds" and the need for transparency as the reason.[22]The bill was passed by the Parliament on 14 May and was signed into the law.[23][24]

Hungary[edit]

On 13 June 2017, the Hungarian National Assembly adopted the Law No LXXVI of 2017 on the Transparency of Organisations which receive Support from Abroad. The law required "associations and foundations" which receive at least 7,2 millionHUFannually from abroad to disclose sources of their funding, register with the court as "an organization receiving foreign funding" and indicate this label on their website and publications. The violations resulted in fines and ultimately revoking of the entity's legal status.

On 18 June 2020, theEuropean Court of Justiceruled that the law violatedEuropean Union lawby "introduc[ing] discriminatory and unjustified restrictions", violatingfree movement of capitaland other guaranteed rights.[25][26]The law was revoked in 2021.

Australia[edit]

Australia'sForeign Influence Transparency Scheme Act(FITSA), enacted in December 2018, is based explicitly on FARA and was drafted in collaboration with the U.S. Department of Justice.[27]Like its American counterpart, FITSA establishes registration obligations for individuals and entities that undertake certain activities aimed at "political or governmental influence" on behalf of foreign principles. The law imposes a lifetime obligation on former cabinet ministers to register any activity they undertake on behalf of a foreign principal unless an exemption applies.[28]

Canada[edit]

Since 2021, Canada has considered implementing a foreign agent registry modeled on the disclosure laws of the U.S. and Australia.[29]As of August 2022, theSenatewas considering Bill S-237,An Act to Establish the Foreign Influence Registry,which would publicly name all federal lobbyists acting for "a foreign government, an individual or entity related to a foreign government" and require disclosure of payments and identities of foreign clients, with penalties of up $200,000 in fines and two years’ imprisonment.[30]Unlike FARA, the proposed act emphasizes activities on behalf of governments, with sponsorLeo Housakosof Quebec stating that it would "[expose] those who seek to influence on behalf of foreign regimes" and "countries like" China, Iran and Russia.[30]

European Union[edit]

In March 2023, it was reported that the European Commission was working on a foreign agents law which would require commercial and nonprofit organizations around the European Union to reveal non-EU funding pertaining to transactions such as paying for academic study. This law aimed to contain influence of Russia and China and limit the corruption scandals such asQatargate.A preliminary questionnaire supposed to feed into an impact assessment was sent out to the NGOs on behalf of the European Commission. The legislation is supposed to be modeled on the disclosure laws of the U.S. and Australia.[31]

Ukraine[edit]

On 16 January 2014, amid theEuromaidanprotests, agroup of lawswas adopted in Ukraine, which defined a foreign agent as a public association that receives funding from foreign states, foreign and international non-governmental organizations, as well as individuals who are not citizens of Ukraine, and participates in political activities on the territory of Ukraine. According to the law, foreign agents had to be registered, face high scrutiny and additional tax measures. On 2 February 2014, the relevant law was repealed.

Bosnia and Herzegovina[edit]

Republika Srpska[edit]

Legislation similar to the USForeign Agents Registration Acthas been passed inRepublika Srpska.[32]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^U.S. Code Title 22 Chapter 11 Subchapter II § 611: Definitions
  2. ^"Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA): A Legal Overview".Congressional Research Service.9 March 2023.Retrieved15 May2024.
  3. ^"FARA Index and Act".US Department of Justice.Retrieved15 May2024.
  4. ^Nägele 2023,pp. 52–53.
  5. ^Nägele 2023,p. 54.
  6. ^Nägele 2023,pp. 55–56.
  7. ^Nägele 2023,p. 56.
  8. ^Nägele 2023,p. 57.
  9. ^Nägele 2023,pp. 58–60.
  10. ^abMegrelidze, Sophiko (10 March 2023)."Georgia drops foreign agents law after massive protests".The Associated Press.
  11. ^James Shanahan, Propaganda without propagandists?: six case studies in U.S. propaganda, Hampton Press, 2001, p 108: "The DOJ's search for those who fail to disclose accurately their relationship with foreign groups and enforcement of FARA is selective."
  12. ^Laufman, David H.; Sanderson, Matthew T. (July 16, 2021)."FARA: Issues and Recommendations for Reform".Politico.p. 6.
  13. ^"Putin Signs Expanded 'Foreign Agents' Law".The Moscow Times.2022-07-14. Retrieved 2022-07-14.
  14. ^"Russia plans to register 'foreign agent' NGOs".the Guardian.2012-07-02.Retrieved2022-09-12.
  15. ^"Proposed Russian legislation expands 'foreign agent' regulations".Committee to Protect Journalists.2022-06-28.Retrieved2022-09-12.
  16. ^"Putin Signs Expanded 'Foreign Agents' Law".The Moscow Times.AFP. 2022-07-14.Retrieved2022-09-12.
  17. ^Russia: Government against Rights GroupsHuman Rights Watch2015
  18. ^"Georgian police use tear gas on protests against 'foreign agents' law".Reuters.March 7, 2023 – via reuters.
  19. ^"Georgians protest against draft law on media, nonprofits".ABC News.
  20. ^"Thousands protest at Georgian 'foreign agent' bill".BBC News.8 March 2022.Retrieved8 March2022.
  21. ^Kirby, Paul (9 March 2023)."Georgia drops 'foreign agents' law after protests".BBC News.
  22. ^"MP Mdinaradze: State compelled to address opaque funding; bill targets all foreign funding sources, including Russia".First channel.15 April 2024.Archivedfrom the original on 12 May 2024.Retrieved15 April2024.
  23. ^"Shalva Papuashvili: today, I signed the Law on Transparency of Foreign Influence, the primary objective of which implies the enhancement of the resilience of the political, economic and social systems of Georgia without external interventions".Parliament of Georgia.3 June 2024.Retrieved10 June2024.
  24. ^"Parliament adopts bill On Transparency of Foreign Influence with third reading".1st channel. 14 May 2024.Archivedfrom the original on 14 May 2024.Retrieved14 May2024.
  25. ^"CURIA - Documents".curia.europa.eu.Retrieved2021-05-12.
  26. ^"Hungary law on NGOs' foreign funding found to break EU rules".AP NEWS.18 June 2020.Retrieved28 July2020.
  27. ^Draffen, Chris; Ng, Yee-Fui (2020). "Foreign Agent Registration Schemes in Australia and the United States: The Scope, Risk and Limitations of Transparency"(PDF). University of New South Wales Law Journal. 43 (4): 1101–1136.
  28. ^"ParlInfo - Foreign Influence Transparency Scheme Bill 2018".parlinfo.aph.gov.au.Retrieved2022-09-12.
  29. ^"Foreign Interference – Foreign Agent Registry".publicsafety.gc.ca.Public Safety Canada. 2021-08-20.Retrieved2022-09-12.
  30. ^ab"Former CSIS honcho says Canadian politicians are on foreign agents' payroll".edmontonsun.Retrieved2022-09-13.
  31. ^"EU 'foreign agents' law spooks NGOs".Politico.Retrieved2023-08-03.
  32. ^"Venice Commission, OSCE, Criticise Bosnian Serbs 'Foreign Agents' Bill".Balkan Insight.Retrieved2023-08-03.

Sources[edit]