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Campaign Finance & Political Influence An overview

Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

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Bill Allison presents during the free business journalism workshop, "Follow the Money -- Tracking Companies' Influence on Politics." For more free sources on business journalism, please visit businessjournalism.org.

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Page 1: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

Campaign Finance & Political Influence

An overview

Page 2: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

�  Bank of America increased the interest rate on Bonnie Rushing’s credit card from 8 percent to 23 percent.

�  Sen. Thomas Carper: “But let me just ask you -- put yourself in the shoes of the credit card company…”

A Washington tale…

Page 3: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

� And how do the credit card companies feel about Sen. Tom Carper?

� Rushing’s monthly interest bill went from about $150 to $674

� Small change to a U.S. Senator’s campaign committee…

Page 4: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

Think of inputs and outputs

Page 5: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

Happens at state level… �  You may recall Gov. Rick

Perry

�  Texas Tech fund rewarded donors

�  They gave in $32K-$310K range

�  They got millions back

Page 6: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

…and at the local level �  Donors gave Kasim Reed

campaign contributions

�  Insiders raised money for Reed’s mayoral campaign

�  Airport concessions awarded to… �  Big donors to Reed’s

campaign �  Big fundraisers for

Reed’s campaign

Page 7: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

Multiple means to exert influence �  Hire former staffers as

lobbyists

�  Hire former lawmakers, councilmen, etc.

�  Contribute to inaugural events

�  Give money to lawmaker charities

�  Give to super PACs

�  Hire relatives of elected officials

Page 8: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

Politicians have lots of pockets �  Campaigns

�  Parties

�  Leadership PACs

�  Nonprofits

�  Businesses & investments

�  Super PACs

�  Family members

Page 9: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

Businesses can pick the pocket(s) �  Lots of places to look

�  We’ll suggest some resources

�  Not all this money can be traced

�  Sometimes, you need sources

Page 10: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

One thing to remember is that all of this is governed by rules

� Federal election law, lobbying disclosure, congressional ethics rules

� 50 sets of state rules

� Some local jurisdictions have rules specific to them (sometimes dependent on state law)

Page 11: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

�  In Colorado, corporate and labor donors are banned, except when they aren’t

�  Colorado Springs is the largest home rule municipality in Colorado

Page 12: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

Let’s look at the federal level

�  (inflation adjusted) �  Up to $2,500 per election

to a candidate, that is, $2,500 for the primary, $2,500 for the general

�  $30,800 to a national party committee (RNC, DCCC, etc.)

�  Up to $117,000 every two years to PACs, parties, candidates…

�  (not inflation adjusted) �  Up to $5,000 to a Political

Action Committee per year �  $10,000 to state, district &

local party committee (for use in federal elections, that is) (combined limit)

�  Unlimited amount to super PAC for eligible U.S. donors

Page 13: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

…but potentially a lot more if they have a lot of friends

� Bundlers put together networks of donors, all of whom can write $500, $1,000 or $2,500 checks to campaigns

� They are important at all levels

� We find bundlers at presidential, congressional, state and probably local donors…

Page 14: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

Unfortunately… �  While bundlers are bigger

than ever…

�  No requirement at federal level that they be disclosed

�  You can always ask a campaign “who the finance committee is”

�  But there’s no place to ask, “Is CEO of this company a bundler”

�  Only one searchable (but limited) resource…

Page 15: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

� As part of the Honest Leadership and Open Government Act of 2007 �  Registered lobbyists must

disclose the bundling of contributions they do for federal candidates

�  Applies to individuals they bring to fundraisers, PACs they control or persuade to contribute

�  All bundles over $16,200 are reported

�  Data available at http://influenceexplorer.com/fec/bundling

Page 16: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

Easy to get around disclosure �  We see tons of invites like

this one

�  Hosts commit to raise money

�  Vast majority don’t show up as bundlers

�  Even when they’re lobbyists

Page 17: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

What a business can do

�  Form (and pay expenses of) a political action committee �  PACs can contribute

$5,000 per election (i.e., primary, general) to a candidate; $15,000 to a national party committee; $5,000 to state, district or local parties per year; $5,000 to other PACs per year

�  Funds must be “segregated” from other corporate money

Page 18: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

Note this language…

� Where are corporations like ExxonMobil and Imperial Oil, and labor unions as well, making contributions?

Page 19: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

Make donations to 501(c)’s

Page 20: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

…and to Super PACs �  Mostly individual donors

�  Few businesses show up

�  But individuals run companies

�  Have interests before government

Page 21: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

Hire lobbyists �  Lobbyists get access

�  Lobbyists are also contributors

�  Federal disclosure at InfluenceExplorer.com, OpenSecrets.org

�  State disclosure spread over 50 state websites

Page 22: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

Lots of lobbyists do lots of fundraising

�  Party Time tracks fundraisers

�  Lots of invitations list “hosts”

�  Hosts can be PACs or lobbyists that pledge to raise money

Page 23: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

Donate to inaugural committees �  All states have different

rules

�  Sometimes donors can give more

�  Enron gave lots to Bush’s Texas inaugural

�  501(c)4s most common vehicle

�  Don’t have to disclose donors

�  Check Guidestar.org

Page 24: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

Pay for junkets �  Not always easy to

trace

�  Disclosure for Congress, Executive Branch

�  States, localities vary

Page 25: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

Where do you get information? �  Federal

�  Primary �  FEC.gov �  House Clerk �  Secretary of Senate

�  Secondary �  OpenSecrets.org �  InfluenceExplorer.com �  NICAR �  NY Times

�  State �  Primary

�  State election authorities �  State ethics commissions �  IRE has a resource for

finding them �  Secondary

�  Followthemoney.org �  Influenceexplorer.com

�  Local �  Can be city clerk, state

ethics commission, etc.

Page 26: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

Some other things to check…

�  Trip reports/junkets

�  Personal financial disclosures

�  Does the business you’re looking at have a charitable arm? �  Whom do they give

money to?

�  Do they sponsor things like charity golf games?

Page 27: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

Some of the forms in Massachusetts (municipal)

Page 28: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

Sources of information

Page 29: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

www.FEC.gov �  Clunky

�  Getting better

�  Still not perfect

�  Original source of data

Page 30: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

Useful features

�  Presidential election map with ZIP-coded contributions

�  Congressional election map with downloadable files for every candidate

Page 31: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

Easier resource: OpenSecrets.org

Page 32: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

Tons of data… �  Federal candidates

1987 to present

�  PACs 1997 to present

�  Lobbying 1998 to present

�  Trips, financial disclosure and much more…

�  You can buy custom slices of data from it

Page 33: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

Lobbying

Page 34: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

What you get

Page 35: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

Drilling down

Page 36: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

Easier resource

Page 37: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

Takes information from forms and makes it easier to use

Page 38: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

State disclosures vary considerably—here’s Mass.

Page 39: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

Issues, campaign contributions listed on individual lobbyist pages

Page 40: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

In Vermont, photo = issues

Page 41: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

InfluenceExplorer.com

Page 42: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

Note all the different data sets �  State and federal campaign

contributions

�  Federal lobbying

�  Federal regulatory matters

�  Federal grants and contracts (also has earmarks)

�  For top contractors, run-ins with federal government

�  EPA fines

�  Federal Advisory Committee info

Page 43: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

All data can be searched and downloaded

�  http://data.influenceexplorer.com

�  Download data in Excel format

Page 44: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

On the federal level, regulations matter

�  Companies comment on them

�  Companies lobby on them

�  Politicians rail against them

Page 45: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

Influence Explorer tracks regulatory actions

Page 46: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

Drill down to individual comments

Page 47: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

State money

Page 48: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

National Institute on Money in State Politics

� Like CRP, it codes contributions by industry

� Covers all 50 states

�  It always runs a bit behind raw state disclosures

Page 49: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

Some good resources for navigating what’s available

�  NIMSP also has a run down of all state laws on lobbying disclosure

�  National Conference on State Legislatures has pages, too

�  Groups that do a lot of lobbying, such as Assoc. Builders & Contractors, have lists & links too

Page 50: Campaign Finance and Political Influence by Bill Allison

Always happy to help steer you to a resource Bill Allison Editorial Director Sunlight Foundation [email protected] 202-742-1520 ext 224 @bill_allison