Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Republican SuperPACs Aren't Bringing In The Cash The Way They Used To

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No more checks from Idaho fascist Frank VanderSloot unless candidates can prove their anti-American extremism

Saturday night I was driving home after dinner and I was hearing some pretty racist talk coming out of my radio. Had someone changed the preset? No, I had a local PBS affiliate on and it was the Tavis Smiley Show. He had some crackpot ant-immigrant kook on from a hate group, the California Coalition for Immigration Reform. And he interviewed her as though she were an expert and never questioned any of her racist assumptions. When she was done, he had a law professor from UCLA on as the next guest to talk about his new book about anti-black racism. What about the anti-immigrant racism Smiley had been promoting 2 minutes earlier? I'm still confused; is Tavis Smiley, a well-known liberal, into anti-immigrant bigotry? It doesn't make sense.

That's usually what you'd expect to hear on Hate Talk Radio, not on PBS. It's pretty much a Republican thing. The California Coalition for Immigration Reform sounds like a reasonable name for an organization but it's just a step or two from the KKK or a militia group, part of the Republican ever-shrinking pup tent. Over the weekend, the Washington Post took a look at how Republican SuperPACs are having trouble finding donors this year. They began with Republicans for Immigration Reform, a far more mainstream group than the California Coalition for Immigration Reform. One of the principals of the PAC, Charlie Spies, who helped raise $153 million for Romney's SuperPAC, Restore Our Future, isn't getting anywhere with Republicans for Immigration Reform. “It has been a challenge to get donors on the Republican side to reengage,” he told the Post. And it's not just because his group is viewed as more mainstream than the typical Republican Party hate groups.
Seven months after the 2012 election, a lingering hangover among conservative donors has stalled efforts by right-leaning independent groups to fill their coffers. Wealthy contributors who dashed off six- and seven-figure checks last year are eyeing super PACs and other politically active groups more skeptically, frustrated that the hundreds of millions of dollars spent to elect Romney went for naught.

“There’s donor fatigue,” said Fred Malek, a veteran GOP operative wired into high-net-worth circles. “Everyone was in a frenzy of giving up until the November elections, and then everyone was sort of worn out on the whole process. It’s very hard to raise money after an election, especially after you lose.”

Several Republican fundraisers said they remain optimistic that the money spigot will reopen as the 2014 congressional elections approach. But this time around, donors are seeking to be more judicious about where they put their money, asking groups for detailed strategy and spending plans.

“At the moment, I’m kind of in a waiting and watching mode,” said Howard Leach, an ambassador to France under President George W. Bush. In 2012, Leach gave $100,000 each to Restore Our Future and American Crossroads, the conservative super PAC co-founded by former Bush political strategist Karl Rove.

...One well-connected Republican donor and fundraiser, who has held off writing big checks to outside groups since the election, said he is among a group of top contributors now questioning the value of financing such organizations, which operate independently of candidates and party leaders.

“I do find it a little worrisome, frankly, that there’s so much more money and so few people behind it,” said the contributor, who requested anonymity to speak candidly about his misgivings. “I am concerned that all that money didn’t seem to bring results.”

Frank VanderSloot, chief executive of an Idaho nutritional-supplement company who gave abundantly to Romney and groups backing him, said he has concluded that it is not effective to finance tax-exempt advocacy groups that can only spend a limited amount on politics.

“If you can’t say what candidate you’re for, it’s hard,” said VanderSloot, who said he gave “several million” in all to various groups, including $1.1 million to Restore Our Future.

From now on, he said, he is sticking with super PACs, which have more latitude to directly engage in elections: “That’s where my money is going.”

...New conservative outfits are finding that they have to work much harder to win over donors, some of whom now hire lawyers to conduct due-diligence inquiries about the organizations soliciting their support.

“We’ve learned to ask people: ‘What is your message? Where are you going to spend the money, and how?’” said VanderSloot, who said that he also requests information about how much of a group’s budget goes to paying people running the organization. “In some cases, you may want to get that answer in writing.”

The intense scrutiny “is winnowing the field of consultants who are able to raise significant funds,” said Robert Kelner, a Washington campaign finance lawyer who heads the political law practice at Covington & Burling.

“You’re seeing more impressive business plans, on better paper with fancier graphics,” Kelner added, referring to the efforts of political groups. “They look more like the kind of proposals someone would submit to a private equity fund.”

In their pitches, many organizations are pledging to diversify their approaches and not rely as heavily on expensive television advertising as they did in the last election, when the airwaves were crowded with discordant messages. The new emphasis is on digital campaigns and get-out-the-vote organizing-- strategies that some groups expect to test this year in Virginia’s governor’s race and New Jersey’s U.S. Senate contest.
It's worth noting that big donors on the Democratic side are also keeping their powder dry but that Democratic grassroots donors are not. And the Republicans don't count on grassroots donors, only on the rich and on special interests. In the last quarter the DCCC outraised the NRCC and the DSCC outraised the NRSC. I can't mention this Inside-the-Beltway scams without reminding potential contributors that a far more effective way to give is to go to ActBlue and contribute directly to candidates who you see eye to eye with. Give to the DCCC, for example, are your money is going to wind up helping reelect anti-Choice, anti-gay, anti-family corporate shills because that's where the DCCC puts most of its money. If you want help in finding good House candidates, here's the place. And for good Senate candidates: here.



SCHEDULE NOTE -- COMING UP AT 9pm PT/12m ET:
YOUR SUPREME COURT AT WORK AND PLAY


Sorry, but for the second night in a row New York City Transit dumped me out of my no. 1 train short of home, and my normal hour-plus trip took closer to two hours (and that's with what I would describe as some highly creative alternative-route-planning; when a packed rush-hour trainful of passengers is disgorged onto a platform already teeming with passengers waiting for nonexistent trains, it's not a pretty scene), leaving me straggling home in a state of wipeout with a deadline bearing down on me, well, unbearably. Plus tonight I discover that I left the text file that contained most of the so-far-written text on my computer at work!

I realize it's outrageous to expect to be able to board a train and have it remain in service for a whopping 28 stops. (Beyond my stop, what do I care? Let them eat cake.) Last night we made it all the way to 137th Street, which is 23 stops, by my quick count; tonight, only as far as 50th Street, a mere 11 stops. Tomorrow -- well, one shudders to think! -- Ken
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1 Comments:

At 8:48 AM, Anonymous BarryB said...

So the Dems are the New GOP, and the GOP are the New Flatearthers. But where's a party that will give us the Old Dems?

 

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