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Donor profile: Robert Rowling

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Ranking: 6

Total contributions to super PACs: $4.1 million*

Federal hard money and 527 contributions:

  • $95,000 to the Republican National Committee

Notable state-level contributions:

  • $113,000 to Texas judges and politicians (2012)
  • $103,000 to retiring Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas (2010)
  • $129,000 to Republican Texas Gov. Rick Perry (2010)
  • $100,000 to Greg Abbott, Texas attorney general (2002)

Corporate name: TRT Holdings, Inc.

Corporate subsidiaries: Gold’s Gym, Tana Exploration Co. and Omni Hotels and Resorts

Robert Rowling, the president, chairman and CEO of corporate conglomerate TRT Holdings, reached super donor status in August thanks to two $1 million contributions to the conservative super PAC American Crossroads, co-founded by fellow Texan Karl Rove.

Rowling made his fortune when he sold his father’s company, Tana Oil and Gas, to Texaco for $476.5 million in 1989. The proceeds of that sale were used to create and develop TRT Holdings, which now owns the Omni hotel chain, Gold’s Gym and Tana Exploration Co.

The Dallas Morning News described his eclectic holdings in a 2008 profile, saying, “He has amassed a grab bag of hotels, fitness centers, oil and gas assets, financial and energy stocks, a fifth of downtown Corpus Christi real estate, even a chain of Mexican dollar stores.”

Forbes estimates his worth at $4.8 billion.

In 2010, TRT Holding gave three donations totaling $2.5 million to American Crossroads, sparking controversy within a San Francisco Bay Area Gold’s Gym franchise, which disaffiliated from the brand after learning of Rowling’s contribution. The source of the problem was American Crossroads’ support for candidates who are opposed to gay rights.

Rowling had already been active in the 2012 election cycle before attaining super donor status, with two other $1 million donations to Crossroads and smaller donations to Restore Our Future and Texas Conservatives Fund, the super PAC that backed Texas Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst in his failed bid for the U.S. Senate against tea party candidate Ted Cruz.

Rowling was born in Corpus Christi, Texas in 1953. He earned his bachelor’s degree from the University of Texas at Austin and his J.D. from Southern Methodist University. Rowling and his wife have two grown sons and currently live in Highland Park, Texas.

In late January, TRT announced it would move its headquarters from Irving, Texas to Dallas, home of campaign finance bigwigs Bob Perry and Harold Simmons. The move — to a site developed by campaign finance heavyweight and commercial real estate magnate Harlan Crow’s Crow Holdings — will be complete in 2013.

Last updated: Aug. 22, 2012

*2011-2012 election cycle; source: Federal Election Commission


Daily Disclosure: GOP nonprofits continue attacks on Senate Dems

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The conservative nonprofit Americans for Prosperity on Wednesday announced a $2.7 million ad buy that will target Democrats in five key Senate races across the country.

The targets are Rep. Tammy Baldwin, D-Wis., Rep. Joe Donnelly, D-Ind., Rep. Martin Heinrich, D-N.M., Rep. Shelley Berkley, D-Nev., and former Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine.

The first of the ads targets Baldwin and began airing in Wisconsin last week, according to a press release from Americans for Prosperity.

Tammy Baldwin: Stop Wasteful Spending,” features a handful of Wisconsinites who believe that “Washington can sure learn a lot from Wisconsin, especially how to tighten their belts and balance the budget.”

The Americans for Prosperity ad also points out Baldwin’s vote in favor of the Affordable Care Act, which it claims will cost $2 trillion — “double what was promised.”

In March, the Congressional Budget Office estimated the net cost of the Act would be $1.1 trillion over nine years.

Two other ads that are part of the buy were released online yesterday. “Smarter Spending Not Higher Taxes” targets Kaine, while “Nevada Taxpayers First” targets Berkley.

The remainder of the ads will air over a two-week period. It is not clear when that period began.

The ads are separate from the $25 million ad campaign targeting President Barack Obama that Americans for Prosperity announced in early August.

Americans for Prosperity is not required to disclose its donors thanks to its nonprofit status, but is connected to billionaire industrialists Charles and David Koch. Koch-backed organizations plan to spend an estimated $400 million on the 2012 elections, Politico reported in May.

Americans for Prosperity alone spent at least $1.3 million on political advertising during the 2009-2010 election cycle and has already spent at least $14.7 million this cycle, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

The organization bills itself as a “grassroots” advocate for free markets and limited government. It has also been called an “incubator” for the tea party movement.

Senate races have also drawn spending form Crossroads GPS, the nonprofit sister organization of super PAC American Crossroads as well as other conservative groups.

The organization announced a $4.2 million ad campaign targeting key Senate races in Ohio, Montana, New Mexico and Florida. Florida — where Democratic incumbent Sen. Bill Nelson faces Club for Growth-endorsed Republican Rep. Connie Mack — is a new target for Crossroads this year. The campaign also represents the first reported negative spending from the Crossroads camp in the New Mexico Senate race, where former Republican Rep. Heather Wilson faces current Rep. Martin Heinrich, a Democrat.

The conservative nonprofit American Future Fund announced yesterday that it spent $600,000 on two ads opposing Rep. Shelley Berkley, D-Nev., and former North Dakota attorney general Heidi Heitkamp. Both are running for Senate in their home states. The North Dakota ad, “Choice,” attacks Heitkamp for her support of Obama and the Affordable Care Act. The anti-Berkley ad, “Battle Born,” targets Berkley for corruption allegations she has faced in recent months.

In other spending news:

  • The nonprofit Republican Governors Association began airing an ad targeting Montana Attorney General Steve Bullock on Wednesday. “The Real Steve Bullock” claims the attorney general has been endorsed by “extreme environmentalists” — the Montana Conservation Voters, which calls itself “the political voice of Montana's conservation and environmental community.” The ad also derisively cites his C+ rating from the National Rifle Association. “Those aren’t Montana values,” the ad says.

Correction: A previous version of this story said Nevada was part of Crossroads GPS's new ad campaign. The four states that are part of the campaign are Ohio, New Mexico, Florida and Montana.

This Americans for Prosperity ad opposing Rep. Tammy Baldwin, a U.S. Senate candidate from Wisconsin, is part of a $2.7 million ad buy announced Wednesday. Alexandra Duszak http://www.publicintegrity.org/authors/alexandra-duszak

DHS employee convictions since 2004

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Donor profile: Robert Mercer

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Ranking: 9

Total contributions to super PACs (includes family members), $3.2 million*

Federal hard money and 527 contributions:

  • $30,800 to Republican National Committee (2012)
  • $30,400 to National Republican Senatorial Committee
  • $25,000 to Club for Growth PAC (2007-2011)
  • $20,000 to Republican Leadership Committee (2011)
  • $10,000 to Sen. Pat Toomey (R-Pa.)
  • $7,200 to Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.)
  • $5,000 to Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.).
  • $4,800 to Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY)
  • $1,700 to former Connecticut Sen. Chris Dodd’s presidential campaign in 2007

State contributions:

  • Mercer donated more than $50,000 to New York Republican Rick Lazio’s unsuccessful gubernatorial campaign in the 2010 cycle and $14,000 to his running mate, Greg Edwards. He also gave $10,000 to Republican Kenneth Blackwell’s failed 2006 gubernatorial bid in Ohio.

Corporate name: Renaissance Technologies Corp.

Total spent on lobbying (2007-2012): $1.3 million, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

Lobbying issues:  Securities and investments, treatment of taxation of capital gains, carried interest, tax issues affecting hedge funds and the Dodd-Frank financial reform bill, according to federal lobbying records.

Family: Daughter, Rebekah Mercer

Biography:

Robert Mercer, 65, is co-CEO of Renaissance Technologies, LLC, a $15 billion hedge fund. The IBM language recognition whiz-turned-financier brought home $125 million in 2011, making him the 16th highest-earning hedge fund manager, according to Forbes.

Renaissance Technologies is based in New York City, with additional locations in London and East Setauket, NY, where Mercer lives. Bloomberg ranked Renaissance Institutional Futures — one of the firm’s top funds — as the 26th top performing large hedge fund in 2011.

The firm has 275 employees, many of whom have given large amounts of money to both Republican and Democratic groups, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

Mercer’s 2011 earnings were trumped by those of James Simon, Renaissance’s founder and current chairman. Simon — a financial supporter of Democratic politics — earned $2.1 billion in 2011, though he officially retired from Renaissance the previous year, according to Forbes.

Mercer is the most prolific of Renaissance donors. In July, he gave $1 million to the pro-Romney super PAC, Restore Our Future and another $1 million to American Crossroads, the super PAC founded by conservative operatives Karl Rove and Ed Gillespie.

Mercer gave $500,000 to super PAC Prosperity First Inc. of $635,500 raised. So far, the group has made no independent expenditures. Its treasurer is a CPA, its address is a post office box in Fairfax, Va., and little else is known of its political intentions.

Last updated: August 23, 2012

*2011-2012 election cycle; source, Federal Election Commission.

Drugs, guns and child porn at Homeland Security

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The Department of Homeland Security is the first line of defense against threats to Americans, entrusted with guarding the borders, protecting the skies and cracking down on potential terrorist attacks.

But instead of protecting America’s citizens, hundreds of DHS agents have been busy smuggling drugs, guns and illegal immigrants, obtaining child porn, and raking in thousands in bribes and theft. 

Those are just a sampling of the crimes DHS agents committed, according to the “Summary of Significant Investigations” released by Homeland Security’s Inspector General this month.

It was a busy 2011 for the IG’s office, which investigated 1,389 allegations that resulted in 318 arrests and 260 convictions. Fines and recovered funds saved more than $45 million in taxpayer funds, according to agency estimates.

DHS is a massive government agency, with “over 225,000” employees, so it may not be surprising that there would be some individuals breaking the rules. But the seriousness of the crimes — including cases where American security was directly compromised by the very agents who are supposed to secure the borders and airports — is eye opening.

“A corrupt DHS employee may accept a bribe for allowing what appear to be simply undocumented aliens into the U.S. while unwittingly helping terrorists enter the country,” warned Charles Edwards, the acting inspector general (IG) at DHS, in Congressional testimony August 1. “Likewise, what seems to be drug contraband could be weapons of mass destruction, such as chemical or biological weapons or bomb-making materials.”

Among the more incendiary crimes profiled in the report:

  • Two TSA agents plead guilty in unrelated cases of having child pornography in their possession. One was sentenced to 20 months in prison; the other received 132 months in jail.
  • One border agent in Arizona physically assaulted another agent before he “pulled his service weapon and pointed it at the victim’s head.” The agent served an unspecified amount of time in jail.
  • While on duty and driving his government issued vehicle, a uniformed Immigration Enforcement officer was viewed buying crack cocaine in Arkansas. The agent received 60 days in prison and 60 months of probation
  • A detention officer at an immigration holding facility was sentenced to 10 months in prison after forcing “nonconsensual sexual contact” on an adult being detained at his facility.
  • One TSA agent was arrested after he “he was observed chasing and threatening to kill a young Somali male.” At the time, the agent was carrying a pair of handguns. The agent, who had also assaulted an 82 year old Somali in 2010, became the second-ever conviction under the 2009 Matthew Shepard hate crimes act.

In all the above cases, the agents were relieved of duty.

While the largest percentage of cases came from FEMA agents — including a consultant who had to pay a nearly $3 million fine for settle a false claims suit and a contractor that billed the government almost $40,000 for a fake employee — many of the most dangerous cases involved agents from Customs and Border Protection. 

“We take all allegations of corruption very seriously,” David V. Aguilar, the acting commissioner for U.S. Customs and Border Protection, said during an early August hearing. “While the number of corrupt individuals within our ranks who have betrayed the trust of the American public and their peers is a fraction of one percent of our workforce, we continue to focus our efforts on rooting out this unacceptable and deplorable behavior.”

Cases involving border security agents were spread throughout the nation. In New York, an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent was discovered to be working with a drug cartel to rob other drug traffickers and sell their product. In Texas, a border agent allowed vehicles carrying “approximately 1,700 pounds of marijuana through his inspection lane in exchange for approximately $10,000 in bribes.” And in Georgia, a border agent working at Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport used his position to bypass security and carry drugs and weapons for the cartel. 

One notable case involved a border protection officer who “provided drug traffickers with his work schedule and lane assignments, which they used to coordinate their smuggling efforts through his inspection lane.” The agent received more than nine years in prison for his actions; his estranged wife, who also pleaded guilty to assisting the scheme, is on the run after not showing at a Texas courthouse.

Not all crimes are created equal, of course. A customs agent in Boston apparently let his inner fanboy get the better of him when he stole an immigration card filled out by astronaut Neil Armstrong at Logan airport before attempting to sell it through an auction warehouse. The agent was sentenced to 24 months of probation.

Edwards, the acting IG, testified that 2,527 DHS employees have been convicted of crimes since 2004. During this period, the grand majority (65 percent) of those crimes have come from FEMA employees, many of whom were involved in kickbacks with contractors or schemes to steal taxpayer funds. 15 percent of the crimes came from border protection agents, 6.5 percent came from immigration officials, and over 5 percent was from TSA agents.

Unfortunately, DHS doesn’t seem to have licked the corruption problem. As of July 15, fiscal year 2012 has seen 146 convictions of agents. That number is guaranteed to increase; last week, two border protection agents were convicted of smuggling hundreds of people into the U.S. aboard Border Patrol vehicles.

An officer with the Transportation Security Administration screens passangers at  Los Angeles International Airport. Since the start of 2004, over 2,500 Homeland Security employees have been convicted of crimes. Aaron Mehta http://www.publicintegrity.org/authors/aaron-mehta

Daily Disclosure: Super PAC ad compares Mack to Charlie Sheen

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"Tiger Blood” is the name of a new ad from a Democratic super PAC, Majority PAC, targeting Rep. Connie Mack, R-Fla., a reference to the always-entertaining Charlie Sheen’s explanation for his ability to ingest copious amounts of harmful substances without dying.

The ad calls the U.S. Senate candidate “the Charlie Sheen of Florida politics,” accusing him of a having a history of “bar brawls, road rage and resisting arrest.”

Mack, whose real name is Cornelius Harvey McGillicuddy IV, has said he was “minding his own business” and “sober” when trouble found him, according to a report from the Associated Press. The incidents occurred when the 45-year-old Mack was in his early twenties.

Mack is running against incumbent Sen. Bill Nelson, a Democrat. Majority PAC’s mission is to maintain the Democrats’ majority in the Senate.

The ad also attacks Mack’s personal financial history, claiming he has a history of “debts and liens” and has overdrawn his checking account. Both claims are true, according to a February report from The Miami Herald.

“Tiger Blood” also claims that Mack was sued by his yacht club and condo association. Mack was indeed sued by the club, and his Fort Myers-area condo association filed a $2,160 lien against him in 2006, the Herald reported.

The ad is currently only available to Web users who know the link, which Politico published this morning.

Another ad in Florida, “Suffered,” part of the $4.2 million campaign Crossroads GPS announced yesterday, targets Nelson for his vote in favor of the Affordable Care Act, which claims the law “cuts Medicare spending by $700 billion.”

The number comes from a July letter from the Congressional Budget Office. A Washington Post analysis says the cut would come from reductions in reimbursements to doctors and hospitals — not to patient benefits.

In other outside spending news:

  • Pro-Obama super PAC Priorities USA Action reported a $2.1 million anti-Mitt Romney advertising expenditure to the Federal Election Commission Thursday.
  • The pro-Romney super PAC Restore Our Future spent $10.1 million on advertising that opposes the president and supports Romney.
  • Americans for Prosperity’s anti-Obama ad “Still Believe” cost the conservative, pro-free market nonprofit $1.9 million. The video does not appear to be available online.
  • Majority PAC spent $1.3 million on airtime against U.S. Senate candidates Rep. Rick Berg of North Dakota, Ohio Treasurer Josh Mandel and Indiana Treasurer Richard Mourdock.
  • Two ads from liberal nonprofit Patriot Majority USA, “Know” and “Means,” cost the group at least $251,000. “Know” targets Sen. Dean Heller, R-Nev., and “Means” targets Rep. Dennis Rehberg, R-Mont. Both are running for U.S. Senate.
Rep. Connie Mack, R-Fla., is running for U.S. Senate against Democratic incumbent Sen. Bill Nelson. Alexandra Duszak http://www.publicintegrity.org/authors/alexandra-duszak

Majority PAC ad: "Tiger Blood"

Bailed-out banks, Freddie Mac, AIG gave $6 million to 2008 conventions

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The Republican nominating convention that kicks off Monday in Tampa (weather permitting), has been funded by tens of millions of dollars in corporate contributions, the exact source of which won’t be known until after the party is over.

But it’s a sure bet that there are at least two big donors from the 2008 event that won’t be giving this time around — American International Group and Freddie Mac.

The two institutions together gave $1 million to the Republican convention host committee. A few months after the conclusion of the convention they were in danger of collapse, and would ultimately receive a combined $139 billion taxpayer bailout.

The donations are possible thanks to a loophole in campaign finance rules that allow corporations, unions and wealthy individuals to give unlimited sums to support the conventions.

It is “absolutely ridiculous” that corporations are able to make such donations, says Craig Holman, a lobbyist for the consumer advocacy group Public Citizen. He calls it “nothing but throwing money at the feet of congressional and White House leaders, presumably with the assumption of getting something in return.”

The two groups were bipartisan in their giving.

AIG gave $750,000 to both the Republican and Democratic host committees. The government would eventually sink $71 billion into the insurance giant. Mortgage buyer Freddie Mac gave $250,000 to both committees. Three days after the close of the Republican event, the government took it over along with Fannie Mae. Taxpayers ultimately sunk $70 billion into the floundering institution.

In all, $6 million was donated by financial institutions that received bailout money to both party conventions, according to a Center for Public Integrity review of Federal Election Commission filings — $3.4 million to Republicans and $2.6 million to Democrats

The total raised for the previous conventions is likely much higher than what we will see this year.

Through the end of 2008, the Republican host committee collected more than $65 million for the event, conducted in Minneapolis, while the Democratic convention in Denver drew about $63 million.

Republicans, meeting in Tampa, barring the arrival of a possible hurricane, aim for $50 million while Democrats, meeting in Charlotte, N.C., a week later, set a relatively modest goal of $37 million, having refused to accept direct contributions from corporations.

It wasn’t supposed to be this way. Reforms in the 1970s were meant to keep corporate money out of conventions. In 1972, as Republicans were trying to decide where to host their national convention, International Telephone & Telegraph offered $400,000 if the GOP would bring it to San Diego. Eight days later, the administration of President Richard Nixon dropped antitrust litigation against IT&T and offered a settlement that was favorable to the corporate giant.

After details of the apparent deal appeared in the press, Republicans tried to save face and moved the convention from San Diego to Miami Beach.

The scandal prompted Congress to enact a new law that would provide taxpayer funding for the parties' conventions, thus removing the need for private contributions — in theory, anyway. For 2012, each party has received $18.2 million from the U.S. Treasury to help defray costs.

But both parties are permitted to operate nonprofit corporations known as “host committees” set up as charitable organizations to offset the financial burden on local governments associated with hosting the conventions.

Democrats have struck a populist note this year, prohibiting direct corporate, political action committee and lobbyist donations. The party has also restricted individual donations to $100,000.

Campaign finance reformers still see loopholes — corporations are allowed, for instance, to make "in-kind" contributions.

During the Democrats’ 2008 convention in Denver, companies provided the host committee with about $5.8 million in in-kind contributions, including $1.7 million in “network equipment” from the tech giant Cisco System, which, records show, was the No. 1 corporate donor to the host committee.

Yet still, “it’s a very significant departure from the past,” Holman said.

The No. 1 corporate supporter of the Republican’s host committee was Qwest, now CenturyLink, which provided nearly $5 million. About half of that was donated directly to the committee and about half was from in-kind contributions. The telecommunications firm also gave roughly $840,000 to the Democratic host committee.

The top individual donor to the Republican committee was Raymond T. Dalio, founder of Bridgewater investments, the world’s largest hedge fund. He gave $2 million.

Overall, companies contributed more than $40 million to the Democratic host committee in Denver and unions donated about $9 million, according to federal records. And companies contributed roughly $52 million to the Republicans’ host committee in Minneapolis-St. Paul.

The Republicans’ Tampa host committee website lists more than two dozen companies and trade associations as “our sponsors.”

This year, companies ranging from Coca-Cola and Wells Fargo to Xerox and UPS are working to ensure that they have a presence at both conventions.

“There’s a lot of cost around the convention,” said Wells Fargo spokesman Kathy Harrison. “It is important as a good corporate citizen to support the host city.”

Wells Fargo was one of the banks that benefited from the government’s bank bailout, though it has paid the $25 billion equity investment back, plus a $2.3 billion profit.

In 2008, the Republican host committee received $3.4 million in donations from banks that received investments from the U.S. Treasury. Donations came from U.S. Bancorp ($1 million); Goldman Sachs & Co. ($255,000); Wells Fargo ($250,000); J.P. Morgan Chase ($100,000) and Morgan Stanley ($100,000) and others.

The Democratic host convention collected $2.6 million, including nearly $330,000 from Wells Fargo and its foundation; nearly $317,000 from U.S. Bancorp; $250,000 from both Goldman Sachs and Citigroup; $150,000 from Morgan Stanley and $100,000 from Bank of America.

Most of the banks and other institutions that made contributions to the conventions have recovered nicely from the recession, once again posting healthy profits — with at least one major exception. Lehman Brothers, whose bankruptcy filing in 2008 spun the global financial markets into a panic, gave $100,000 to the Democratic convention.

Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus, left, and convention CEO William Harris unveil the stage and podium for the 2012 Republican National Convention in Tampa, Florida. John Dunbar http://www.publicintegrity.org/authors/john-dunbar Michael Beckel http://www.publicintegrity.org/authors/michael-beckel

Manipulating Medicare in the election season

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Mitt Romney's selection of Rep. Paul Ryan as his vice-presidential nominee has vaulted Medicare to the top tier of election issues, thanks to Ryan's proposal that the entitlement program be converted to a system of "premium support" that would provide subsidies for elderly beneficiaries to buy insurance on the private market. Judging by the fiery rhetoric from both campaigns, Medicare seems certain to remain a high-profile topic for the remainder of the contest. 

But Medicare is a complex topic, and the charges and counter-charges seem likely to yield more heat than light for a confused electorate. A recent story by FactCheck.org provides a helpful reality check on the finger-pointing, but there's been little of substance illuminating Medicare's increasingly precarious finances and its often-confusing spending choices. 

The Center's Manipulating Medicare series has attempted to fill that void. In the next month, we'll be adding to this reservoir of reporting with new investigative pieces on billing procedures by doctors and hospitals that have added tens of billions of dollars to our Medicare tab.

In the meantime, catch up with these examinations of the Medicare system:

 

Gordon Witkin http://www.publicintegrity.org/authors/gordon-witkin

OPINION: Physicians' group will barnstorm conventions with truth-telling on ObamaCare

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As the Republican convention gets underway today in Tampa, we can expect to hear the politicians and delegates gathered there — including GOP nominee Mitt Romney — rail against “Obamacare”, insisting that what we need instead of a “government takeover of health care” is “patient-centered” care, although what that would look like hasn’t been disclosed.

If recent statements by Romney and his VP pick Paul Ryan are an indication of the rhetoric we’ll likely hear, get ready for speech after speech telling us that Obamacare will “cut” $716 billion from Medicare and cost small businesses a bundle.

In anticipation of these sorts of misrepresentations, doctors from all over the country — all members of a four-year-old organization called Doctors for America — have traveled to Florida to serve as a truth squad. And while they’re dispensing facts, they’ll also be providing more than a little free care. When the GOPers leave the Sunshine State, the doctors will hop on a bus and head to Charlotte to try to persuade the politicians and delegates who will gather there that they need to start aggressively defending the reform law.

Doctors for America is a bipartisan grassroots organization of 15,000 physicians and medical students from all 50 states. The organization’s executive director, Dr. Alice Chen, said the doctors decided on the road trip because “politics, not patients, has been driving the health care debate and is threatening to roll back the promise of a better health care system.”

Chen says the mission of the group is to build a health care system that works for everybody, not just the wealthy and fully insured. The group’s message: “Stop messing with health care reform because people’s lives are at stake.” Its “Patients Over Politics Bus Tour," which will make stops in Atlanta and Columbia, S.C. and several other cities between Tampa and Charlotte, will feature press events, town hall-type forums, and preventive health screenings.

In both convention cities, the docs will talk about how they and other health care providers are already seeing the Affordable Care Act improve the lives of their patients.

One of the physicians who can attest to that is Evan Saulina of Oregon. "I got involved in health advocacy when I lost two of my patients in 2006,” he said. “They died because they did not have coverage or affordable access to the care they needed, despite both working full time.” He said he already has seen numerous benefits for his patients as a result of the reform law. He cited as an example seniors who come in for preventive care, now covered for the first time by Medicare, and young people who are able to stay on their parents’ policies until age 26.

Another young member of Doctors for America, Kenya Wheeler of California, says he is among many who might not be alive today if not for the Affordable Care Act. He’ll be on the trip this week. 

“Little did I know that a year after health reform passed, I would need health care to save my own life,” Wheeler says on the organization’s website.

A year ago, Wheeler suffered three serious seizures as a result of a previously undiagnosed mass in his brain. It turned out to be lymphoma.

“Over the next six months, I was in and out the hospital getting rounds of high dose chemo that made it almost impossible to maintain my previous activities,” he wrote. “To make matters worse, my graduate student insurance had a $400,000 lifetime cap — a cap that seemed like a lot of money when I was healthy. But with cancer, my health care bills skyrocketed. My friends and family organized fundraising events so I wouldn't run out of coverage in the middle of my treatment. My medical treatments have cost over $600,000 (mostly covered by insurance), but they saved my life.

“I’m more determined than ever to make sure everyone can have the health care they need, that nobody will be told that they have no options because they don't have insurance or they can't afford $600,000 to save their own life.”

Earlier this month, the Affordable Care Act made lifetime and annual limits on health insurance policies, including student policies, a thing of the past.

One of the goals of Doctors for America is to collect 5,000 signatures on a Declaration of Support for the reform law during their bus tour. You can follow the group’s travels on the Doctors for America Facebook Page.

Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney writes on a white board as he talks about Medicare during a news conference in Greer, S.C . Wendell Potter http://www.publicintegrity.org/authors/wendell-potter

Daily Disclosure: GOP not giving up on Maine Senate race

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Republicans are trying to peel away support from popular former Gov. Angus King, an independent, who is favored to win a U.S. Senate seat made more competitive by the retirement of senior Republican Sen. Olympia Snowe.

Maine Freedom, a new super PAC, spent $137,000 on an ad supporting Cynthia Dill, the Democratic candidate and opposing King. The  super PAC has some strong Republican connections.

As reported Friday by the Bangor Daily News, the group's treasurer is Michael Adams, general counsel for the Republican Governors Association. Adams is also a member of the Republican National Lawyers Association, according to his profile at law firm Dinsmore & Shohl, where he is an elections lawyer.

The super PAC’s assistant treasurer, Erin Berry, is also a former lawyer for the RGA and previously worked at the Republican State Leadership Committee, according to her LinkedIn profile.

Republicans apparently hope to split the Democratic vote between King and Dill, thus giving Republican candidate, Charlie Summers, a chance at victory.

The RGA, a politically active nonprofitwhose mission is to elect Republican governors, is not involved with the Maine Freedom super PAC, according to spokesman Mike Schrimpf.

“The RGA has zero involvement with the group. We are not funding it, helping with strategy, anything,” Schrimpf said in an email to the Center. “The only connection is the RGA’s counsel, Mike Adams.”

Target Enterprises, the group that made the ad buy for Maine Freedom, is a California-based media placement company. The president of the group, Adam Stoll, was senior adviser to the Republican National Committee in 2004 and 2008 and served as the national advertising director for the 1996 presidential committee of former Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan.

Maine Freedom registered with the FEC as a super PAC on Aug. 16 and is has not yet reported its donors. The only reported campaign spending so far is Friday’s pro-Dil/anti-King ad, which was not available online at this writing.

In other outside spending news:

  • The nonprofit National Rifle Association Institute for Legislative Action reported spending $420,000 in the Ohio and Virginia U.S. Senate races, where the group opposes Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, and former Democratic Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine.
  • As part of a $250,000 ad buy, Republican nonprofit Crossroads GPS released “Mountain,” opposing Rep. Tammy Baldwin, D-Wis., who is running against former Republican Gov. Tommy Thompson. The pair are vying for the U.S. Senate seat being vacated by Democratic Sen. Herb Kohl.
  • Conservative nonprofit Americans for Prosperity spent $3.6 million on “New Ideas,” which was released Thursday and opposes President Barack Obama.
  • On Friday, Americans for Prosperity released “Washington-Style Reform,” attacking Rep. Joe Donnelly, D-Ind., for supporting the Affordable Care Act. Donnelly is running for U.S. Senate in the state.
  • Conservative super PAC National Horizon reported spending $192,000 on ads supporting Republican Wendy Long for U.S. Senate from New York. The litigation lawyer faces incumbent Democrat Sen. Kristen Gillibrand. National Horizon’s latest ad criticizes Gillibrand and the Affordable Care Act.
  • American Future Fund, a conservative nonprofit, spent $548,000 on “Battle Born,” an ad opposing Rep. Shelley Berkley, D-Nev., and $183,000 on “Choice,” an ad supporting Republican Rick Berg for U.S. Senate in North Dakota. Both ads were released Aug. 22.
  • The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee spent $189,000 on advertising opposing Rep. Denny Rehberg, R-Mont., who is running for U.S. Senate against incumbent Democratic Sen. Jon Tester.
  • Majority PAC, a super PAC supporting Democratic candidates for U.S. Senate, spent $730,000 on ads opposing Rep. Connie Mack, R- Fla. Majority PAC released the ad “Tiger Blood” opposing Mack on Thursday. Mack faces incumbent Sen. Bill Nelson.
  • SEIU COPE, the political action committee of the Service Employees International Union, spent $153,000 opposing Rep. Michael Coffman, R-Colo., and supporting state Rep. Joe Miklosi, D-Colo., who face off in the election for U.S. House in Colorado’s 6th district.
  • The super PAC of the AFL-CIO, Workers’ Voice, spent $118,000 on flyers, direct mail and staff support in support of Obama.

Update (Aug. 28, 2012): This story has been updated to include comment from the Republican Governors Association and note the ad also opposes Angus King.

Romney balancing act on undocumented youth getting harder

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Undocumented youths 15 to 30 years old certainly can’t vote. But they are a large group — estimated at 800,000 to 1.7 million — that Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney doesn’t think he can write off completely.

Why? Conventional wisdom has it that Romney, to win, needs to peel off Latino votes from President Obama in key swing states such as Nevada, New Mexico and Colorado. Some Latino voters were once undocumented themselves, or know someone who was or is. They also tend to support the decade-old federal DREAM Act proposal — or something like it that would give youths a chance to earn full legal immigrant status, which isn’t possible within the current immigration system.

Over the weekend, former GOP Florida Gov. Jeb Bush warned his party that it had to get with the nation’s changing demographics and heed the Latino vote — or get left behind. 

As Romney’s campaign prepares for the sprint to the finish, the GOP standard-bearer might consider the 2010 California gubernatorial campaign of Meg Whitman, a Romney supporter. In a blitz of Spanish-language TV and radio ads, Whitman simultaneously tried to woo Latino moms and dads by praising Latino schoolchildren as “the future,” while attacking illegal immigrants as a burden and opposing legalization for youths or adults. 

That didn’t work.

Romney has repeatedly said he would veto the DREAM Act, which once had prominent GOP supporters. The act would allow certain youths to earn a green card, or legal permanent residency, by attending college or serving in the military. (Legal permanent residency is a prerequisite step to apply for citizenship.) Romney has also attacked a program that President Obama began this month to allow some undocumented youths who arrived before age 16 and who are not older than 30 to apply for both work permits and a two-year protection from deportation. Obama called it a “stop gap” measure only, and said that he’d sign the DREAM Act if Congress were to pass it. 

Romney has pushed a “self-deportation” line as a solution to oust illegal immigrants, but has echoed President Obama in expressing sympathy for young illegal immigrants who were brought to the United States “through no fault of their own.” So far, though, Romney hasn’t offered specifics on what he might do for those young immigrants, if not the Dream Act. And he has dodged questions on whether he would cancel or continue Obama’s new two-year program if he’s elected.

Florida Sen. Sen. Marco Rubio, a Cuban-American and Romney “surrogate,” tried to step into that void this summer when he said he was developing an alternative to the DREAM Act that could be put before Congress.

To curb criticism from the right, Rubio said his idea wouldn’t open a path to citizenship for youths. His program would only provide extended temporary legal status, he said. That stance drew attacks from critics who said Rubio’s proposal would create a “permanent underclass.” Rubio denied that, claiming that once youths had temporary legal status, they could rely on the existing immigration system to ultimately seek green cards. But Rubio has failed to explain how that’s possible given the limits of the current system and its obstacles, as explained in this Center for Public Integrity piece.

On the eve of the GOP convention, Romney’s balancing act on undocumented youths got even more complicated. 

Last Thursday, one of Romney’s informal immigration advisers, Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach, filed a lawsuit against Obama’s new program on behalf of 10 immigration agents. The suit challenges Obama’s right to allow undocumented “childhood arrivals” to apply for temporary relief from deportation.

Kobach has earned a reputation as an architect of tough state immigration laws, such as Arizona’s “show me your papers” law, and legal challenges to policies that allow certain undocumented students to pay in-state tuition for state college. Last week, Kobach pressed the GOP convention to keep hard-line planks on immigration. 

Kobach’s latest suit against Obama’s program is funded by Numbers USA, a Washington, D.C.-based population-control group that has long opposed efforts to pass the DREAM Act.

In 2007, Numbers USA executive director Roy Beck explained his limited sympathy for these youths: "I have no trouble looking at them in the eye, and saying, 'Too bad. Life is hard.’”

The Coalition for Human Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles called Kobach’s suit “the equivalent of seventeenth-century witch-hunting.”

Pushed to respond to Kobach’s suit, a Romney spokesman issued a carefully worded response, as reported by The Hill. These youths deserve “clarity about their long-term status,” the Romney spokesman said, and Obama’s action only makes it harder to pursue a bipartisan proposal that would offer young illegal immigrants some relief.

Two years ago, in California, a similar balancing act blew up in Meg Whitman’s face during a debate in heavily Latino Fresno that was sponsored by Univision, the Spanish-language TV giant. Fresno is a farm region where agribusiness groups, a strong GOP constituency, had taken a lead in efforts to try to get Congress to legalize their mostly Latino immigrant workforce — and their families — during the presidency of George W. Bush.

When a young woman rose and told Whitman and Democratic candidate Jerry Brown that she was about to graduate with honors but was undocumented, Whitman’s response left the audience cold. She told the student she didn’t think undocumented students should be allowed into a state college, nor did she support the federal DREAM Act. Labor unions paid for TV ads in Spanish calling Whitman "a two-faced woman."

Whitman lost in California, for various reasons, including the Latino vote, which is about one-fifth of the state’s electorate. Polls showed that between 64 and 80 percent of California’s Latino voters voted Democrat in 2010. 

Last Friday, Univision announced that Obama and Romney had agreed to appear in separate forums and answer questions from the audience. Look for what Romney says when he’s pressed, again, to explain his position on undocumented youths.

Meg Whitman speaking in 2011. Susan Ferriss http://www.publicintegrity.org/authors/susan-ferriss

Arizona primary latest example of Club for Growth's clout

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As Republicans have battled for the soul of their party in primaries across the country, the deep-pocketed, anti-tax Club for Growth has proved itself a force to be reckoned with.

If heavily favored Rep. Jeff Flake prevails Tuesday in Arizona over businessman Wil Cardon, the Club will mark four wins against two losses among its favored candidates in U.S. Senate GOP primary races.

Of about five-dozen organizations that spent a combined $32 million on independent expenditures in Republican Senate primaries this year, Club for Growth ranks No. 1, having spent $10.8 million, according to a Center for Public Integrity analysis of Federal Election Commission records.

The Club’s super PAC, which is allowed to accept unlimited contributions and spend the funds on ads attacking or backing candidates, is responsible for nearly all of this spending.

Flake has cultivated a reputation in Washington as an anti-earmark crusader, routinely earning a 100 percent favorable rating from the Club for his voting record. He was also one of the first senators to sign the Club’s pledge to repeal President Barack Obama’s signature healthcare reform law.

Flake was the first candidate of the 2012 election cycle endorsed by the group back in February of 2011.

The Club has spent more than $1 million supporting Flake through its nonprofit, political action committee and its Club for Growth Action super PAC — that’s about 70 percent of the $1.5 million spent by outside groups on independent expenditures in the Arizona contest.

Cardon has sunk about $9 million of his own funds into the race, but trailed Flake by 22 percentage points in a recent poll.

Notably, the Club for Growth’s PAC has also steered about $885,000 in bundled contributions into Flake’s campaign war chest, according to the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics — more money than any other federal candidate.

Super PACs, which have flourished in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court’s Citizens United ruling in 2010, are required to disclose their donors.

Among the super PAC's top donors are billionaire tech pioneer and Ron Paul supporter Peter Thiel ($2 million); board member and leveraged buyout specialist John W. Childs ($1.1 million); investor Virginia James, who sits on the Club’s leadership council ($1 million); and board chairman Jackson Stephens ($1 million).

Club for Growth spokesman Barney Keller said his organization is “proud to play a role” in helping to elect conservatives who will “fight to pass pro-growth policies.”

“We don’t care about our win-loss record,” Keller said. “We just want limited government, lower taxes and pro-growth policies passed in Washington.”

This outlook has often put it at odds with the Republican establishment.

Club for Growth Action spent more than $5.6 million on ads aimed at helping Ted Cruz in the Texas GOP Senate primary. Cruz beat Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst in a heated primary runoff election in July. And the Club spent seven figures assisting the candidacy of Richard Mourdock, who bested moderate incumbent Sen. Dick Lugar in Indiana’s Republican Senate primary.

Only in Wisconsin did an establishment candidate prevail over the Club’s favored contender. Earlier this month, former four-term Gov. Tommy Thompson defeated Club-endorsed Mark Neumann, a former congressman, and political newcomer Eric Hovde, who spent more than $5 million of his own money on the race.

The Club’s other loss came in Nebraska, where state Sen. Deb Fischer unexpectedly triumphed over Club-endorsed Don Stenberg and Jon Bruning, the candidate preferred by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

Reity O’Brien contributed to this report.

Arizona Republican Senate candidate Rep. Jeff Flake, R-Arizona, is running for retiring Sen. Jon Kyl's, R-Arizona, seat Tuesday. Michael Beckel http://www.publicintegrity.org/authors/michael-beckel

U.S. Arms Agreements, 2004-2011

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U.S. sets record arms sales in 2011

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2011 was a very good year for U.S. arms sales, with more than triple the business from the year before. 

According to a new report to Congress, worldwide sales of U.S. weapons last year added up to $66.3 billion. That accounts for more than three-quarters of 2011 arms sales worldwide, which is “the highest single year agreements total in the history of the U.S. arms export program.”

The report was prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS) as part of their annual study of arms sales.

In 2010, the U.S. authorized $21.4 billion in sales, which led CRS to describe the jump as “extraordinary.” In terms of overall sales, Russia was distant second to the United States, having moved $4.8 billion. The previous record was in 2009, when the U.S. did almost $31 billion in sales.

Since the start of 2008, 81.4 percent of U.S. arms sales agreements have gone to the Middle East while 16.04 percent have gone to Asian countries.

In the report, CRS notes that sales to developing nations were a major driver in lifting 2011 U.S. sales, jumping from $14.3 billion in 2010 to $56.3 billion in 2011. CRS points to Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates as countries that bolstered their arms purchasing in 2011, which CRS says could be linked to concerns over Iran. Saudi Arabia purchased more than $33 billion in arms from the U.S., including 84 new F-15 jets and upgrades for 70 older models.

The Saudis were not alone in purchasing weaponry in the region. The United Arab Emirates purchased 16 Chinook helicopters for just under $1 billion total; Oman shelled out $1.6 billion for 18 F-16 fighters. Egypt added land forces, spending $1 billion on M1 Abrams tanks, a sale that the Pentagon has used to argue for freezing domestic production of the Army’s signature land vehicle.

But “the U.S. arms agreements with Saudi Arabia were extraordinary,” concluded the report, as they “represent, by far, the largest share of U.S. agreements with the world or the developing world in 2011.”

The selling of arms to Saudi Arabia is not without controversy. As the Center reported in June, the country has continued to receive steady flows of arms from the United States despite being on a State Department watchlist for human rights violations. Since the start of 2004, Saudi Arabia has purchased $75.7 billion in arms.

Another country which has received weapons despite human rights abuse concerns is the tiny nation of Bahrain. Earlier this year, the Center reported that the U.S. lifted a freeze on arm sales that had been put into effect due to human rights abuses during the “Arab Spring” uprising. Like Saudi Arabia, Bahrain is a major strategic partner for the U.S. The Persian Gulf nation received $80.4 million in military financing from the U.S. between 2005 and 2010 and is home to a 60-acre U.S. naval base which houses the U.S. Fifth Fleet.

No law requires that U.S. arms be exported only to countries that the State Department — in its annual human rights assessments — determines are treating their citizens well. Instead, a more narrow restriction known as the so-called “Leahy Law,” named for author Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) and passed in 1997, prohibits U.S. assistance to specific military and police units deemed responsible for human rights abuses.

While the United States was clearly the leader in weapons transactions, a number of other countries took part in the global arms trade, including France, the United Kingdom, Germany, and Italy — traditional Western European arms suppliers. China has also begun to rise to prominence in this area, although they still lag significantly behind the U.S. and Russia. 

Four Saudi Arabian F-15 jets fly over Riyadh in 2009. The middle eastern country agreed to more than $33 billion in arms purchases from the United States in 2011. Aaron Mehta http://www.publicintegrity.org/authors/aaron-mehta

Daily Disclosure: Obama's abortion stance in Illinois statehouse raised

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An anti-abortion group released an ad featuring an “abortion survivor” accusing then-Illinois state Sen. Barack Obama of voting to “deny basic, constitutional protections for babies born alive from an abortion.”

The nonprofit Susan B. Anthony List ad references the fracas that surrounded President Obama’s voting record on a bill that would protect babies that have survived abortions.

How Will You Answer?” features Melissa Ohden.

“I’m going to tell you something you may not know. Many children, more than you might think, actually survived failed abortions and are born alive,” Ohden says. “I know, because I’m one of them.”

How Will You Answer? will air in Missouri at a cost of $150,000. Women’s rights have consumed the public conversation following remarks about “legitimate rape” made by the state’s Republican nominee for U.S. Senate, Todd Akin.

Ohden refers to Obama’s votes in the Illinois State Senate against the Illinois Born Alive Protection Act in 2001, an issue first brought to national attention in 2008 by nurse-turned-activist Jill Stanek.

The ad implies Obama would leave babies who survive abortions to die, which is inaccurate. Obama voted against the act, but noted Illinois state law requires physicians to use life-saving measures should an aborted fetus in fact be born alive.

Obama maintained that his primary opposition to the state bill — of which the U.S. Congress passed a federal version in 2002 — was that it undermines Roe v. Wade and a women’s right to choose.

Furthermore, according to Illinois news media, there was no evidence that babies born alive after failed abortions were being left to die.

But Stanek, the anti-abortion nurse-activist, testified that she saw babies being abandoned to die at Christ Hospital in Oak Lawn, Ill.

Factcheck.org did its own analysis of the claims in 2008.

The Susan B. Anthony List is a “social welfare” nonprofit, so it is not required to disclose its donors. In 2010, the most recent records available, the group reported raising $7 million.

The organization has spent almost $800,000 this election cycle, more than half of that supporting failed Republican presidential candidate, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum. The group spent an additional $188,000 opposing Obama.

In other outside spending news:

  • The National Rifle Association Institute for Legislative Action, a nonprofit, released an anti-Tim Kaine ad, “Stand for Freedom, Stand against Tim Kaine.” The former governor is running for U.S. Senate from Virginia. The $181,000 buy is the group’s first independent expenditure in the 2012 election.
  • The NRA Institute for Legislative Action also hit Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla., with “Nelson Needs to Go.”
  • Thank you, Paul Ryan!” from the political action committee Campaign to Defeat Barack Obama praises Republican vice presidential nominee Rep. Paul Ryan.
  • Pro-Obama super PAC Priorities USA Action airs its own “disappointed voters” ad. After a spate of pro-Mitt Romney groups produced ads featuring former Obama voters, “Olive” highlights a Massachusetts small business owner’s disillusionment with Romney, the state's former governor. The ad is airing in Florida, Colorado, Ohio and Virginia and is part of a $30 million campaign by the super PAC.
  • Democratic super PAC House Majority PAC released a series of ads targeting U.S. House races. “Something’s Not Right” criticizes John Koster’s “love affair with Rush Limbaugh.” Koster is the Republican candidate for U.S. House in Washington’s 1st District and will face Microsoft executive and Democrat Suzan DelBene in November.
  • Hurt” from House Majority PAC opposes North Carolina state Sen. David Rouzer, a Republican running for U.S. House in the state’s 7th District against Rep. Mike McIntyre.
  • Resume” from House Majority PAC opposes Mia Love, the mayor of Saratoga Springs, Utah, who is the Republican candidate for U.S. House in Utah’s 4th District. Love faces incumbent Democratic Rep. Jim Matheson.
  • We Still Do” from the 60 Plus Association, a conservative nonprofit, features senior citizens arguing health care reform is still needed. The ad opposes Kaine, who is running against former U.S. Sen. George Allen, the Republican nominee.
  • Liberal super PAC American Bridge 21st Century’s new video, the “Romney-Ryan Bromance: You Complete Me” seeks to highlight the similarities between Romney’s platform and Ryan’s politics.
  • New super PACs: Ladies First Super PAC and the Latino District Defense Fund, both of Dallas.
  • MoveOn.org Political Action reported spending $116,000 on ads opposing Romney.
An "abortion survivor" criticizes Obama's votes when he was a state senator in Illinois. Rachael Marcus http://www.publicintegrity.org/authors/rachael-marcus

Georgia's ethics commission: A sad tale of dysfunctional state government

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Perhaps no state illustrates the political perils of ethics enforcement better than Georgia, where the ethics commission has been the nexus of more infighting, vitriol and litigation than a Univision novella.

Keeping track of all the resignations, firings, accusations and countercharges there has challenged even the most knowledgeable observers of Peach State politics. Three executive directors have resigned or been fired since 2006. Two other employees collected $405,000 in damages for allegedly wrongful termination.  Lawmakers stripped the agency of 40 percent of its funding, its power to make new rules, even its name.

Today, as public pressure builds for ethics reform in Georgia, the agency faces a host of other challenges:

  • Two former top-ranking officials allege the commission fired them for investigating suspected campaign abuses by Gov. Nathan Deal.
  • Thousands of candidate disclosures swamp the agency’s online filing system, paralyzing it at peak periods for many users.
  • Violators continue to avoid stiffer penalties because the commission has not devoted the resources to formally notifying them.
  • Thin staffing keeps the staff from reviewing even 10 percent of the tens of thousands of filings it receives each year.

Much of this has come to pass, critics say, because the commission answers to the very politicians it’s supposed to regulate and investigate. Legislative leaders set its budget, control its powers and, along with the governor, decide who its five members will be.

In the view of many of the body’s critics, that system has failed. An independent commission, says former commission chief Teddy Lee, is essential.

“It’s got to be set up in a way that it can’t be manipulated,” says Lee, “by people who have no desire to be overseen or second-guessed.”

Pinching pennies

Tight funding has hobbled the commission as far back as anyone can recall.

The agency, created in 1974 to enforce Georgia’s new campaign finance law, gradually assumed lobbyist oversight and other responsibilities as well. Sometimes lawmakers ponied up more money to help carry out the new duties, but ethics advocates say it was rarely enough.

When Lee took over in 1990, he had just two employees, two typewriters and a photocopier so old that the manufacturer wouldn’t even offer a service contract.

The commission got a modest budget bump with passage of the 1992 Ethics in Government Act, Lee said. The law imposed Georgia’s first limits on campaign contributions in local races and forced lobbyists to register with the state and disclose their frequently lavish gifts to government officials.

Still, Lee said, he and an assistant had to juggle their time just to give ethics complaints a basic once-over. Budget-writers, he said, refused to add money to hire even one full-time investigator.

“If you ever wanted to raise eyebrows on a legislative committee, you asked for an investigator position,” Lee said. “That was a non-starter.”

Lee avoided possible reprisals for sensitive cases over the years even as he watched peers in other states “walk the plank” in similar circumstances. “Sometimes all they’ve got to do is get the drop on you and it’s over,” he said.

After the 2002 election, it appeared Lee’s luck might have run out.­ ­Gov.-elect Sonny Perdue, the first Republican to win the office since Reconstruction, asked Lee and other department heads to resign to make room for his own leadership team.

Lee refused, keeping his job after the commission’s chairman rebuffed Perdue in a strongly-worded letter. Georgians’ trust in the agency’s integrity, Lee said, depended on its independence from the political process.

But over the years, politics has cast an increasingly large shadow over the panel’s composition. The governor, initially allowed one appointment, won the power to name a second in 1975 and a three-member majority a decade later. In 2005, the Senate’s new Republican majority took a fourth appointment away from the lieutenant governor, a Democrat. (The speaker of the House selects the fifth member.)

Political pressures continued to bubble up, Lee said. When lawmakers’ personal financial disclosures were first posted online, the commission’s chairman urged him to take them down. “He said, ‘I’ve gotten two calls from two legislators from different parties, and they are really upset,’” Lee recalled. The commission, at its next meeting, agreed unanimously to keep the disclosures online.

By January 2006, though, Lee’s time had come. Two commissioners asked him to step down. They “wanted me to resign and say it was my idea, that I wanted to pursue other opportunities,” Lee said.

Lee refused, and the commission fired him a day later, as members said they needed a “fresh approach.” Steve Farrow, the commission chair at the time, declined to comment in a recent telephone interview.

“If you are doing your job with a state ethics commission, there are people who sometimes have the power to get you back,” Lee said recently. “They are people who want what they want and are used to always trying to get it.”

Commissioners denied widespread speculation that they were doing the bidding of Perdue, who’d recently paid $20,000 in fines and restitution for accepting excess campaign contributions. All three of the governor’s appointees voted to dump Lee, who had overseen the Perdue investigation.

Political considerations factored into Lee’s firing, though, even if the governor’s influence did not, a former commission member said recently.

After a decade and a half of ethics cases against state lawmakers, Lee had “no rapport at all” with them on budgetary matters, said the former commissioner,  who asked not to be identified. “Certainly, we have to have some relationships with legislators.”

The friction, he acknowledged, may have been inevitable. “There’s always this dynamic when you have influential legislators who may or may not be happy with what you’re doing,” he said.

Dashed hopes

Despite supporters’ concern about Lee’s ouster, 2006 opened with the promise of being a banner year for ethics enforcement in Georgia.

A new law expanded lobbyist oversight and barred campaign fundraising while legislators were in session. Fines were increased and financial disclosure requirements tightened.

To help with enforcement, lawmakers beefed up the commission’s budget by 68 percent. Flush with funding for the first time, the agency upgraded its online presence to make all candidates’ and lobbyists’ disclosures accessible with a single mouse-click.

Rick Thompson, Lee’s replacement, also created an investigative unit — hiring six veteran police officers who were expecting to use arrest powers the commission had never before employed.  

They would be the first full-time investigators at the Ethics Commission, as well as the last. Lawyers and auditors later investigated cases along with other duties, until budget cuts did away with virtually all of those positions as well.

Thompson said he hoped investigators with law enforcement backgrounds could quickly close a backlog of hundreds of pending complaints. Instead, he said, cases bogged down as he sent their reports back over and over for revision. “They didn’t have any strong writing skills,” Thompson said.

The constant rewrites exasperated the investigators, who complained they were being held to unrealistic standards. “We write like cops. We don’t write like attorneys,” former investigator Robert Bentivegna said.

Some of the investigators believed the campaign finance laws were riddled with ambiguities. The rewrites, they said, soft-pedaled their findings and deleted their conclusions.

“In criminal law it’s black and white. You either did it or you didn’t,” investigator Phillip West later testified. “And this was convoluted.”

Within a few months, Thompson fired his new director of investigations, Bill Thompson (no relation), saying he missed deadlines and failed to follow direction. Bill Thompson responded with a whistleblower lawsuit, charging that the real reason for his dismissal was his insistence on pursuing sensitive cases.

In a sworn deposition, Bill Thompson said his former boss initially told him to pursue criminal cases that would send a message to politicians statewide.

“I want to scare the bejesus out of those guys under the Gold Dome,” Bill Thompson said Rick Thompson told him.

But Rick Thompson’s resolve soon wavered, Bill Thompson said, amid worries about the commission’s funding. “Rick … painted almost every politician as a powerful politician that could affect his budget,” he said.

Others blamed the Thompsons’ conflict on personalities more than politics. “Bill … tends to rub on people the wrong way because he wants to do so much and to bring things to light,” Bentivegna said recently.

Several investigators, in depositions in the whistleblower suit, cited potential criminal cases that were never prosecuted.The first case, they said, was to have been against a former legislator suspected of spending tens of thousands of campaign dollars on personal expenses.

“Every time we started to do it, they would pull back on the bridle and say, ‘No, we don’t want to do that,’” West testified in 2008.

Previously, an outside investigator had told commissioners she found no evidence that Rick Thompson manipulated cases for political reasons. The state’s lawyers, while denying wrongdoing, settled the whistleblower complaint in June 2008 for $125,000.

The settlement marked the end of the investigative unit. By then, its remaining members had grown disheartened and already left for other law enforcement jobs.

Bentivegna, now a suburban Atlanta police detective, laments the unit’s demise.

“I’m just a cop at heart,” he said. “I believe if you did something wrong, you should pay the price for it.”

Rick Thompson, for his part, disputes any notion that he showed political favoritism at the commission.

“I was aggressive with Democrats and Republicans both,” he said. “No one in their right mind could say, ‘Rick pulled punches,’ because I went after everybody.”

In depositions, though, some investigators said they believed the commission did indeed pull punches by dismissing solid cases or issuing weak penalties. “It was a joke,” West said.

Rick Thompson noted that Georgia law gives commission members that prerogative.

That, Bill Thompson said in 2007, was the core of the problem. “When you have a commission of five political appointees,” he said, “you’re going to have political decisions.”

An end to rule-making

That wasn’t the end of conflict for the commission. In 2009, the panel ran into another roadblock over new rules that could curtail politicians’ use of private aircraft provided by lobbyists and campaign supporters.

“There were an awful lot of free planes flying around,” former Senate Majority Leader Eric Johnson, R-Savannah, said recently. “There had been some abuses.”

After Johnson asked for clarity, the commission enacted rules in December 2008 on how to calculate the value of those flights. Previously, candidates could estimate as little as they wanted; some didn’t report them at all. The new rules, fashioned after federal election guidelines, set a market value for such flights based on the type of plane and the distance traveled.  

But some legislators were annoyed by the regulations, which became the last the commission would write. In April 2009, House leaders pushed through a bill stripping the agency of the power to make any more rules unless the Legislature specifically allowed them.

House leaders also tried to slash the commission’s budget by two-thirds, but never said why. One key Senate budget-writer, though, offered his own assessment of the proposed budget cut.

“Unfortunately, it happens a lot,” longtime Senate Appropriations Chairman Jack Hill, R-Reidsville, said recently. “They’re called ‘grudge cuts.’”

The Senate negotiated the budget reduction down to 30 percent, which still forced layoffs, a 60-percent cutback in office space and an end to subscriptions, maintenance agreements and new office supplies.

Rick Thompson announced his resignation a few months later, in August 2009. Now a consultant primarily to Republican candidates, he says that “no one told me that I had to go.” At the time, though, associates said he complained that political pressures and his frustration over weak ethics penalties led to his departure.

Wheeling and Dealing

Stacey Kalberman, a lawyer transitioning from a career in insurance regulation, took over as executive director in April 2010 but fared no better than her predecessors. She is now embroiled in a dispute over what she regards as her forced departure in 2011.

The falling out revolves around a case Kalberman inherited involving Gov. Deal’s actions while still a congressman. In March 2010, a complainant alleged that Deal’s gubernatorial campaign had misspent money in several ways, including payment for legal fees to defend him in a congressional ethics probe. A half-dozen related complaints followed as Deal won the 2010 Republican primary and general election for governor.

When Deal’s attorneys ignored her request that summer for campaign documents, Kalberman said, she notified the commission and prepared subpoenas. But once Deal became governor and the draft subpoenas were ready for review, she said, commission Chairman Patrick Millsaps refused to sign them.

Millsaps says he doesn’t recall briefings on the Deal probe and denies being asked to sign subpoenas. “That’s something I would remember,” he said.

Millsaps, a Republican whom Deal had just reappointed, “seemed uneasy” when she briefed him about the Deal case, Kalberman later told the state inspector general’s office. Deputy director Sherry Streicker said she too met resistance from Commissioner Kevin Abernethy who, after a similar briefing, “turned white and said he didn’t want any part of this.”

Abernethy, now the commission’s chairman, declined to comment. He has previously denied Streicker’s account.

Millsaps and Kalberman agree that he emailed her in May 2011 with his concern that the commission might run out of money before the year ended.

“Before we jump into ANY grand campaign, I think we need to look at this more closely,” he wrote.

When the two met to discuss the matter in June, the chairman told her commissioners planned to cut her pay by 30 percent and eliminate Streicker’s position altogether.

Kalberman walked out of the meeting. While she insists she did not quit, Millsaps emailed her the next day to accept her resignation.

A few days later, Deal’s executive counsel called Kalberman to suggest another state job might be available — a gesture Kalberman later described as an effort to “keep me quiet.” Deal’s lawyer said he simply wanted to help identify other opportunities.

Cutbacks in the commission’s spending — enacted a week later — eliminated Streicker’s slot and trimmed the director’s pay, potentially saving $120,000 a year in salaries. Much of the projected savings evaporated, though, with the hiring of a staff attorney to perform many of Streicker’s duties and a contract attorney to draft advisory opinions. Streicker, who was still looking for work, said she applied but couldn’t even get a job interview.

Kalberman and Streicker have both filed suit, contending the budget crisis was fabricated to force them out and disrupt the Deal investigation.

Millsaps flatly denies that allegation. The Georgia inspector general’s office, which reports to Deal, conducted a preliminary inquiry and dismissed a charge last November that the governor orchestrated the terminations.

Millsaps contends political pressure on the commission is rare because the targets of ethics complaints fear repercussions if they try to intercede.

“Once they put you on the Ethics Commission, nobody wants to talk to you,” he said. “It really is more isolating than anything else.”

An uncertain future

Today, the commission’s funding has somewhat stabilized. Lawmakers added $200,000 to its $1 million budget for more staff and for computer upgrades designed to allow the online filing system to handle more traffic.

But the years of internal turmoil — combined with an increasing workload and a staff shrunk from 31 employees in 2006 to just 11 — have taken their toll.

The commission found violations in 78 cases over the course of 2008 and 2009 but just 28 in the two-and-a-half years since then, based on analysis of orders posted on the commission’s website. In that period, the average fine fell from more than $2,900 to less than $700.

The agency remains unable to meet one of its statutory mandates — checking all campaign disclosures to be sure they’re filled out properly. Budget-writers this year funded a second auditor, but the commission plans instead to hire support staff to help manage the increased workload. With one auditor, the commission expects to review fewer than one in 10 filings.

Lawmakers continue to resist calls to restore the panel’s rule-making authority — with one exception. Just hours before lawmakers adjourned for 2012, a proposal to let the commission waive late fees was inserted into an unrelated bill on fishing licenses.

A second provision would have allowed the agency to seal closed cases if no significant violations had been proven. That measure sailed through the Senate with no discussion and nearly passed the House until detractors questioned its intent. House Ethics Chairman Joe Wilkinson, who defended his proposal as a way to protect candidates from “frivolous” complaints, says he’ll try again next year as part of a larger proposal to restore full rule-making authority.

Several months after the legislative flap, in July, the commission closed the  investigation into Deal’s campaign money that had ignited so much turmoil — dismissing two complaints and negotiating settlements in three others. The governor paid $3,350 in fees and acknowledged minor “technical defects,” a classification that could allow sealing of those files if Wilkinson’s proposal passes in 2013.

Ethics reform seems likely to be a major issue when legislators reconvene in January.

Advocacy groups made a proposed $100 cap on lobbyists’ gifts to lawmakers a signature issue in this year’s legislative races. In non-binding ballot questions, voters from both major parties overwhelmingly backed a gift cap in July.

House Speaker David Ralston upped the ante recently by proposing a ban on all lobbyist gifts. He’s also suggested giving the ethics commission more money and autonomy “so that they are truly independent.” No details have been released on how that might be accomplished.

Advocates such as Sen. Josh McKoon, R-Columbus, working with activists ranging from Common Cause to local Tea Parties, are putting together their own ethics agenda. That may well include more transparency for political action committees and broader revolving-door restrictions on ex-state officials who want to become lobbyists.

Even more ambitiously, some talk about applying sunshine laws to the Legislature for the first time.

Whether activists’ ideas will be considered remains an open question. In 2010, House leaders introduced a bill to rename the commission, hike fines, ramp up lobbyist oversight and require thousands of local candidates to file disclosures directly to the commission. A bipartisan coalition of legislators had already signed on to their own ethics reform bill but couldn’t get a hearing, nor could they amend the leadership’s bill, effectively shutting them out of the discussion.

Johnson, the former Senate majority leader, believes the time has come for Georgia to have an independent, well-funded enforcer of campaign finance laws. The trick, he says, will be choosing the enforcers and insuring their impartiality.

“Do you pick them out of the phone book?” he asked. “Do judges do it? Judges have been political appointments.

“Somebody always has a political agenda. …. You still have to figure out how to take the politics out of politics.”

Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal sits down to sign a bill at the State Capitol in Atlanta, May 2012. Jim Walls http://www.publicintegrity.org/authors/jim-walls

Daily Disclosure: NRA goes after Democrats in contested Senate races

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Until recently, the National Rifle Association’s primary involvement in the 2012 election has been limited to renting booths at state fairs and circulating flyers and bumper stickers, plus the occasional low-budget TV or radio buy.

But thanks to the NRA Institute for Legislative Action, the powerful gun rights group has stepped up its game. A $420,000 ad buy last week followed by a $358,000 buy reported Tuesday shows the NRA is ready to invest in more than just convincing fair- and rodeo-goers to vote against President Barack Obama.

The NRA Institute for Legislative Action’s new ads, released Monday, attack the records of Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla., and former Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine, who are both running for U.S. Senate — and Federal Election Commission filings indicate Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, is the next target.

Bill Nelson Needs to Go” notes the Florida senator’s approval of Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor, who said in a 2004 ruling that gun ownership is “not a fundamental right.”

“You can’t be a pro-gun senator when you back anti-gun judges,” the ad says.

Stand for Freedom, Stand against Tim Kaine” says that Kaine received a grade of “F” from the NRA for making gun control part of the Democratic National Committee’s agenda when he was chairman.

The NRA Institute for Legislative Action is the lobbying arm of the NRA, according to its website. The institute was established in 1975 both to pursue the group’s legislative agenda and to educate the public.

The organization is a nonprofit and does not reveal its donors. However, the Center for Responsive Politics discovered that conservative nonprofit Crossroads GPS, founded by Republican operatives Karl Rove and Ed Gillespie, contributed $600,000.

Because Crossroads GPS is itself a nonprofit, the source of the donation is unknown. The Institute operates primarily on contributions, not membership dues, according to its brochure.

The group is not to be confused with the NRA Political Victory Fund, a traditional political action committee operated by the Institute. The PAC has been making the more modest campaign expenditures. Unlike the Institute, the Political Victory Fund is subject to contribution limits.

The maximum allowable contribution to the PAC is $5,000. The NRA’s PAC has taken in some $11.1 million in the 2012 election cycle and spent $5 million, according to FEC records.

In other outside spending news:

  • Americans for Prosperity, another conservative nonprofit, released its second ad in two weeks critical of Rep. Joe Donnelly, the Democrat running for U.S. Senate in Indiana. “Stop Spending Away Our Future,” released Tuesday, follows “Washington-Style Reform,” released last week. According to a press release, the pair of ads is running for two weeks at a cost of $700,000. Donnelly faces tea party candidate Richard Mourdock, who ousted longtime Sen. Richard Lugar in the state’s first competitive GOP primary in decades.
  • Americans for Prosperity also reported spending $2.5 million on Web, radio and TV placement for its anti- Obama ads “Tick Tock” (posted as “A One Term Proposition”) and “New Ideas,” which were released earlier this month.
  • A super PAC opposing Nebraska state Sen. Deb Fischer, the Republican candidate for U.S. Senate from the state, reported spending $215,000 on TV and radio advertising. End the Gridlock has raised a total $252,000, but only 10 percent of that has come from within Nebraska. The super PAC’s biggest contributor is billionaire film producer Sidney Kimmel, who gave $100,000.
  • The Susan B. Anthony List Inc., an anti-abortion nonprofit, reported spending $165,000 on TV ads opposing Obama. Tuesday the group released an ad critical of then-Illinois state Sen. Obama’s votes on “born alive” bills, the Daily Disclosure reported.
  • The Susan B. Anthony List Inc. also reported five independent expenditures for… parking tickets? According to the FEC reports, the group paid $100 for tickets related to its opposition of Democratic U.S. Senate candidates Rep. Tammy Baldwin in Wisconsin, Tim Kaine in Virginia, Sen. Sherrod Brown in Ohio, U.S. House candidate Christie Vilsack in Iowa and the president.
  • The union American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees released an online ad called “Wisconsin Workers Say ‘We’re More Than Just Paul Ryan and Scott Walker.’” The ad opposes Rep. Paul Ryan, the running mate of GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney.
  • New super PACs: America Forever in Chatham, N.J.
Illinois gun owners and supporters fill out NRA applications while participating in an Illinois Gun Owners Lobby Day convention. Rachael Marcus http://www.publicintegrity.org/authors/rachael-marcus

GOP platform at odds with public on defense spending

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In May, the Center for Public Integrity and the Stimson Center unveiled the results of a major poll on defense spending. Our poll found wide consensus among the public and across party lines that the defense budget could use some trimming — around three-quarters of those polled thought there should be cuts for air power, ground forces, and naval forces, and over eighty percent said there is “a lot of waste” in the defense budget. In fact, respondents preferred far deeper cuts than those suggested by either the Obama administration or the Republicans.

During the conventions, we decided to take a look at what the party platforms say, and how that measures up to public opinion. First up: the GOP and presidential nominee Mitt Romney.

Romney has made it clear that he intends to expand defense spending if elected in November, having already called for spending a minimum of four percent of the GDP on national defense.

But Tuesday afternoon, as Romney was being officially nominated at the Republican National Convention, his party unveiled the official GOP platform for 2012. Included in the party platform was a thirteen-page section on “American Exceptionalism,” laying out the Republican view of defense and the future of the military.

While the document is light on specifics and heavy on rhetoric, there are some clues for what would be the Romney administration’s national security priorities. And in some very expensive cases, they don’t match up with public sentiment.

For example, the platform includes a call to strengthen American’s nuclear arsenal. “We recognize that the gravest terror threat we face – a nuclear attack made possible by nuclear proliferation – requires a comprehensive strategy for reducing the world’s nuclear stockpiles and preventing the spread of those armaments,” reads the platform.  “But the U.S. can lead that effort only if it maintains an effective strategic arsenal at a level sufficient to fulfill its deterrent purposes, a notable failure of the current Administration.”

This line echoes calls from prominent Republican Congressmen who wrote a letter in February calling proposed cuts by the Obama administration a “deep concern.” At the time, the Center reported how campaign finance records show that since 2009 the signers received $1.12 million from the employees and political action committees of the four large defense contractors with a major stake in the nuclear weapons industry. (Spokespeople for House members and companies alike deny there has been any quid pro- quo.)

But the public would prefer that the nuclear arsenal be reduced, not expanded. In fact, respondents on average favored at least a 27 percent cut in spending on nuclear arms — the largest proportional cut of any in the survey. Overall, two-thirds of those polled — 78 percent of Democrats, 64 percent of Republicans, and 57 percent of independents — expressed a desire to cut spending on nuclear arms.

In another part of their platform, the GOP claims the Obama administration has “systematically undermined America’s missile defense” and calls for a recommitment to America’s missile shield.  However, a pair of recent studies by the Government Accountability Office have called into question the costs and effectiveness of the missile defense program. In one case, as the Center has previously noted, a missile defense system has been cancelled for inefficiency but is still set to cash in on $250 million in taxpayer dollars.

According to the Center’s poll, the public favors cutting 14 percent of missile defense spending. At the same time, 74 percent of those polled believe that pursuing missile defense is important for the country’s national security, which means that Americans want a missile shield- just one that costs less money.

While discussing foreign aid, the GOP insists on relying more on private sector work than government-run programs that are a “proven breeding ground for corruption and mismanagement by foreign kleptocrats.” Corruption and waste in Afghanistan and Iraq is a long-standing problem that has haunted both the Bush and Obama administrations. In July, the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction told the Center he believes  $6 billion to $8 billion of taxpayer money has been lost to waste and abuse in Saddam Hussein’s former fiefdom; later that month the IG for Afghanistan reconstruction reported to Congress that millions of lost funds have been sunk into construction projects.

While the Center’s poll did not specifically ask about foreign aid, respondents were very clear about their views on Afghanistan: it’s time to get out. 85 percent of respondents expressing support for a statement that said in part, “it is time for the Afghan people to manage their own country and for us to bring our troops home.” A majority of respondents backed an immediate cut, on average, of $38 billion in the war’s existing $88 billion budget, or around 43 percent.

The platform also delves into social issues, calling for an enforcement of the “Defense of Marriage Act in the Armed Forces,” a reference to President Obama’s support for gay marriage. The GOP also pledged that “a Republican Administration will return the advocacy of religious liberty to a central place in our diplomacy” while calling for increased security against human traffickers on the border.

At the very end of the platform is a paragraph about Iran. ”A continuation of [the Obama Administration’s] failed engagement policy with Iran will lead to nuclear cascade,” warns the GOP. “American must lead the effort to prevent Iran from building and possessing nuclear weapons capability.”

The need to contain Iran, a major focus among the “Neoconservative” wing of the Republican party, has also driven the U.S. to increase arms sales to friendly Middle Eastern countries, most notably to Saudi Arabia, which last year purchased $33 billion in arms from America.

And, of course, not all Republicans are locked in with their party on military spending. In recent weeks some noted Republicans have begun calling for a Romney presidency to consider cuts to military spending as a necessity facing the country.

Stay tuned next week when we take a look at the Democratic party platform.

 Mitt Romney speaks at the American Legion National Convention, Wednesday, Aug. 29, 2012, in Indianapolis. Aaron Mehta http://www.publicintegrity.org/authors/aaron-mehta

Daily Disclosure: DCCC runs ads in heartland House districts

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New ads in Illinois and Wisconsin mark what the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee says is its first foray into those states with independent television advertising, Federal Election Commission reports show.

Three ads will air in congressional districts in those states aiming to convince undecided voters to elect Democrats to the U.S. House of Representatives.

In Illinois’ newly created 13th District, “Enough Is Enough” attacks Rodney Davis, the GOP nominee for U.S. House. The ad highlights Davis’ appearance on the “clout list” of disgraced former Gov. George Ryan, who is in jail on corruption charges.

Davis, an aide to U.S. Rep. John Shimkus, R-Ill., faces physician David Gill, the Democrat, in the fall.

In Illinois’ 12th District, the DCCC released “Protecting the Middle Class,” supporting Gen. Bill Enyart. A Democrat, Enyart was the commander of the Illinois National Guard.

Enyart faces Republican Jason Plummer in the bid to win the seat of retiring Democratic Rep. Jerry Costello in what is expected to be a competitive race.

The DCCC also released an ad attacking Rep. Sean Duffy, R-Wis., who is running for re-election in Wisconsin’s 7th District. Duffy rose to fame as a star on MTV’s “Real World” in 1997, later became a sports commentator for ESPN and then served as a Wisconsin district attorney.

Duffy faces Democratic state Sen. Julie Lassa in November. According to The New York Times, the district is populist-leaning, but recent redistricting will give Duffy an edge, The Hill reported.

In a fourth ad called “Broken Promises,” the DCCC attacks a handful of House Republicans for their “vote(s) to end Medicare.” It is unclear where the ad will air, but it features Republican Reps. Dan Benishek of Michigan, Scott Tipton of Colorado, Pat Meehan of Pennsylvania, Steve Southerland of Florida, Renee Ellmers of North Carolina, Joe Heck of Nevada and Speaker of the House John Boehner, R-Ohio.

According to the Center for Responsive Politics, the DCCC has spent about $3.3 million on independent expenditures, spent mostly on advertising.

The DCCC brought in $8.2 million in July, finishing the month with $36.2 million in the bank, according to its most recent monthly filing with the FEC. The National Republican Congressional Committee brought in $11.7 million in July and finished the month with $48.9 million on hand, according to its FEC report.

Candidate committees dominate the top donors list of the DCCC, including those of Reps. Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif. ($870,000), Steny Hoyer, D-Md. ($870,000) and John Larson, D-Conn. ($455,000), according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

In other outside spending news:

  • Priorities USA Action, a super PAC supporting President Barack Obama, reported spending $171,000 on radio ads opposing GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney.
  • Majority PAC, a super PAC supporting Democrats running for U.S. Senate, reported buying ads worth $61,000 opposing Rep. Connie Mack of Florida, the GOP candidate for U.S. Senate in the state. Mack is trying to unseat popular Democratic Sen. Bill Nelson.
  • The Conservative Majority Fund, an independent spending group that has made voter identification laws and Obama’s birth certificate its focus, reported spending more than $70,000 on nationwide telephone calls to voters opposing Obama, FEC reports show. The group has spent a total of $1.3 million on calls opposing Obama, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.
  • New super PAC: Ka Kaw Super PAC in New Berlin, Wis.
The DCCC links GOP House nominee Rodney Davis to disgraced former Illinois Gov. George Ryan. Rachael Marcus http://www.publicintegrity.org/authors/rachael-marcus
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