October 18, 2006

K Street Veering Left

For all the Republican effort in the last decade to append Washington's corporate lobbying community to the GOP coalition, K Street's main project, as it were, is, was, and always will be to deliver for clients and companies. To ensure favorable legislation -- or to block unhelpful measures -- these lobbyists need to be able to access the influential. That is done, among other ways, through campaign contributions. While the business community is more inclined to support Republicans on both philosophical and personal grounds, their professional motivation trumps all.

This is why, as a review of their latest campaign finance filings reveals, House Min Leader Nancy Pelosi and Min Whip Steny Hoyer will both break their all-time fundraising records this cycle, and will do so thanks in no small part to PAC contributions. Both Pelosi and Hoyer have already raised more PAC dollars through the end of September than they did for the entire campaign in 2004, when both held the same leadership positions they do now.

According to PoliticalMoneyLine, nearly $940K of Pelosi's $1.46M raised so far this cycle comes from PAC contributions. Of the $940K, over half comes from business interests or law firms and lobbying shops. While a third is from organized labor, Pelosi's corporate contributions have spiked compared to 2004. Just in the third quarter of this year, her donors included such GOP-friendly groups as the American Bankers Assoc, the American Hospital Assoc, Credit Suisse, the Financial Services Roundtable, the Mortgage Bankers Assoc, Honeywell Corp, Accenture, Genworth, Lockheed Martin and even the Nat'l Beer Wholesalers.
[JONATHAN MARTIN]


Some of these heavyweights gave to Pelosi in 2004, but with a full month of contributions yet accounted for, many have already exceeded their past donations. The Bankers gave Pelosi $6K in '04; they've already given $7.5K. The Financial Services Roundtable? They donated $2K for the whole '04 cycle, but had given $5K through last month. The Mortgage Bankers offered a token $1K in January of 2003. Last month, they maxed out to $10K. And how about the Beer Wholesalers, perennially one of the most loyal GOP allies? Maxed out to Pelosi -- in July.

Hoyer, the chief K St liaision for House Democrats, has already raised nearly $2.1M so far this cycle, the most ever in his 24 years in Congress. Of that, almost $1.5M comes from PACs. Though widely viewed as more friendly to business interests than his rival from California, Hoyer has also has seen his corporate contributions soar from Republican-leaning sources. The National Retail Federation, Capital One, Sallie Mae, and Occidental Petroleum have all stepped up their giving from 2004 to the man who could be the next Maj Leader of the House.

In short, bets are being hedged. Groups that could be impacted by the Democrats' top priorities in January want to be sure they can get their calls returned. Whether it be the minimum wage (the Retail Federation), student loan interest rates (Sallie Mae) or lobbying reform (all of the above), Pelosi has made clear that her caucus would waste no time pushing through their agenda. And when that happens, these interests want to have the chance to make their case to somebody in leadership.

Asked about the influx of K St dollars to the would-be leaders of a Democratic-controlled House, Pelosi spokesman Brendan Daly said it indicated "support for our agenda and the political reality that we have a chance to win." Pointing to their "6 for '06" plan released before the summer recess, Daly said such donors "understand our agenda" and that is the agenda they can expect should Democrats take the majority.

Carl Forti, the NRCC's top spokesman, declined to comment on the trend.


Posted at 05:12 PM


Comments


Ah -- for the honest and brutal days of Charlie Wilson (D-Lufkin: "If you can't drink the lobbyist whiskey, take the lobbyist money, sleep with the lobbyist women and then go onto the floor and vote against 'em, you shouldn't be in congress."

take the K St. lucre, but don't waste a farthing on bear grease when it comes time to put it to the whole 'damn tribe.

Texas Traveler | 10.19.06 07:59 AM


aewdsa saf wefrasf adsf sdaf

Jessica | 01.29.08 08:33 AM


Sorry, but what is kimerikas?

Jane.

sweeta-qg | 03.27.08 02:00 AM


Sorry, but what is kimerikas?

Jane.

sweeta-qg | 03.27.08 02:00 AM


Sorry, but what is kimerikas?

Jane.

sweeta-qg | 03.27.08 02:00 AM

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