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Saturday, April 13, 2019

SLUDGE and MAPLIGHT are two info outlets previously unknown at Crabgrass. Each keeps a focus on money in politics, so that each is worth a bookmark.

There is one joint item of the two outlets, Sludge here, Maplight here, each ending with further reading suggestions at page bottom, where each goes a separate way. The joint item, is excerpted at length, not to encourage readers to feel no need to seek out the originals, but for opposite purpose, to show value in such a pursuit of original web content on a key political stumbling point for progressive advances (and of all things, the DCCC showing up in reporting, it being already noted as a stumbling point for reform and progress). Excerpting is from the item as published on Maplight, with the belief that text and links are identical in each - links below from the original - links being so prevalent that they also are excerpted; see original for full set:

Corporate Lobbyists Providing More Bundled Donations to Dem Congressional Committee ---- by Andrew Perez and Alex Kotch -- April 03, 2019

Corporate lobbyists are raising an increasing amount of money for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) at a time when the House Democrats’ campaign arm is taking fire from the left for its effort to freeze out primary challengers.

Progressives have roundly criticized the DCCC for its plan to not conduct business with political vendors that work for candidates who plan to challenge incumbent Democrats. Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., said the new policy could have prevented him from winning his congressional seat. Freshman Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., said the DCCC’s vendor policy would empower lobbyists because “voters will have one less avenue to pursue change.”

The DCCC raised nearly $19 million in the first two months of this year, more money than it had raised by this point last election cycle, and the committee is relying more heavily on corporate lobbyists to collect checks. Lobbyists whose clients include health care, oil, gas, and coal interests, raised almost $440,000 for the DCCC in January and February, Federal Election Commission records show. Many of their clients oppose progressive priorities like a “Medicare for All” health-care system or a Green New Deal to mitigate climate change.

“I do not take money from corporations, PACs, or lobbyists,” Khanna said in an email on Tuesday. “The DCCC should not, either.”

A DCCC spokesperson did not respond to questions from MapLight and Sludge, nor did any of the committee’s lobbyist bundlers.

In February 2016, the Democratic National Committee (DNC) quietly reversed an Obama-era ban on contributions from federal lobbyists and political action committees. Lobbyists raised roughly $100,000 for the DCCC in 2015-16, before raising close to $1.9 million for the committee during the 2018 election cycle. This year, led by centrist Democratic Rep. Cheri Bustos of Illinois, the DCCC has already received almost as much money via donations bundled by corporate lobbyists than in all of 2017.

Fighting Single-Payer

While most of the Democratic presidential primary candidates support Medicare for All, and 108 House Democrats have signed on to single-payer legislation, the party’s congressional leaders have resisted calls for sweeping changes to the nation’s health-care system. They have instead pushed for improvements to the Affordable Care Act — the 2010 health-care law — and lower drug prices. In February, the Intercept reported that a top aide to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., had detailed party leaders’ objections to Medicare for All in a meeting with health insurance executives.

The Partnership for America’s Health Care Future, a coalition of health-care companies and trade organizations opposed to Medicare for All, has sent frequent emails highlighting critical comments made by Pelosi and Bustos. On Monday, they distributed a memo noting that Bustos recently said the “price tag for Medicare for all is a little scary,” while Pelosi asked, “How’s it gonna be paid for?"

Suggested earlier, Pelosi might need to be primaried. However she shows as a realist in light of Mitch McConnell and his Senate majority, and in light of who presently holds and exercises executive power of a veto.


That said, it almost goes without saying, Bustos REALLY, REALLY, REALLY needs to be primaried, post haste and with gusto. Undercut the undercutters. If feasible, at least try. Eventually they learn.

(Unfortunately they adapt. Inserting Tom Perez at DNC being a cardinal example. And they've rigged the system in their favor by spending a little of their holdings to gain a lot. We're Sisyphus. Accept that. Keep pushing.)

About a week prior to the co-publishing, The Intercept noted extreme progressive caucus dissatisfaction with Bustos/DCCC less over big money sucking-up than with the anti-reform move to freeze out challenges to incumbency (regardless of incumbent service to money or imbecility).

NOTE: If you read none of the co-published links other than this one, do read it. (Wendell Primus is a senior Pelosi aide pushing for now to not take on health insurance interests but to divide/conquer by trying to entice them, on behalf of Pelosi, to join in a general effort aimed at reform of drug pricing and practices; i.e., divide Big Pharma and Big Health Insurance, leaving the one alone if joining in disciplining the other. Good luck Wendell, they have joinder and know it.) Resuming excerpting:

As Democratic House leaders undermine the left’s push for universal health care, lobbyists representing major health insurance and pharmaceutical companies have been flooding the DCCC with cash. All six corporate lobbyists who have bundled donations for the DCCC this year represent at least one health-care business or trade organization.

Vic Fazio, a former California Democratic congressman and senior advisor at Akin Gump, and John Michael Gonzalez of Peck Madigan Jones have lobbied for Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA), the nation’s largest pharmaceutical trade association. Fazio has also lobbied for Gilead Sciences, a company that has earned billions of dollars from sales of a drug based on government research to prevent HIV infection. Fazio has raised $73,500 for the DCCC this year; Gonzalez has bundled $30,500.

[... comparable naming names and actions with linking omitted from excerpt; see original]

Promoting Fossil Fuel Interests

Democrats are also divided over the best approach to mitigate climate change. Although most progressives support Ocasio-Cortez’s Green New Deal plan, others favor less ambitious measures such as a carbon tax or carbon-capture technology.

The DCCC’s lobbyist bundlers represent major fossil fuel interests. Elmendorf, of Subject Matter, has lobbied for oil company BP America and General Electric, which operates an oil and gas division. Thomas, of Mehlman Castagnetti, has lobbied for the Edison Electric Institute, a trade organization for utility companies, as well as the oil company Chevron. Podesta has lobbied on natural gas pipelines for NextEra Energy, which is the second-largest American producer of electric power from natural gas and has billions of dollars invested in shale gas production and pipelines. Gonzalez recently lobbied Congress on behalf of Entergy, an electric utility that uses coal and natural gas to produce power.

While the DCCC is trying to keep its vendors from aiding primary challengers, there has been no such push to prevent its consultants from advising corporate clients, whose goals are often at odds with much of the Democratic Party. Global Strategy Group, which conducted polls for the DCCC last cycle, has worked with the health insurance lobby AHIP. The firm was also a consultant for the coalition that successfully defeated a single-payer ballot measure in Colorado in 2016.

SKDKnickerbocker, a media firm that’s worked for the DCCC, has provided public affairs support for controversial corporate mergers like the one between AT&T and Time Warner. Perkins Coie, a law firm that works with the DCCC and other major Democratic Party political groups, has counseled unnamed financial institutions.

Again, some item links were omitted. The DCCC being satisfied with its blessed consultants raising havoc aside from any primary challenges adds focus to what DCCC is, that being dreadful and counter-progressive. Do not give DCCC any small donor money unless you are in one of those special interest camps. If a progressive, shun DCCC as if a plague.

In closing, the co-published item seems well researched, and rich in supporting links to flesh out the story in ways encouraging trust. Readers are urged to follow-up, since informed voters are better voters; and we need help against Trump voters, who revel in being uninformed but strongly biased, as well as stupid.