Sunlight Foundation

Rove Announces Crossroads Fundraising Target

According to the Wall Street Journal:

Two conservative groups founded last year with the help of Republicans Karl Rove and Ed Gillespie have set a goal of raising $120 million in the effort to defeat President Barack Obama, win a GOP majority in the Senate and protect the party's grip on the House in the 2012 election.

...

If the conservative groups meet the target disclosed to The Wall Street Journal, they would establish their organizations—American Crossroads and Crossroads GPS—as possibly the largest force in the 2012 campaign, aside from the presidential candidates themselves and the political parties.

American Crossroads and its sister group helped conservative groups reach parity in the 2010 elections with labor unions and other Democratic-leaning groups that for years had led in campaign fund raising.

When Messrs. Rove and Gillespie helped launch the groups last year, they hoped to raise $52 million. They exceeded their goal by raising $71 million in the 29 weeks between opening their doors until the election. That made them the second-largest source of campaign spending other than candidates and political parties.

Hydra of independent groups fuels Republican side

Outside groups aligned with Republicans are dominating spending on independent expenditures in the run-up to the 2010 midterm elections. As of October 20, these groups have spent more than $99 million, more than twice as much as the party committees tasked with electing Republicans to the House of Representatives and the Senate, to both support Republican candidates and oppose Democratic candidates.

These non-party groups are supplanting the traditional role of party committees on the Republican side. Nearly all of the money spent on independent expenditures to support Republicans or oppose Democrats comes from groups that exclusively spend money to aid Republicans.

Four of the top five non-party spenders are supported and run by a series of political operatives who, in effect, make up the Republican Party in exile. American Crossroads, Crossroads GPS, The 60-Plus Association and Americans for Job Security are linked together by their connections to the power structure that won elections for the Republican Party from the 1990s to the end of the George W. Bush presidency. So far, these four organizations have spent $35.97 million attacking Democrats and praising Republicans.

By contrast, the official G.O.P. congressional committees -- the National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) and the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) -- have spent a little less than $49 million on independent expenditures.

With the Republican National Committee (RNC) in shambles and the campaign committees hampered by contribution limits and disclosure rules, these outside groups have emerged as a replacement for the traditional party structure and they are largely being funded by a shadow establishment that operates in the dark without disclosure rules that have been ostensibly waived by the Supreme Court. There is no similar equivalent on the Democratic side.

The largest and highest spending of these groups is the two-headed organization comprised of American Crossroads, organized as a 527 and a Super PAC, and Crossroads GPS, organized as a 501(c)4 non-profit. These two organizations--both share the same PO Box number--are made up of the Republican Party in exile.

While Crossroads GPS, The 60-Plus Association and Americans for Job Security do not disclose their donors, American Crossroads is a so-called section 527 organization--named after the part of the tax code under which it's organized--and has to disclose its donors to the Internal Revenue Service. It also reports some of these contributions to the Federal Election Commission.

The reports are filed monthly and after yesterday's released disclosure American Crossroads is showing contributions exceeding $22 million. So far, the group has spent more than $16 million on independent expenditures in 24 different races.

The majority of this money has come from three donors and two corporations. Texas homebuilder Bob Perry has provided $7 million to American Crossroads. In 2004, Perry was a major funder of the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth, a 527 group that ran ads assailing the Vietnam record of presidential candidate John Kerry. Perry also contributed millions to the Economic Freedom Fund, another 527 group that operated during the 2006 election cycle.

The other donors include Robert Rowling, a Bush Pioneer, and his company TRT Holding, which have contributed a combined amount exceeding $2 million. Alliance Resource Group, a company with large coal holdings, has contributed $2 million. The owner of Public Storage, Wayne Hughes, contributed $1 million.

Former White House Political Director Karl Rove and former Republican National Committee chairman Ed Gillespie are both affiliated with the Crossroads groups and are known to help raise money and provide strategy. Rove and Gillespie are perhaps the most well-known high-level Republican operatives involved in the Crossroads family, but they are not the only ones.

President Steven Law previously worked as deputy secretary of Labor in the George W. Bush administration and was the executive director of the NRSC in 2000. Former Republican National Committee chairman Mike Duncan is the chairman of the board of American Crossroads. Jo Ann Davidson, director of American Crossroads, was previously the co-chair of the Republican National Committee. Jim Dyke worked at the Department of Commerce under George W. Bush and is now secretary at American Crossroads.

The political director of American Crossroads is Carl Forti, a veteran operative specializing in running independent expenditure campaigns. Forti ran an $80 million operation at the NRCC in 2006. The Crossroads family that Forti runs has spent $26 million on independent expenditures so far this cycle.

Forti also runs the communications strategy firm Black Rock Group with Michael Dubke. Dubke also operates the organization Crossroads Media, which is not directly associated with the Crossroads family. Crossroads Media, however, is the media company for the Crossroads family and has received $20.89 million from American Crossroads and Crossroads GPS for media and advertising services.

Dubke is also connected to another big independent expenditure operator on the Republican side, Americans for Job Security. Dubke helped found Americans for Job Security and served as executive director and then president from 1997 to 2007.

Americans for Job Security operates out of the same office as Crossroads Media and the Black Rock Group and is currently run by Stephen DeMaura, the 25-year old former executive director of the New Hampshire Republican Party. DeMaura is the only employee of the group. Crossroads Media has received $2.95 million from Americans for Job Security for media services in the 2010 midterms. This group has spent $4.39 million on independent expenditures so far this election.

Forti, the political director for the Crossroads family, also handles the PR and media profile of The 60-Plus Association. The 60-Plus Association was founded in 1992 as a conservative counter to a perceived liberal bias in the group senior citizen advocacy group AARP. So far, The 60-Plus Association has spent more than $5 million on independent expenditures.

Daily Disclosures

A roundup of what we're noticing in the Reporting Group as we dig into government data and disclosures:

Another fat Tuesday: American Crossroads and Crossroads GPS reported spending a combined $3,749,741 on several senate races yesterday -- the highest day of spending by the two groups so far (Oct. 5 is a close second, with $3,698,949). Together, the groups have spent about $17.5 million this cycle. Both are advised by Karl Rove; Crossroads GPS doesn't disclose its donors. American Crossroads does.

Entering the fray: Majority Action PAC, which filed with the Federal Election Committee as a Super PAC on Aug. 17, 2010, made its first independent expenditure, paying for "mail production & postage" aimed at defeating third party candidate Joe Aden, who points out on his website that the FEC "allows us to spend and/or collect $5,000 before filing forms." Majority Action PAC is also opposing Scott Tipton, the Republican candidate in Colorado's third congressional district. The organization lists Judith Zamore as treasurer and custodian of records; Zamore's linkedin profile is here.

Neck and neck: After reporting media buys in a half dozen races (MD-1, NY-20, IL-10, IA-3, HI-1, FL-25 and IA-2), the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee ($21,753,309) is less than $1 million behind the National Republican Congressional Committee ($22,362,981) in independent expenditures.

Be sure to check out our Follow the Unlimited Money tool--updated hourly!--to get all the latest info on outside groups.

School lobby: University of Southern California hires lobbying firm American Defense International; USC is interested in money appropriated for installation protection and research into post traumatic stress disorder and traumatic brain injury.

Romney restoration? Yesterday, we noted the formation of a 527 calling itself DraftPalin4President. What caught our eye about the filing was that the group, headquartered in Tucson, Ariz., was paying fees to the Washington office of law and lobbying firm Akin Gump. Today we came across a new Super PAC filing for a group called Restore Our Future PAC. The filing lists Chris R. Spies as its treasurer and its address as that of the Washington, D.C. office of law firm Clark Hill. Spies' bio notes that he served as "Chief Financial Officer and Counsel for Governor Mitt Romney’s Presidential campaign." He managed the $105 million that Romney raised, including FEC compliance. Spies also worked for the Republican Governors Association, a 527 organization. To date, Restore Our Future has yet to make any independent expenditures.

Super PACs: Track (and read all about) them on the Reporting Group site

The Washington Post weighs in on the growth of "Super Pacs," organizations that can take unlimited funds from any source and spend them to influence elections. You can find a complete list of these Super PACs, technically called independent expenditure committees by the Federal Election Commission, here.

My colleague Ryan Sibley has followed them since one Super PAC, the League of Conservation Voters Victory Fund, spent $50,000 to run phone banks to help Sen. Michael Bennet, D-Colo., stave off a primary challenge. Super PACs also intervened in Florida elections and have been set up by everyone from Joe the Plumber to Karl Rove.

Use the Reporting Group's new tool, Follow the Unlimited Money to track all independent expenditures by traditional party committees, labor unions that have taken advantage of Citizens United to spend unlimited sums straight from their coffers to influence elections, and the new Super PACs.

Mid-Morning News:

  • Josh Marshall looks into how Shirlington Limousines came to be connected to alleged-briber Brent Wilkes. The "missing link" appears to be former Rep. Bill Lowery (R-CA), who is now a lobbyist with close ties to Appropriations chairman Jerry Lewis (R-CA).
  • Following the money doesn't have to be limited to politics and the Episcopal Diocese of Washington has shown how to follow the money in the religious arena.
  • Captain Ed is disheartened by the failure of Coburn's amendments to strip pork from the emergency supplemental. When talking about the Northrop Grumman earmark he asks the question that we all have in our head when thinking this, "Why does a corporation that made $2.4 billion in profit need another $200 million from American taxpayers to cover a loss they've absorbed in that same year?" Amen.
  • citizen dc at Daily Kos writes about Karl Rove's "unexplained personal wealth". It is quite strange that a man who doesn't make so much money happens to own million dollar homes.
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Vanity Fair Exclusive Abramoff Interview:

In an exclusive interview with Vanity Fair (to be published next week) ex-lobbyist and Republican heavyweight Jack Abramoff dishes on his GOP friends who have “airbrushed” him out of the Congress, the Party, and the White House. GOP Party chairman Ken Mehlmen, “exchanged e-mail with Abramoff, did him political favors (such as blocking Clinton administration alumnus Allen Stayman from keeping a State Department job), had Sabbath dinner at his house, and offered to pick up his tab at Signatures.” Karl Rove sat next to Abramoff for the NCAA Tournament games at the MCI Center and House Majority Leader John Boehner was a regular at Abramoff’s restaurant Signatures. Jack Abramoff on Newt Gingrich: “I have more pictures of him than I have of my wife!” President Bush once asked Abramoff, “What are you benching, buff guy?” Conrad Burns, “Every appropriation we wanted [from Burns’s committee] we got. … Our staffs were as close as they could be. They practically used Signatures as their cafeteria. I mean, it’s a little difficult for him to run from that record.”

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Malaysian Prime Minister Paid Abramoff $1.2 Million:

Ex-lobbyist Jack Abramoff was paid $1.2 million by the former Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohammed to set up a meeting with President Bush, according to the Associated Press. Mahathir was persuaded by the conservative Heritage Foundation to seek the meeting because, “the conservative think tank believed he could help ‘influence (Bush) in some way regarding U.S. policies.’” Sources claim that Abramoff used his connections to White House aide Karl Rove to set up the meeting. The Malaysian government also paid $300,000 to an Abramoff connected company to lobby members of Congress and to set up trips to the country, including a 2001 trip by then-Majority Leader Tom DeLay (R-TX). Mahathir states that he cannot recall where the money paid to Abramoff came from but that it did not come from the Malaysian government.

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Abramoff, Rove Ties Examined:

Jack Abramoff contacted White House aide Karl Rove four times to arrange for his client, the President of Malaysia, to meet with President Bush, according to former associates of the disgraced lobbyist. The Los Angeles Times reports that the Malaysian government paid $1.2 million to the American International Center, a shell company set up by Michael Scanlon and Abramoff, to lobby the White House for a meeting between the two Presidents. President Bush eventually met with President Mahathir in May of 2002 after Rove approved the meeting, according to the Times source. The White House denies that Abramoff’s lobbying played any part in Mahathir’s visit, stating that “the meeting was arranged through normal channels.”

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Abramoff Claimed Close Ties to Karl Rove:

Former associates of Jack Abramoff claim that the ex-lobbyist “frequently told them he had strong ties to the White House through presidential confidant Karl Rove.” The Associated Press reports that, “One said he was present when Abramoff took a call from Rove's office to confirm a White House meeting had been approved between Malaysia's prime minister and Bush in May 2002. Abramoff was being paid by Malaysia for helping it in Washington, according to evidence the Senate has made public.” Rove’s executive assistant is Susan Ralston, a former top assistant to Abramoff. Rove, through a spokesman, describes Abramoff as a “casual acquaintance.”

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Ex-Aide to Majority Leader Had Contacts with Abramoff:

The former chief of staff to John Boehner, Barry Jackson, accepted an invitation to travel to Saipan in the Marianas Islands to visit with clients of Jack Abramoff, but decided not to go. According to the Associated Press, Jackson, now chief deputy to White House aide Karl Rove, was contacted by Abramoff associate David Safavian – who is now indicted for his role in the Abramoff affair – on visiting Saipan to look at the working conditions at garment factories on the Islands. Jackson cannot remember why he did not go to the Islands. On Sunday’s Meet the Press Boehner said that Abramoff may have been in contact with “low-level employees” in his office.

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