Right after the violent protest at the U.S.
Capitol, dozens of U.S. companies announced they would halt political
donations to the 147 Republican lawmakers who voted to overturn Donald
Trump’s presidential election loss. Two months later, there is little
sign that the corporate revolt has done any real damage to Republican
fundraising.
If anything, the biggest backers of Trump’s election-fraud narrative
— such as Missouri Senator Josh Hawley and Georgia Representative
Marjorie Taylor Greene — have been rewarded with a flood of grassroots
donations, more than offsetting the loss of corporate money. And
contributions from both small donors and rich individuals looking to
fight the Democrat agenda have poured into the party’s fundraising
apparatus.
The boycott’s limited impact underscores the diminishing role of
corporate money in U.S. politics. Individual donations of $200 or less
have made up a growing share of campaign money in recent years, while
the share given by corporate America shrinks. That trend has accelerated
with the rise of anti-establishment figures on both the right and left,
such as Trump and progressive firebrand Bernie Sanders, a Vermont
senator.
Reuters examined contributions by more than 45 corporate donor
committees that vowed to cut off the 147 Republicans — eight senators
and 139 members of the House of Representatives. The review found that
the political action committees (PACs) gave about $5 million to the
lawmakers during the 2019-2020 election cycle — or only about 1% of the
money the lawmakers raised, according to Federal Election Commission
(FEC) disclosures.
By comparison, Republican fundraising operations supporting Senate
and House candidates raked in a combined $15.8 million in January alone
on the strength of small-dollar donations. These groups outraised their
Democrat counterparts by more than $2 million that month, regulatory
filings show.
Interviews with Republican operatives, big-money donors, and
fundraisers revealed little apprehension that corporate outrage over the
Jan. 6 Capitol protest would damage the party’s fundraising for the
2022 congressional elections.
Dan Eberhart, a major Republican fundraiser, said he had predicted
for years that Trump's support would collapse. He believed the violent
protest at the Capitol would be the tipping point.
"The data is the opposite,” Eberhart said. “You are seeing a
hardening of support for Trump … I think there will be no shortage of
money.”
Some Republicans and lobbyists believe that companies now backing
away from the 147 lawmakers — or from political giving entirely — will
reconsider that stance as their interests are threatened by the policies
of a Democrat White House and Congress.
“The Democrats have become our best fundraisers," said Fred Zeidman, a
Republican donor and fundraiser in Houston and chairman of investment
bank Gordian Group.
In a sign the corporate backlash may already be fading, the U.S.
Chamber of Commerce, the nation's leading business lobby, said Friday
that it has decided not to boycott the Republican lawmakers after
discussions with more than 100 companies.
Ashlee Rich Stephenson, the chamber's political strategist, wrote in a
memo to members that there is a "meaningful difference" between members
who voted to overturn the election in some states and those who
"continue to engage in repeated action and undermine the legitimacy of
our elections," such as trumpeting debunked conspiracy theories.
Among the more than 45 corporate PACs examined by Reuters, the five
that donated the most to federal candidates in the 2019-2020 election
cycle are controlled by AT&T, Comcast, Honeywell, Home Depot, and
New York Life Insurance. Asked for comment on this story, AT&T and
Comcast declined and the others did not respond.
Rising Grassroots Power
The National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC), which
supports House candidates, raised $7.5 million in January, outpacing its
Democrat counterpart by about $500,000, FEC filings show.
The Republican organization backing Senate candidates is chaired by
Florida Senator Rick Scott, who voted after the Capitol attack to
overturn Pennsylvania’s Electoral College results. It collected more
than $8.3 million in January, compared to $6.1 million received by its
Democrat counterpart.
That performance came despite the dearth of corporate contributions.
Ten corporate PACs examined by Reuters slashed donations in January by
more than 90% compared to the same month in 2017, right after the
previous presidential election. All ten of the PACs had sworn off
donating to the 147 lawmakers.
Asked about the corporate boycott, NRCC chairman Tom Emmer, a
Minnesota congressman, told Reuters that Republican House members "don’t
answer to PACs. We answer to voters."
The Senate fundraising committee did not respond to requests for comment.
The waning importance of corporate money reflects a fundamental shift
in fundraising over the past decade as the advent of online platforms
such as Act Blue and WinRed made it easy to solicit donations from
rank-and-file voters. Individual donations, small and large, accounted
for two-thirds of funding for last year's elections. PACs made up only
about 4%, down from 9% in 2016, according to the nonpartisan Center for
Responsive Politics. PACs are typically controlled by corporations,
industry groups and labor groups.
The biggest beneficiaries of rising small-dollar donations are often
rabble-rousing politicians who vow to take on the Washington
establishment.
Nearly half of the $774 million Trump raised for the 2020 election
came from donations of $200 or less. In 2012, Republican presidential
nominee Mitt Romney raised just 17% of his money that way. Sanders, a
left-wing independent, refused to take corporate money and still raised
hundreds of millions of dollars in small donations to support his 2016
and 2020 presidential campaigns.
'Unreal!' Donations
On the night of the attack, lawmakers came out of hiding to return to
the vandalized halls of the Capitol to vote on objections to the
Electoral College results in Arizona and Pennsylvania. Certifying the
winner is normally a formality, but the 147 Republican lawmakers
unsuccessfully tried to overturn those states' results after Trump spent
months claiming that Democrats had stolen the election.
Hawley, the Missouri senator, was pilloried by Republicans and
Democrats for leading the coalition of Senate objectors. He took in
$969,000 in donations in January, according to a Feb. 1 memo posted on
his website. That is eight times the $120,000 in donations Hawley raised
in the first quarter of 2020, regulatory filings show.
The corporate PACs that have stopped donating “account for a VERY
small percentage of total fundraising that is more than offset by a huge
surge in grassroots support,” Hawley’s pollster, Wes Anderson, wrote in
the memo.
Hawley’s campaign did not respond to requests for comment.
Greene — the freshman congresswoman who has come under fire for
promoting baseless conspiracy theories — said in Twitter posts that she
had netted $335,000 in contributions on Feb. 2 and 3 alone. On Feb. 4,
the House of Representatives voted to strip Greene of two committee
assignments over her remarks, including those in which she advocated
violence against Democrats.
“UNREAL! $175,000!!” Greene said in one Twitter post. Democrats are
“attacking me because I’m one of you... We will never give up!” she said
in another.
Greene’s campaign did not respond to queries from Reuters.
Eberhart, the Republican fundraiser, held two fundraising events for
Hawley when he ran for the Senate in 2018. Eberhart said he called
Hawley in mid-January, expecting him to sound beleaguered after taking
widespread criticism over his role in trying to overturn the election.
"He sounded energized, at ease; he'd been receiving a huge amount of
national support," Eberhart said. “The grassroots are as charged up as
ever.”
Silent Wealthy Donors
While some corporations have condemned the 147 Republicans and cut
off contributions, mega-rich individual donors have largely stayed quiet
since the Capitol attack.
Reuters asked 15 of the largest Republican donors, many on Wall
Street, if they are reconsidering political donations in the wake of the
assault. Five — Kenneth Griffin; Steve Schwarzman; Richard Uihlein;
Jeffrey Yass; Kelcy Warren — declined to comment. Nine others — Charles
Schwab, Bernard Marcus, Laura Perlmutter, Joe Ricketts, Vince McMahon,
Shirley Ryan, Ronnie Cameron, Paul Singer, and Warren Stephens — did not
respond to queries.
A spokesman for Jeffrey Sprecher — chief executive of exchange
company ICE and husband of former U.S. Senate candidate Kelly Loeffler —
said that ICE had suspended its PAC contributions indefinitely after
Jan. 6. The spokesman declined to comment further, including on
Sprecher’s donations as an individual.
The brisk fundraising since the violent protest indicates that most
Republican voters are “comfortable” with the party that has been remade
in Trump’s mold, says J. Miles Coleman, a nonpartisan analyst at the
University of Virginia Center for Politics.
“The Republican Party — it’s not going to go back to the party it was before Trump,” he said.
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