Kerry's PACs Outspend Bush's by More Than 4 to 1
NewsMax.com Wires
Tuesday, Oct. 26, 2004
WASHINGTON – Interest groups that can urge the public to
vote for or against candidates have spent at least $25 million on
the presidential race since Labor Day, with John Kerry's supporters
outspending President Bush's by more than 4 to 1.
The efforts range from pro-Kerry hard-hat stickers handed out by
International Union of Painters and Allied Trades PAC to
pro-Bush radio ads, paid for by National Right to Life's political action committee, airing in every battleground state.
Story Continues Below
"There's a lot more to come in the next week and a half," said Kent
Cooper, co-founder of the nonpartisan Political Money Line campaign
finance tracking service.
Because PACs are financed with limited contributions from
individual donors, their spending pales in comparison to the tens
of millions of dollars that partisan groups collecting unlimited
donations from companies, unions and wealthy activists are devoting
to ads and get-out-the-vote operations.
But political action committees wield a powerful privilege the
other groups do not: PACs can ask the public to cast ballots for or
against a particular candidate, something so-called soft-money
groups must stop short of doing. PACs can spend unlimited sums in
presidential and congressional races as long as they do so
independent of the campaigns their efforts support.
"In the presidential race, I think you're dealing with two
factors. One, they want an impact on the race," Cooper said. "But
there's probably a certain percentage of it where there's egos
involved, and they want to show their members they played a role in
the race ... maybe even more so than changing voters' minds."
Pro-Kerry labor union PACs have spent
nearly $9 million since Labor Day reaching voters individually
and en masse. The spending includes television and radio ads, hats,
T-shirts and Frisbees, mass mailings, yard signs, telephone calls
and door-to-door visits.
Environmental PACs are the next-highest presidential spenders.
Groups including Sierra Club and League of Conservation
Voters have devoted roughly $4 million in PAC money to efforts
supporting Kerry or opposing Bush.
On Bush's side, National Rifle Association's PAC has spent
more than $3 million opposing Kerry or supporting Bush.
Anti-abortion PACs, including National Right to Life's, also have
spent heavily to back Bush, together pouring in more than $1
million.
Though the presidential race draws most of PACs' independent
spending, high-profile congressional contests that will determine
which party controls the House and Senate are also attracting
special-interest money.
In all, PACs have devoted roughly $7 million to independent
efforts in congressional races since Labor Day, an Associated Press
review of reports they filed with the Federal Election Commission
shows.
Led by physician groups such as American Medical Association
PAC, political action committees have spent at least $1.5 million
backing Republican Rep. Richard Burr, who is running against former
Clinton White House Chief of Staff Erskine Bowles for North
Carolina's U.S. Senate seat being vacated by Kerry's running mate, John
Edwards.
NRA Political Victory Fund has spent independently in
roughly two dozen congressional races. The amounts range from about
$169,000 in TV ads and $100,000 worth of postcards promoting Burr
to about $4,700 for postcards supporting Republican Rep. Katherine
Harris, who became famous as the secretary of state overseeing
Florida's 2000 presidential recount.
National Association of Realtors PAC has spent at least
$350,000 seeking the re-election of Republican Rep. Anne Northup of
Kentucky, a perennial Democrat target who began receiving real
estate agents' support after backing them in a legislative dispute
with banks over home sales.
National Beer Wholesalers PAC devoted about $72,000 to
mailings backing beer magnate and Colorado Republican Senate
candidate Pete Coors. American Dental PAC is also supporting
one of its own; it spent about $93,000 on radio ads favoring
dentist and Democrat House candidate Jim Harrell of North
Carolina.
One person appears to be the source of one PAC's spending.
California business executive Robin Arkley's $515,500 in donations
was the only money raised by You're Fired PAC through
September; the PAC spent $250,000 this month on ads opposing the
re-election of South Dakota Democrat Tom Daschle, the Senate
minority leader.
National and state party committees can also spend unlimited
amounts supporting presidential and congressional candidates
independent of their campaigns. They have reported roughly $128
million in independent expenditures since Oct. 1, an FEC analysis
found.
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Read more on this subject in related Hot Topics:
2004 Elections
Campaign Finance Reform
DNC
George W. Bush
RNC
Sen. John Kerry