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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
US big business funnels hundreds of millions into presidential
campaigns
By Tom Carter
29 May 2007
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With the 2008 US presidential election still more than 17 months
away, and primaries not scheduled until next year, a money
primary is well under way to separate the serious
candidatesthose with the most support from corporate Americafrom
the rest.
Largely concealed from public view, Democratic and Republican
candidates have been touring the country at a hectic pace, holding
lavish fundraising dinners and meeting with wealthy individuals
in state after state. Each candidate must work first and foremost
to convince the richest layers in American society that their
interests will be defended if he or she is elected. The interests
and needs of Americans of ordinary means hardly impinge on the
process.
Lobbyists, financial firms, investment banks, law firms and
corporations are shelling out cash to the respective candidates
at rates unprecedented for this stage in the campaignoften
hedging their bets by funding multiple candidates from both parties.
There have been predictions that the nominees from each party
will need to raise as much as $500 million apiece by election
day in November of 2008.
As of the latest filings with the Federal Election Commission
(FEC), which date from the first quarter of 2007 (January to March),
Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton was in the lead with a $36
million war chest, shattering previous records for funds raised
at that stage of a campaign, with hefty sums coming from large
financial firms, lawyers and lobbyists. This figure includes $10
million left over from her previous Senate campaigns. For the
2006 campaign she raised $52 million.
According to the Center for Responsive Politics (CRP), Clinton
has asked her top tier of supporters, the HillBlazers,
to raise at least $1 million each from other donors10 times
the amount that George W. Bushs Pioneers were
asked to raise in 2000. She meanwhile drew in $1.7 million
from the securities and investment industry alone and, of all
the candidates, she has collected the most from lobbyists.
Clinton has also been credited with an aggressive campaign
to secure funding early from the major donors who traditionally
back Democratic candidates, thereby locking her opponents out
of these funds.
Democratic candidate Barack Obama raised $25.8 million in the
first three months of 2007 for his campaign for the presidency.
According to the CRP, the Illinois senators largest contributor
was the global financial firm UBS, which donated $162,200 so far,
followed closely by the energy company Exelon, which donated $159,800,
and the investment bank Goldman Sachs, which donated $146,100.
It is worth noting that Exelon is the parent firm of Commonwealth
Edison (ComEd), a home electricity provider with 3.3 million customers
in Obamas home state of Illinois. Commonwealth Edison is
notorious among Illinois residents for the cruel rate hikes it
has imposed over the past several years.
According to an April 17 article in Bloomberg News,
Obama took the lead in fundraising from investment bankers, having
collected $479,209 from the major Wall Street firms.
Former senator, one-time personal injury lawyer, and multimillionaire
investor John Edwards raised $14 million for his presidential
campaign during the same period, with the bulk of these funds
coming from lawyers and lobbyists. The hedge fund firm Fortress
Investment Group, for which Edwards worked for a time, provided
$182,250 to his campaign.
Democratic candidate Christopher Dodd raised $8.7 million.
On the Republican side, former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani
raised $16.6 million for his campaign. A list of his top 10 contributors
compiled by the CRP includes hedge funds, investment banks, law
firms, etc., but also notably includes the financial firm UBSthe
top contributor to the Obama campaignand the Las Vegas gambling
chain Station Casinos. Giuliani is in the lead in terms of financial
backing from the oil industry and casinos.
The one-term governor of Massachusetts and venture capitalist
Mitt Romney raised $23.4 million in the first quarter of 2007,
a feat that immediately propelled him to the top rank of Republican
contenders. According to the CRP, Romney has attracted more money
than any other candidate from commercial banks ($288,000), the
pharmaceutical industry ($157,000), real estate businesses ($1.6
million), and financial firms ($1.9 million).
Not surprisingly, $99,800 in donations came from Bain Capital,
which Romney founded in 1984. Bain Capital has had major holdings
in Staples, Dominos Pizza and Brookstone, among other companies.
Romney also received $71,250 from Bain & Co, another one of
his assets.
Republican candidate John McCain reported $13 million in funds
raised during the same period. According to the CRP, like many
candidates a significant fraction of McCains resourcesfully
$2.4 millioncame from finance, insurance and real estate
firms. Lawyers and lobbyists account for a further $1.3 million.
McCains top contributors include the corporate law firm
Blank Rome LLP, the financial firm Bank of New York and the telecommunications
giant IDT.
An exceedingly narrow social stratum is represented in the
financing of these campaigns. Some major donors appear repeatedly
on the lists of various candidates. The financial firm Goldman
Sachs, for example, is named on the list of the top 10 contributors
for McCain, Edwards, Clinton, Dodd, and Obama.
See Also:
Candidates file personal finance disclosure
reports
The American presidency: Only millionaires need apply
[28 May 2007]
Military and money dominate
opening of US 2008 presidential campaign
[17 April 2007]
Record US presidential fund-raising:
The best elections money can buy
[5 April 2007]
2008 election campaign: Hillary
Clinton claims lead in the money primary
[3 April 2007]
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