Big Money and Secret Spending Distorting Democracy

New Analysis on Eve of 2012 Elections

A new analysis of pre-election data from the Federal Election Commission (FEC) and other sources by Ohio PIRG Education Fund and Demos shows that outside spending in the first presidential election since Citizens United is living up to its hype: new waves of “outside spending” have been fueled by dark money and unlimited fundraising from a small number of wealthy donors. Outside spending organizations reported $1.11 billion in spending to the FEC through the final reporting deadline in the 2012 cycle. That’s already a 200% increase over total 2008 outside spending.

Report

Ohio PIRG Education Fund and Demos

A new analysis of pre-election data from the Federal Election Commission (FEC) and other sources by Ohio PIRG Education Fund and Demos shows that outside spending in the first presidential election since Citizens United is living up to its hype: new waves of “outside spending” have been fueled by dark money and unlimited fundraising from a small number of wealthy donors.

“While the results of next week’s contests are up in the air, one thing is clear: big donors and secret spenders have been drowning out the rest of our voices for months,” said Ohio PIRG Public Interest Advocate Tabitha Woodruff.

Outside spending organizations reported $1.11 billion in spending to the FEC through the final reporting deadline in the 2012 cycle.  That’s already a 200% increase over total 2008 outside spending.

Here in Ohio, the House race in the 16th District had more outside spending – more than $6.5 million – than any other House race in the country. In addition, the Ohio Senate race ranked third in the Senate in terms of outside spending, coming in behind the Wisconsin and Virginia Senate races.

Large Donor Dominance

Almost half of all reported outside spending comes from Super PACs, the independent expenditure-only committees created in the wake of Citizens United, and Super PACs continue to receive the bulk of their funds from a small set of wealthy donors making very large contributions.

$266.6 million or 60.5% of the 440.9 million raised by Super PACs from individuals came from just 91 people giving at least $1 million.  Just over 1900 donors giving $10,000 or more were responsible for 97% of this fundraising.

“On Election Day, we’re all supposed to have an equal say,” said Adam Lioz, Counsel for Demos.  “But, next week a small group of millionaires and billionaires will have more influence than millions of middle class families.”

The two Presidential campaigns combined have reported raising $394.4 million from small donors giving less than $200, who are at least 1,972,000 individuals. Just 629 big donors giving at least $100,000 were responsible for $393.4 million in Super PAC donations.

“Because of their wealth and the Supreme Court’s equation of money with speech, those megadonors are able to amplify their voices to more than 3100 times the volume of an average small donor,” noted Woodruff.

Sheldon and Miriam Adelson, have given $52.2 to Super PACs in the 2012 cycle, which, though a significant sum, is just .21% of their net worth.  It would take more than 322,000 average American families donating an equivalent share of their wealth ($162) to match just the Adelsons’ giving. 

Business Money to Super PACs

While it is likely that much of the business money coming into the elections is funneled through dark money sources such as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which so far has spent at least $35 million on races nationwide, the analysis found that business corporations remain the second largest source of Super PAC money, accounting for 12% of all Super PAC funds.

Some of the largest and most active Super PACs receive a significant portion of their funding from businesses: pro-Romney Restore Our Future received over 20% of its funds from for-profit corporations.

Polling last week found that 84 percent of Americans agree that corporate political spending drowns out the voices of average Americans, and 83 percent believe that corporations and corporate CEOs have too much political power and influence.

Dark Money

Of the $1.11 billion in outside spending reported to the FEC, nearly one-quarter, or $257.9 million, was “dark money” that cannot be traced back to an original source.

Doubly-Secret Money

Because of gaps in reporting requirements, spending reported to the FEC is only part of the picture.  Groups are not required to report to any public agency certain spending that is intended to influence an election but falls outside of certain time windows before that election.  When all types of outside spending on television ads related to the presidential race are taken into account, 32% the spending has come from by “dark money” groups that do not disclose their donors.

“Americans across the political spectrum have long held transparency in campaign funding to be crucial,” said Woodruff. “When citizens can’t follow the money voters can’t judge the credibility of political communications and corporations and other special interests can fund misleading advertisements without facing accountability.”

Last week, new polling found that 76% of Americans support a requirement that companies publicly disclose their contributions to groups like the U.S. Chamber of Commerce that funnel their money into politics.

Voting a Critical Counterbalance

Ohio PIRG and Demos are encouraging every eligible American to go to the polls by November 6th to push back on the power of big money. 

“Unlimited, corporate, and secret money continues to undermine the principle of ‘one person, one vote,’” Lioz said.  “It’s more important than ever that Americans use the power of their votes to push back and make their voices heard.”

This is the third release in the Ohio PIRG Education Fund and Demos series of analyses on the role of money in the 2012 elections.  Previous reports are available here and here. Today’s release shows a sharp increase in the amount of secret spending reported to the FEC, as we would expect given the proximity to the election.  The organizations plan to release a short post-election update on November 9 and a comprehensive analysis of election fundraising and spending in January 2013.

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