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Koch Brothers, Chamber of Commerce Face Possible Campaign Donation Disclosure After Ruling

Posted: 03/30/2012 8:13 pm Updated: 03/31/2012 10:28 am

Koch Brothers Campaign Donations
David Koch is major funder of independent groups, like Americans for Prosperity, that would be forced to disclose their donors for "electioneering communications" under the District Court's ruling in Van Hollen v. Federal Election Commission (FEC).

WASHINGTON -- On Friday evening, the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia issued a ruling that could begin the process of revealing the identities of secret donors to groups connected to Karl Rove and the Koch brothers.

The court ruled in Van Hollen v. Federal Election Commission that the FEC rules that restricted campaign donor disclosure are not valid and must be changed to provide for disclosure.

"We are very happy to see the judge got it right," says Paul Ryan, a lawyer for the Campaign Legal Center, a campaign finance watchdog that was a part of the team challenging the FEC rules.

Those rules state that donors to groups spending money on "electioneering communications," or advertisements that do not specifically call to elect or defeat a candidate, must only be disclosed if they specifically earmarked their donation to that particular expenditure. Since few, if any, donors to these groups ever earmark their donation for a specific election expense there was no disclosure.

That FEC rule came in the wake of the 2007 Supreme Court ruling in Wisconsin Right to Life v. FEC. That ruling overturned a ban, instituted by the McCain-Feingold campaign finance reform law, regarding direct corporate and union contributions to electioneering communications.

Friday's court ruling could reverse a trend started by the FEC rules, and aggravated by the Supreme Court's 2010 Citizens United decision, that led to an explosion in undisclosed contributions to electoral efforts. The percentage of independent spending that went undisclosed jumped from 1 percent in 2006 to 43.8 percent in 2010, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

Advertisements falling under the rubric of "electioneering communications" include those run against President Barack Obama by the American Energy Alliance and Americans for Prosperity, both non-profits linked to the Koch brothers. All ads run by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce are classified as "electioneering communications." The ruling would require for the first time that contributions to these groups, and many more, be disclosed.

Crossroads GPS, a non-profit linked to Karl Rove, has run millions of electioneering communications against Obama and Democratic senators this election cycle without disclosing any of their donors.

Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.) challenged these FEC rules in 2011, arguing that the rules preventing disclosure were an unlawful interpretation of the plain language of the McCain-Feingold campaign finance reform law, which mandated disclosure of these donors. Therefore, he said, they should be tossed out by the court.

"This is good news for our democracy and for voters - this victory will compel the FEC to require enhanced disclosures of the funders of campaign-related advertisements," Van Hollen said in a statement.

Judge Amy Berman Jackson stated Friday in her ruling that, "there is no question that the regulation promulgated by the FEC directly contravenes the Congressional goal of increasing transparency and disclosure in electioneering communications."

"In sum, the Court finds that Congress spoke plainly, that Congress did not delegate authority to the FEC to narrow the disclosure requirement through agency rulemaking, and that a change in the reach of the statute brought about by a Supreme Court ruling did not render plain language, which is broad enough to cover the new circumstances, to be ambiguous," the ruling continued. "The agency cannot unilaterally decide to take on a quintessentially legislative function; if sound policy suggests that the statute needs tailoring in the wake of WRTL or Citizens United, it is up to Congress to do it."

Fred Wertheimer, the president of campaign finance watchdog group Democracy 21 and another one of the lawyers representing Van Hollen, said in a statement, "Now it is the FEC’s turn to act. Democracy 21 calls on the FEC to conduct an immediate rulemaking procedure. The FEC must get new rules in place promptly to ensure that outside spenders making electioneering communications disclose the donors funding these campaign related expenditures."

While the ruling unambiguously states that the FEC's rules on electioneering communications are in contravention of congressional intent and should be invalidated, the next step remains murky.

"If this ruling stood and this was the end of it, we'd have much more disclosure," explained University of California-Irvine law professor Rick Hasen. "I don't think that this is going to be the end of it."

On his Election Law Blog, Hasen laid out five possibilities of what could transpire in the wake of this decision, including the FEC immediately writing new, appropriate rules or an appeal from the FEC, prolonging the court challenge. The FEC requires four votes from its six commissioners to appeal a decision.

"This is a good day for those who want to shine light on who's funding our elections," Hasen said. "These things are years in the making. People who think that this is going to solve all the problems immediately are probably going to be disappointed."

The efforts by the Van Hollen team will also continue, according to the statement from Wertheimer. He explained that the legal team will now consult on "a potential second lawsuit challenging the FEC disclosure regulations that have gutted the contribution disclosure requirements for outside groups making independent expenditures."

Independent expenditures are election expenses that do call for the election or defeat of a candidate. This type of spending is what corporations and unions were freed to spend money on in the Supreme Court's Citizens United ruling.

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WASHINGTON -- On Friday evening, the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia issued a ruling that could begin the process of revealing the identities of secret donors to groups connected to K...
WASHINGTON -- On Friday evening, the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia issued a ruling that could begin the process of revealing the identities of secret donors to groups connected to K...
 
 
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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TeraWatt60 11:02 AM on 03/31/2012
What is the fear of these people about disclosing the kinds of  donations ? Aren't they proud of the "blow for freedom" that they are purchasing with their millions? Maybe they are worried that the people will see them for what they really are...self-serving plutocrats trying to buy elections/policies that are really only favorable to their bottom line but to everyone and everything else on the planet  Read More...
11:56 AM on 05/05/2012
Define Karl Rove
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MekhongKurt
03:12 AM on 04/29/2012
I think I'll rewrite the lyrics of the oldie goldie "Ghost Riders in the Sky," but re-title "Koch Roaches on the Sly," or "Koch Roaches Try to Buy/On the Buy," or "Koch Roaches on the Sly," LOL! OR even "Koch Roaches Finally Die"!!!
06:24 PM on 04/16/2012
There are 4533 comments on this board, I would hope that some of you might want to send a brief message to the US Chamber of Commerce and put yourself in the running for a chocolate bar. http://guesswhattheuschamberwillspend.org/
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JTyroler
Hoping Congress doesn't destroy the nation.
10:53 AM on 04/04/2012
There should be disclosure of campaign contributions - otherwise, what prevents foreign governments or criminal organizations from secretly donating to campaigns?

I hope that Paul Ryan, lawyer for the Campaign Legal Center, has a middle initial to prevent being confused with a different Paul Ryan who apparently has little problem with taking money from the Koch Brothers or the Chamber of Commerce.
08:47 PM on 04/03/2012
Some Tea Party spokesmen and activists bankrolled by the Koch have repeatedly made death threats against Obama. Tea party activists have openly or in an implied manner advocated violence against those who disagree with the extreme right wing.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
truly moderate
Paleo-conservative and Anti-tea party
04:52 AM on 04/03/2012
Koch and Soros are both crony capitalists. One abuses capitalism for political conservative gains. The other to pave the way for his socialist agenda.

The point is regardless of whether you are left or right shouldn't matter. They are corrupt.

Mr. Mccain was totally right about SuperPACS and until we get some Reform Party members, its unlikely much will change concerning corrupt politics on either side of the aisle.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ThinkinPerson
06:28 PM on 04/08/2012
No, this is not tit for tat. Koch family values are clear: eliminate the government. Soros makes no such claim, he participates in the free market just like Koch and others, but he is not hell bent on destroying the government or replacing democratic systems. There is a difference, and its important to call a spade a spade.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
truly moderate
Paleo-conservative and Anti-tea party
04:15 AM on 04/10/2012
Why can't liberals accept accountability that one of their own CAN be corrupt? Personal accountability. I have no problem admitting Koch is corrupt and I'll admit I'm center right.
04:14 PM on 04/02/2012
ALL donations should be public information. The office of the president is to serve ALL people of the U.S. ----all people donate to the presidential campaign, and certainly all funds being donated for use by the candidate pursuing employment of that office, should be transparent and readily made available to the public.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
journeyman steve
01:33 PM on 04/02/2012
I have as much faith in the FEC doing the right thing as I do that the SEC will do the right thing, that the FTC will do the right thing. If there's a way to reduce government expenditures, firing the lot of the people working for these three regulatory bodies would be a good start. And then hiring them based upon hiring criterias of HR departments -- as lame as those are -- instead of the "Who will vote to corrupt the law and America with me?" that are presently asked by those who nominate and vote on nominees.....

Capability is over-rated. Perception and the politics of perception rule the country, stroke the ego, and let everyone feel like they get a trophy. Phooey, TANSTAAFL.
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WOODSTOCKER60
EYESIGHT ISSUES.I TYPE IN CAPS....HAVE A NICE DAY!
08:23 AM on 04/02/2012
Koch then turned his focus to foreign markets, including the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany with the help of Erich Koch. A high level Nazi official in charge of Prussia, Erich Koch invited Fred Koch to sell his oil in Nazi Germany after he was banned from doing business in the US. After the fall of Nazi Germany, Erich Koch and Fred expanded the oil empire to the Soviet Union. A few years later, the Soviets took Fred Koch’s oil and prosecuted Erich for war crimes. Since the 1980′s, the Koch brothers, David and Charles Koch, have made it their mission to assault all of the aspects of American life and history that they hate or disagree with. To that end they have created a number of conservative think tanks and organizations dedicated to eliminating these aspects. Liberalism and virtually anything that has to do with government is their number one target. For example, when David Koch ran for the presidency on the Libertarian ticket in 1984 he was pretty blunt about his goals. According to David Koch, they would “like to abolish the Federal Elections Commission and all the limits on campaign spending.” The Koch ticket promised to abolish Social Security, the Federal Reserve Board, welfare, minimum-wage laws, corporate taxes, all price supports and subsidies for agriculture and business, and U.S. Federal agencies including the SEC, EPA, ICC, FTC, OSHA, FBI, CIA, and DOE.
11:09 AM on 04/02/2012
How regressive....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
truly moderate
Paleo-conservative and Anti-tea party
04:55 AM on 04/03/2012
Most conservatives would oppose abolishing the FBI (ummm Bush was named an honorary member afterall). Then again, the Koch brand of fiscal conservatism is far beyond the GOP "establishment", which they consider liberals, lol.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nick1936
08:17 AM on 04/02/2012
Once the names are made public we will finally know who runs this country
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WOODSTOCKER60
EYESIGHT ISSUES.I TYPE IN CAPS....HAVE A NICE DAY!
08:25 AM on 04/02/2012
With the backing of the Koch brothers, the Heritage Foundation recently provided Republican Darryl Issa a wish list of regulations they want to see repealed, including environmental regulations, consumer protections, and worker protections. Without these important protections and regulations, the Koch brothers would be free to screw over consumers, treat their workforce like slaves, and pollute the environment as much as they want. And we are seeing these attempts to eliminate protective policies play out in the halls of Congress as we speak. But it is just not in Congress, its in individual states as well.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
journeyman steve
01:34 PM on 04/02/2012
You had more words allowed, could have used "again" in almost all of your sentences :)
07:46 AM on 04/02/2012
The Koch brothers are also major contributors to the Tea Party as well even though David Koch has pictures of him speaking and yet he denies having anything to do with it.
Buttercup690
Politicians like......mo money,
08:03 AM on 04/02/2012
Right, they are huge supporters of that SC disaster known as Nikki Haley.
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WOODSTOCKER60
EYESIGHT ISSUES.I TYPE IN CAPS....HAVE A NICE DAY!
08:24 AM on 04/02/2012
THEY LIE SO EASILY....THE SAME WAY WE BREATH...........
07:29 AM on 04/02/2012
This is a double edge sword. Koch brother are talked about but where is Soros name? Soros back liberal media to push the liberal agenda. Does media have to explain why stories of Obama not dealing with russia on missile defense see the light of day. Does selling gun to terrorist in mexico get any coverage. It is not who donates to who because both sides have thier money trees. It is the media that scares me, when you do not get all the stories because the media is pushing an agenda that is a problem. Americas media is one of the least trusted in the world. They report and do not report depending on if the story will help or hurt the agenda and canidates they promote. What has happened to america media?
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WOODSTOCKER60
EYESIGHT ISSUES.I TYPE IN CAPS....HAVE A NICE DAY!
07:57 AM on 04/02/2012
Soros back liberal media to push the liberal agenda."

YES...THOSE WHO PUSH FOR EQUAL PAY...EQUAL RIGHTS...HEALTHCARE FOR ALL...JOBS HELD IN THIS COUNTRY....REMOVING SUBSIDYS FOR OIL AND FARMING COMPANYS....ENDING WARS TO BENEFIT THE WEALTHY...
...WHAT A SAD AGENDA..."CARING ABOUT THOSE HUMANS WHO MAKE UP OUR COUNTRY...WHILE NOT ALLOWING A FEW CHOSEN RICH FOLKS THE POWER TO CONTROL YOUR LIFE!.."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
emrogers
What could possibly go wrong?
08:21 AM on 04/02/2012
LOL Koch brothers puch an agenda that is strictly self-serving and based on greed. Soros backs politicians and bills that try to help others. Hope you can see the motivation is utterly and entirely different.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
invmartyc
Am I not turtle enough for the turtle club?
07:25 AM on 04/02/2012
What are Koch, Rove, and the rest hiding? What is it they do not want us to know? How can anybody support people who will not be transparent and honest?

Why would anyone be in the GOP? I finally asked myself that and I am now an independent!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
journeyman steve
01:39 PM on 04/02/2012
I've been independent since Reagan. I supported the build-up of the MIC but had issues with the debt that his tax breaks were causing in the national debt, with additions piled on with how Reagan played the Democratic congress during his first term that allowed federal aid programs -- safety nets -- to expand in scope of budget and Americans that could qualify so long as they played the game and used the "liberal loopholes" that now have more people on SS and Medicare than are really unable to work.

I now vote for the strategic and the tactical, to be fiscally conservative and accountable, to provide for world-class defense and monetary policy, and to be able to invite economists to the discussion of how short-term funding (or lack of it) impact longer term economic projections.
07:02 AM on 04/02/2012
All of these people it seems, both Democrats and Republicans, have little interest in the Democratic process unless they can distort it to their own purposes. The explosion of Super Pacs and other organizations specifically created to illicitly alter the system should be outlawed with strong penalties for circumvention.

What was begun in the 18th century with the clear idea of creating a nation where everyman, before women were fully thought of as persons, could be free to vote his conscience without coercion , is now but a shadow of the founder's intentions . The advent of biased media , attack ads , obscene financing of campaigns, lack of debate on issues etc. makes a mockery of the word democracy and is nothing more than a form of coercion of the voters.

America was once the hope for the world, a beacon of freedom to instill hope in people, and as something to emulate and strive for, has become to many, nothing more that a joke. It is more than time for a serious change in the beliefs of people like the Kochs who have no interest in the betterment of the country. They and those like them are not true patriots to my mind.
Buttercup690
Politicians like......mo money,
08:07 AM on 04/02/2012
Exactly. I am a big fan. The Koch brothers bought that SC tea bagger Nikki Haley.
05:22 PM on 04/02/2012
I am not American but a patriotic Canadian with a great respect for the history of the U.S. It saddens me to see what is happening in your country.

Unfortunately for Canadians we are governed by a party and a man, Stephen Harper, who many think would like to make Canada in a Republican image. Also, unfortunately, our Prime Minister is virtually a dictator without some of the checks and balances such as those that restrain the American president.

My only hope is that voters, in both countries, will get rid of those who would ruin our democracies for purely personal benefit. God help us if what we are seeing now contiues.
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BlueDogInRedState
All citizens deserve a fair chance to vote
08:33 PM on 04/03/2012
I hope it's not "all" of both parties. Hopefully we still have a few idealists when it comes to democratic principles.

Nice post. F&F.
09:09 AM on 04/04/2012
Blue Dog, I am a cynic and pessimist. I certainly subscribe to your comment but I feel that the political process is stacked against idealists. Humans being what they are, are first and formost interested in " what's in it for me".

I remember watching Jack Kennedy give a speech in which he said " don't ask what your country can for you--ask what you can do for your country", or something along those lines. What he said then is true today but I see little of that in political parties of any stripe. Sad.

To my mind, the person who has seemed to have the best interests of the country as a whole at heart in the last few years was Bill Clinton. Not perfect, but on the whole he seemed to me to want to make things better for the greatest number of his people. It may be that Obama too thinks this way. Unless change stake place in both Canada and America, the people of both countries are in for some rough years.
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06:49 AM on 04/02/2012
Finally, we'll see which corporate hoors the brothers and their ilk are "donating" to and how much they've paid to influence their votes, er, a .... I mean to help their campaign.