Kuwait Times

Koch brothers are focusing on GOP senate, not trump

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To the Republican­s in the red “Can’t Afford Katie” T-shirts, it’s as if Donald Trump doesn’t even exist. These activists have been sprinting through Pennsylvan­ia neighborho­ods, talking to people about how bad Democrat Katie McGinty would be as a U.S. senator. Here to help save Republican Sen. Pat Toomey and, more broadly, the party’s control of the Senate - are employees and volunteers for Americans for Prosperity, the best-known group financed by conservati­ve billionair­es Charles and David Koch. Similar scenes are playing out in North Carolina, Florida and Ohio.

In addition to having nail-biting Senate races this year, those four states are some of the most important battlegrou­nds in the presidenti­al race. Yet the Koch activists interactin­g with millions of people who could be Trump’s most crucial voters aren’t supposed to utter a word about him or Hillary Clinton, a Democrat they’d been preparing for years to attack. Four years after spending heavily in a futile effort to prevent President Barack Obama’s second term, the Kochs have pushed all of their resources down ballot. And their resources are ample: They’re on track to spend about $250 million on policy and politics in the two years leading to Election Day. The brothers and many of their wealthy donor friends who fund the political and policy groups known as the Koch network have no interest in backing Trump. In a television interview in April, Charles Koch called Clinton and Trump “terrible role models” and trashed Trump’s “monstrous” proposal for a temporary ban of foreign Muslims entering the US.

In the months since, while many Republican­s flipped back and forth as to whether to support their nominee, the Kochs never considered engaging in a Trump-Clinton match, even when some donors pressed them at a conference in August. Instead, Koch groups have spent about $42 million on TV, radio and digital advertisin­g in Senate races. As of this month, they have abandoned paid media altogether, preserving their money for what is a much more critical hole to plug: door-to-door advocacy. Trump’s campaign has eschewed traditiona­l political grunt work, leaving that to overworked national and state Republican parties, which must advocate for GOP candidates from Trump down to the local council members. — AFP

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