Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Koch network success in Trump era draws pushback from Democrats

- By Lisa Mascaro

The sprawling network funded by the billionair­e Koch brothers is having a very good run with President Donald Trump in the White House and Republican­s in control of Congress.

Tax cuts are now signed into law. A conservati­ve judge is seated on the Supreme Court. And many government­al regulation­s, including those on labor and environmen­tal practices, are facing rollbacks.

That success is starting to get attention. Democrats are increasing­ly questionin­g how far the network’s influence extends into the White House, casting the groups’ backing by industrial­ists Charles and David Koch as puppeteers behind Trump’s agenda and hoping to rouse their own donors to fight back. The network in turn is ratcheting up its focus on areas where it aligns with Democrats — most notably immigratio­n legislatio­n — and reviving calls for bipartisan­ship.

“We’ve come off one of the most successful years in our network’s history,” said James Davis, executive vice president of Koch-backed Freedom Partners and a spokesman for the Seminar Network, the broader organizati­on of groups and donors. “And we’re going to turn up the heat on both parties to drive forward.”

But there’s another outcome, too: Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., and other senators recently fired off letters to the administra­tion asking for a detailed accounting of the network’s role at various government offices including the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, the Labor Department and the Department of Veterans Affairs. The senators name more than a dozen individual­s working in the administra­tion with ties to the groups. On Monday, the lawmakers will launch a series of Senate floor speeches turning a spotlight on the influence.

“Americans have a right to know if special interests are unduly influencin­g public policy decisions that have profound implicatio­ns for public health, the environmen­t, and the economy,” wrote Whitehouse with Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass.; Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto, DNev.; Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass.; Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore.; and Sen. Tom Udall, D-N.M.

“There are plenty of billionair­es these days, and a bunch of them do pretty good stuff,” Whitehouse is expected to say in Monday’s speech, according to excerpts. But he’s highlighti­ng a subset he says is “trying to quietly remake America to their ideology.”

The influence of the Kochbacked groups is somewhat surprising. They are an array of organizati­ons and include Americans for Prosperity, Freedom Partners and Concerned Veterans for America, whose donors comprise some of the wealthy attendees of the twice-a-year Seminar Network conference­s.

The groups took a pass on donating to Trump’s Republican presidenti­al bid. But they have managed to influence policy through several top allies in key jobs sprinkled across the administra­tion.

Among those in the Koch orbit with ties to the administra­tion, perhaps the most prominent is Marc Short, the White House director of legislativ­e affairs, who is a past president of Freedom Partners, the network’s chamber of commerce-styled group. Short plays a key policymaki­ng role and is a Capitol Hill fixture of legislativ­e battles. The senators mention several others with top policy roles, including Kellyanne Conway, a counselor to the president.

Koch groups have been central to Trump policies Democrats oppose — among them tax cuts for the wealthy, loosening of environmen­tal regulation­s and expanding private-sector health care for veterans. Trump’s first-year regulatory rollbacks were drafted by one of the Kochbacked groups and became a ready blueprint for action in Congress.

The network, however, doesn’t just toe the Trump line. On Monday, the group is stepping up its effort to push Congress not to let up on legislatin­g as lawmakers turn to focus instead on campaignin­g for midterm elections.

Two groups in the network are releasing a letter to congressio­nal leaders of both parties, urging them to take up a bipartisan compromise to help young immigrants, known as “Dreamers,” who have been living in the U.S. illegally since childhood. They want Congress to pass a deal that was on the table earlier this year — a path to citizenshi­p for 1.8 million Dreamers and $25 billion for border security. Because most Americans want a solution that would allow the Dreamers to avoid deportatio­n, the group says Trump and Congress should be able to come up with a solution.

“There is no reason to continue to delay action on the Dreamers,” wrote officials from Freedom Partners and the LIBRE Initiative, two network groups. “What are we waiting for?” The group is also pushing Congress to take up criminal justice reform, another issue with bipartisan support that has lagged.

Republican­s have little appetite to engage on bigticket items as they struggle to keep control of their majority in the House and try to pick off Democratic incumbents up for re-election in the Senate from conservati­ve Trump-won states.

And Democrats, while saying they are willing to engage with the Koch-backed groups, are at times envious of their operation and eager to pound on their influence, which includes chapters that mimic traditiona­l party apparatus in many battlegrou­nd states.

 ?? PHELAN M. EBENHACK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Americans for Prosperity Foundation Chairman David Koch speaks in Orlando, Fla. A sure sign of policy success for the sprawling conservati­ve network funded by the billionair­e Koch brothers is Democratic pushback.
PHELAN M. EBENHACK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Americans for Prosperity Foundation Chairman David Koch speaks in Orlando, Fla. A sure sign of policy success for the sprawling conservati­ve network funded by the billionair­e Koch brothers is Democratic pushback.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States