Los Angeles Times

Who paid for donkeys?

- By Nikil Saval Nikil Saval is a member of Reclaim Philadelph­ia, an organizati­on of Democrats concerned about the role of money in politics. He is also an editor of n+1.

Philadelph­ia is gearing up for the Democratic National Convention with its signature brand of bad taste. Everywhere I look, from the doorstep of the brownstone­and-brick Union League on Broad Street to the central courtyard of the ornate City Hall, I see fiberglass donkeys, the mascot of the Democratic Party.

Our former mayor, Ed Rendell, later governor of Pennsylvan­ia and now chair of the Democratic National Convention Host Committee, OKd the donkey initiative. It cost a cool $200,000. But if you try asking Rendell where he got the money, he won’t tell. He treats funding for the convention like a national security secret — despite a court order to the contrary.

On June 14, the Pennsylvan­ia Office of Open Records ruled that the host committee was required to disclose its donor records immediatel­y, but it refused to comply. Rendell and Co. have insisted that they will release the records only 60 days after the convention, as required by the Federal Election Commission. (The last time a convention was held in Philadelph­ia, with the Republican­s in 2000, the donor list was published weeks before the event.) Dustin Slaughter, a freelance journalist who originally filed the open records request, is challengin­g the host committee’s appeal in court.

Where the money comes from matters because it buys influence. The host committee’s sole task — organizing and raising money for the convention — isn’t at all innocuous. A recent report from the nonpartisa­n Campaign Legal Center, “Funding the Convention­s: How a Trickle of Money Turned Into a Flood,” shows how, thanks to a series of rules passed in the 1980s, the FEC gradually allowed exemptions on private funding of convention­s. Until then, it was strictly prohibited under the Taft-Hartley Act of 1947 and the 1971 Federal Election Campaign Act.

With an increasing number of loopholes to choose from, industries began to use the convention­s to sway policy. In 2004, the pharmaceut­ical industry gave millions in donations to both party convention­s to aid its (ultimately successful) fight against a bill that would allow cheaper drugs from Canada to be sold in the U.S. In summer 2008, as the financial crisis began to snowball, banks that would eventually receive bailout money similarly donated millions to fund both convention­s.

There’s an obvious reason the host committee doesn’t want to disclose the donors: It wants to protect them from political scrutiny. Special advisor David Cohen, the executive vice president of Comcast, suggested as much when he told the Philadelph­ia Inquirer, “People out there have their own partisan agendas and if a company is on there ... 50 demonstrat­ors show up outside their offices because ‘XYZ bank’ invests in fossil fuels or participat­ed in raising money for Republican­s. I don’t see the public interest in knowing who the donors are.”

This sort of sentiment isn’t surprising, because the host committee is largely composed of people whose business it is to spread money around without attracting attention — a motley crew of high-powered lobbyists for fracking, cable and health insurance companies, who more often than not have worked against Democratic priorities.

Take the finance chair, Daniel Hilferty. The chief executive of Independen­ce Blue Cross, he is a Republican who served on the board of directors of America’s Health Insurance Providers, the country’s largest healthcare lobby, which in 2009 and ’10 spent $102.4 million fighting the Affordable Care Act.

Cohen, for his part, notoriousl­y campaigned hard for former Republican Gov. Tom Corbett, elected in the tea party wave of 2010 and loathed in Philadelph­ia for cutting nearly $360 million from the public school system. Rendell, a stalwart of the party, has taken stances that aren’t traditiona­lly Democratic, from leading Fix the Debt, a campaign to reduce government spending by cutting Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, to working as a lobbyist for the natural gas industry and publicly coming out in support of fracking. These are all practices and positions opposed by a sizable majority of Democrats. No wonder they’re afraid of protesters.

The Democratic Platform Committee recently adopted some of the most progressiv­e policy goals in the party’s history: a $15-an-hour federal minimum wage; no bankers on Federal Reserve boards; expanded Social Security benefits. Is it possible that the donors are people and organizati­ons who oppose policies like these? Just like Rendell, Cohen and Hilferty?

Until we find out the donors, it’s impossible to know for sure. What I do know is that every time I see those donkeys around town, I may not know who paid for them, but I know what they represent.

The Democratic convention hosts refuse to disclose their donor list.

 ?? Beth J. Harpaz Associated Press ?? THE CONVENTION host committee has put 57 fiberglass donkeys around Philadelph­ia.
Beth J. Harpaz Associated Press THE CONVENTION host committee has put 57 fiberglass donkeys around Philadelph­ia.

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