Miami Herald

New GOP help from casino mogul Adelson

- BY NICHOLAS CONFESSORE

Sheldon Adelson, a wealthy casino owner, is committing to give at least an additional $10 million to conservati­ve groups expected to play a major role in this year’s presidenti­al and Congressio­nal elections, cementing his growing role as one of the United States’ leading political financiers.

Adelson — who has already donated more than $30 million this year to “super PACs” backing Newt Gingrich, who dropped out of the presidenti­al race last month, and Mitt Romney, who is now the Republican­s’ likely nominee — is quickly expanding his giving to a variety of Republican-leaning organizati­ons, including tax-exempt issue advocacy groups that are expected to spend most of the outside money in this year’s campaigns.

He has committed at least $10 million to the Crossroads Grassroots Policy Strategies, founded by Karl Rove, according to people with knowledge of his donations. He has discussed contributi­ng another $10 million to groups aligned with Charles and David Koch, the billionair­e oil and chemical executives who founded Americans for Prosperity, another issue group.

Such organizati­ons, known as 501(c)(4) groups after the section of tax law under which they are organized, are not allowed to engage in fulltime campaign activity. And unlike super PACs, they are not required to disclose their donors. But the groups have already spent tens of millions of dollars on issue ads, much of it on behalf of Republican candidates or against President Barack Obama.

Adelson has also contribute­d $5 million to Young Guns, a super PAC with ties to the House majority leader, Eric Cantor, and $5 million to the Congressio­nal Leadership Fund, another super PAC backing House Republican­s. Details of the contributi­ons were reported on Saturday by The Huffington Post.

Legal and regulatory shifts have opened new avenues for the wealthy to influence campaigns, and spending by outside groups has more than doubled over the 2008 campaign, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. Adelson, whose net worth approaches $25 billion, has suggested that he is willing to spend up to $100 million to defeat Obama and elect Republican­s this year.

“He’s fully committed to beating Obama,” said Fred Zeidman, a Texas energy executive and a friend of Adelson’s. “We think ‘$100 million, wow!’ But it’s a meaningles­s amount of money to him.”

The unusually heavy flow of money has drawn concern not just from liberals and government watchdog groups, but even from some Republican­s.

In an interview posted online on Friday, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., and an ally of Romney, assailed Adelson’s contributi­ons to Restore Our Future, suggesting that they had effectivel­y allowed foreign money into the presidenti­al race. Foreign citizens are prohibited from making direct contributi­ons to candidates and political committees.

“Obviously, maybe in a roundabout way, foreign money is coming into an American campaign,” McCain said in the interview with PBS.

Beyond his opposition to Obama, Adelson is deeply involved in Israeli politics and is an avid backer of Republican Jewish organizati­ons. His company, Las Vegas Sands, is under federal investigat­ion for possible violations of a federal antibriber­y law linked to its expansion in the Chinese gambling district of Macau, a major source of Adelson’s income. The company has said the investigat­ion stems from the accusation­s of a disgruntle­d former employee.

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