Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Barnes won’t take corporate PAC money, but he used to

- Contact Daniel Bice at (414) 3136684 or dbice@jrn.com. Follow him on Twitter @DanielBice or on Facebook at fb.me/daniel.bice.

Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes is all against taking contributi­ons from political action committees run by corporatio­ns.

Even if he used to be for them. Shortly after announcing his bid for the U.S. Senate last month, Barnes posted that he would not be accepting any corporate PAC money in the race.

“I want to be clear — I’m not taking donations from corporate PACs, which means we need people like you with us,” Barnes tweeted on July 20.

The post sounded a lot like something he had written three years earlier, though he was much more definitive this time.

“Our campaign is powered by real people, not corporate interests,” Barnes tweeted in July 2018. “That’s what sets us apart.”

Got it? Corporatio­ns, bad; people, good.

But a review of his campaign records shows that Barnes received seven contributi­ons from corporate PACs totaling $6,450 since 2014.

In fact, the majority of that cash came just last year. He received four donations from corporate PACs for a total of $5,500.

Among the businesses chipping into Barnes’ campaign war chest in 2020 were BNSF Railway ($2,500), Centene Corp. ($1,500), Johnson Controls Inc. ($1,000) and JPMorgan Chase & Co. ($500).

The donations from Johnson Controls and BNSF came in December 2020. Johnson Controls is the only Wisconsin-based firm of the four.

The first-term Democrat did not receive any PAC donations from a business in the first half of 2021.

Asked to explain the past donations in light of his current stance, the Barnes campaign merely repeated his campaign pledge.

“Mandela’s campaigns have always been about putting the people first, and in this campaign we’re doubling down on everyday Wisconsini­tes by proudly rejecting campaign contributi­ons from corporate PACs,” said Kory Kozloski, a Barnes adviser.

Barnes’ campaign officials did put the past donations in context.

The seven corporate donations, they said, are not a representa­tive sample of his contributi­ons over the last eight years. The total amount given by those firms make up less than 0.5% of the more than $1.4 million he has raised since 2014.

Overall, they said, Barnes did not rely on corporatio­ns to fund his past campaigns.

In 2018, for example, his campaign for lieutenant governor took in some 2,489 total contributi­ons. The donations from the seven corporatio­ns represent just a tiny fraction of this figure.

“We are proud to have grassroots support from every corner of Wisconsin in his campaign for U.S. Senate,” Kozloski concluded.

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