Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Barnes’ gun lobby claim partially correct

Johnson received about $1.2 million in support

- Laura Schulte

Following the mass shooting at a school in Uvalde, Texas, the U.S. Senate has moved to address gun violence – a measure some argue does too little, while others say goes too far.

In Wisconsin, Democrats running for the U.S. Senate have been targeting incumbent Ron Johnson, a Republican seeking a third term. That includes Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes, who in a May 27 news release said:

“Ron Johnson will do or say anything to distract from the $1.2 million he’s taken from the gun lobby.”

Has Johnson really accepted that much money from the pro-gun lobby?

Not all donations are directly received by candidates

When we reached out to Barnes’ campaign, press secretary Lauren Chou pointed to data collected by Brady United, a nonpartisa­n gun violence prevention group founded after the passage of the Brady Law in 1993. The data outlines which U.S. senators have benefited the most from donations from the National Rifle Associatio­n.

According to the data, Johnson has received nearly $1.27 million from the NRA during his time as a senator, including both direct campaign contributi­ons and indirect spending, such as TV commercial­s.

OpenSecret­s, a nonpartisa­n nonprofit research group that tracks money in politics, had similar numbers. According to its database on spending by gun interest groups, Johnson has received $222,529 in direct support, in addition to more than $1 million in outside spending since he took office in 2017. (That counts spending in support of Johnson, or against his opponents).

That leads to an important distinctio­n we want to underline.

While Johnson has received about $1.2 million in overall support from progun groups since his first election in 2010, only about $223,000 has been directly accepted by his campaign. As noted, the other $1 million has been spent on his behalf by those groups.

“We determined approximat­ely 83 percent of the dollars they say Senator Johnson has ‘taken from the gun lobby’ are independen­t expenditur­es over which he had absolutely no control, and in fact, did not have any personal knowledge of,” said Alexa Henning, a Johnson campaign spokespers­on.

For context, in a May 27 report, TMJ4-TV in Milwaukee took a look at how the gun lobby’s spending on Johnson compares to other politician­s.

Johnson had the 15th highest total of any current elected officials in the U.S., the report said. It also noted that the NRA has spent more than $771,000 against Wisconsin’s other U.S. senator, Democrat Tammy Baldwin. That’s the 10th highest dollar amount spent against any sitting elected official.

Our ruling

Barnes claimed Johnson has taken $1.2 million from the gun lobby.

Data shows that Johnson has received – through both direct and indirect contributi­ons – about $1.2 million in support since his first campaign started in 2016.

But of that, only about $200,000 went directly to his campaign. The remainder – more than $1 million – represents outside spending either in support of Johnson, or against his opponents over time. So, Barnes is off in his wording.

Our definition for Half True is “the statement is partially accurate but leaves out important details or takes things out of context.”

That fits here.

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