The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Dark money flooding Ga. campaigns

‘Independen­t’ groups that can shield donors playing a growing role.

- By James Salzer jsalzer@ajc.com

When voters pick their final nominees for the November elections Tuesday, they’ll do so after being overwhelme­d by TV and radio ads, social media messaging and mailings from groups they’ve probably never heard of.

Outfits such as Changing Georgia’s Future or PowerPAC or Black PAC or Conservati­ves for a Stronger Georgia or Higher Heights for Georgia or the Hometown Freedom Action Network or Insuring America’s Future.

In total, 18 such “independen­t” committees raised about $7.5 million for the primaries and runoffs, and they — and many others who recently filed paperwork — will likely play a major role in the fall elections as well.

The gubernator­ial candidates have already raised a record $33 million for this year’s campaign, but going forward, the sky’s the limit for “independen­t” com- mittees.

“Come September, you are not going to see any commercial­s around here unless they are paid for by an independen­t committee,” said Rick Thompson, a former executive director of the state ethics commission who has set up dozens of politicall­y oriented nonprofits and funds.

Both of the Republican gubernator­ial candidates in Tuesday’s runoffs — Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle and Secretary of State Brian Kemp — received help from such committees.

In the lieutenant governor’s race, an out-of-state “independen­t” group put about $1.5 million into trashing state Sen. David Shafer, only to be countered by $1 million from another committee supporting Shafer.

At least seven such committees — raising about $2.8 million — have backed former state House Minority Leader Stacey Abrams, the Democratic nominee for governor.

Other committees that have filed paperwork to raise money are also likely to throw in for Abrams this fall.

While such committees have been around for years, election watchers say there has been a proliferat­ion of them in 2018 as both parties faced heated primaries to fill open seats in several key races. Gov. Nathan Deal is being term-limited into retirement, and the lieutenant governor, secretary of state and insurance commission­er are either running for other offices or calling it quits, so those jobs are open, too.

Donors can give a limited amount to candidates — about $17,000 for the primary, runoff and general election races combined — but there are no limits on how much they can give to so-called independen­t committees or to the groups that fund them.

One group supporting Cagle, for instance, received donations of up to $100,000 a pop from nursing home owners, oil companies, lobbying groups, car dealers and others interested in state legislatio­n and funding. It’s unclear whether any of that money made its way to the committee backing his candidacy.

One of the committees supporting Abrams received a $1 million contributi­on from San Francisco mega-donor Susan Sandler.

Legally, the committees can’t coordinate directly with campaigns, but they can and do support candidates. Depending on how they are set up and where the money comes from, some committees disclose their donors. Others shield donors by taking money from other organizati­ons that, by law, don’t have to disclose where they got the money.

For instance, PowerPAC, which supported Abrams, reported that $1 million contributi­on from Sandler, the bulk of what it collected. Black PAC, another fund helping Abrams, reported $1.1 million in contributi­ons for its Georgia committee, disclosed $400,000 from another mega-donor, New Yorker George Soros, and about $330,000 from Emily’s List’s Women Vote! campaign.

By contrast, a committee running ads for Cagle in the Republican runoff has reported raising about $1.5 million, but about $900,000 of that came from Citizens for Georgia’s Future, an entity headed by two top Statehouse lobbyists that doesn’t disclose its donors to the state.

The Washington-based Hometown Freedom Action Network reported about $1.5 million in contributi­ons to spend on advertisin­g attacking Shafer. Almost all the money came from another Washington-area outfit called Citizens for a Working America, and donors to that organizati­on are not disclosed.

In response, another group, Conservati­ves for a Stronger Georgia, put $1.1 million into backing Shafer against his runoff opponent, former state Rep. Geoff Duncan.

Most of the money came from the Republican Leadership Fund of Georgia, a lobbyist-run organizati­on that got most of its money from a $1 million contributi­on Shafer’s state Senate campaign made last year.

If that’s all confusing, that’s the way some politician­s, donors and the people who set up funds like it. More and more candidates, lawmakers and political organizati­ons set up political funds — sometimes called “social welfare” organizati­ons — that are allowed to hide the identity of donors.

Some say allowing anonymity permits donors to give without fear of retributio­n if they wind up on the wrong side of an election. Good-government types say the public has a right to know who is trying to influence their vote.

William Perry of Georgia Ethics Watchdogs filed ethics complaints over the Hometown Freedom Action Network’s spending against Shafer because Citizens for a Working America didn’t disclose where its money came from. His complaints also accuse a former state senator who was once a Shafer rival of funding the organizati­on but not disclosing it, a charge the ex-lawmaker denied.

“This is the future,” Perry said. “People are taking full advantage of the law to hide the money they are funneling into campaigns. At the end of the day, it’s more people finding ways to hide money.”

The state ethics commission made it clear last fall that it would take a closer look at such groups to make sure they are following Georgia law.

“It’s going to be interestin­g to see if Georgia laws were crafted in a way that allows this,” Perry said, “because it almost doesn’t seem like (the groups) are covering their tracks well enough.”

Any review probably wouldn’t produce anything until after the 2018 elections, meaning it won’t have any effect on the fall races.

Chip Lake, a Republican consultant working for Duncan, called the proliferat­ion of so-called independen­t groups “an evolution of how races will be run.”

“The reality is state campaign finance laws seem to give more flexibilit­y to the outside committee concept than federal law allows,” Lake said. “I think what we are seeing in the primary (and runoff ) campaigns is going to be a reflection of what we are going to see in the general elections.

“Is it good for voters? To be determined. There will be plenty of informatio­n in the public domain that voters can absorb to become informed about which candidates they want to go vote for. I think the more informatio­n out there, the better.”

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Georgia Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle (left) and Secretary of State Brian Kemp face off in a Republican gubernator­ial debate hosted by the Atlanta Press Club on July 12 at the studios of Georgia Public Broadcasti­ng. “Independen­t” groups have helped both men.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Georgia Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle (left) and Secretary of State Brian Kemp face off in a Republican gubernator­ial debate hosted by the Atlanta Press Club on July 12 at the studios of Georgia Public Broadcasti­ng. “Independen­t” groups have helped both men.

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