The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Loeffler

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tion Commission disclosure reports from Loeffler, Sprecher, national Republican campaign committees, and all 20 of the candidates running in the special election, as well as data compiled by the Center for Responsive Politics.

It’s a move that her campaign says makes her a more independen­t senator, not less.

“Kelly has been blessed to live the American dream, and she stepped out of the private sector to work for every single Georgian in Washington to make sure they had the opportunit­y to live theirs,” said her spokesman, Stephen Lawson.

Just the beginning

But the Senate campaign is just the beginning for Loeffler and Sprecher, the chief executive of Interconti­nental Exchange, theGeorgia- based company that owns the New York Stock Exchange. They have both been major political donors, almost always to Republican­s, since 2003.

Eric Tanenblatt, a Loeffler supporter who was also anational finance co- chair for Mitt Romney’s presidenti­al campaign, has known Loeffler and Sprecher for years as “very generous donors to the Republican cause.”

“When people would come throughGeo­rgia for fundraiser­s, they were always at the top of the list,” he said.

This year is no exception for the couple. With $ 8.5 million donated toa vast array ofGOP campaigns and committees across the country, Sprecher and Loeffler have joined the ranks among the top spending families in the country, although only they count a sitting senator among them.

In addition to firing up her own campaign in the months after Kemp appointed her over President Donald Trump’s objections, Loeffler also gave $ 291,300 to the Trump Victory PAC and $ 248,500 to the Republican National Committee.

While she learned the ropes in the Senate, she simultaneo­usly gave the maximum $ 2,800 campaign contributi­on to no fewer than 16 of her 22GOPSenat­e colleagues up for election in November, including David Perdue, Susan Collins, Lindsey Graham and Ben Sasse, along with three GOP Senate campaigns and two House campaigns, including long- shot Georgia congressio­nal candidate Angela Stanton- King.

At the sametime, Sprecher separately donated an additional $ 7.9 million to GOP campaigns and PACs, including $ 5.5 million to Georgia United Victory, a PAC spending heavily against U.S. Rep. Doug Collins in the Loeffler race.

Across the country, Sprecher gave $ 1 million to the America First PAC supporting Trump, $ 717,000 to the National Senatorial Campaign Committee, $ 258,500 to the RNC, $ 290,300 to Trump Victory, and the maximum $ 10,000 contributi­on to 14 state Republican parties, including Arizona, Colorado, Kentucky and Maine.

“It looks like they are giving very strategica­lly,” said Larry Nobel, former general counsel of the Federal Election Commission .“It reminds meof the line, ‘ It’s notwhat’s illegal that’s scandalous, it’s what’s legal.”

To Nobel’s point, all the reported spending by Loef fl er and Sprecher lands exactly at the limits set by law. None of the raising and spending in her thousands of pages of disclosure­s appears to be anything but legal.

“I think the criticism is unfair and usually coming from career politician­s,” Tanenblatt said. “Kelly didn’t have to do this job. We should be celebratin­g successful people.”

Money — everywhere

The couple’s largest investment this year, of course, is her Senate race. Loeffler has made four loans to her campaign for a total of $ 17 million against a bank line of credit through Morgan Stanley Private Bank, the company’s banking unit for clients “of significan­t wealth.” She has made two more loans from her personal checking account for a total of $ 6 million.

Loef fl er has also raised more than $ 5.1 million from individual­s and corporate PACs. If you’ve everwonder­edwho would write a check to amultimill­ionaire, it turns out the answer is lots of other multimilli­onaires.

Among the donors to her campaign are Rebekah Mercer, the daughter of GOP megadonor Robert Mercer; H. R. Perot Jr ., the billionair­e son of Ross Perot; and Glen Rollins, the former CEO of Orkin. Other deep pockets adding to Loeffler’s coffers are Bobby Sasser, the executive chairman of Dollar Tree; GeoffreyBo­isi, a Carnegie Corporatio­n trustee; and Thomas Saunders, a Palm Beach investment banker.

Altogether, her campaign has raised $ 28.25 million and spent $ 22.3 million heading into the finalweek before the election.

David and Goliath

Itmakesfor­aDavid- and- Goliath money contest between Loeffler and her closest Republican competitor in the race, Collins. The two are deadlocked in recent polls for what looks like a single GOP ticket to a January runoff.

After Kemp passed over Collins for Loeffler for the Senate appointmen­t, Collins announced he would run against Loeffler for the seat anyway. He started the race with $ 1.65million from hisHouse committee, raised $ 4.43 million from individual and PAC donors, and has spent $ 3.68 million.

It’s less than one- fifth of what the Loeffler campaign alonehas spent, excluding the millions pouring in against Collins from outside groups, but the details shape the contrast.

If Loeffler is campaignin­g more than two hours away fromAtlant­a, she often heads out in her private jet, purchased in the weeks after Kemp appointed her to the Senate.

Collins, on the other hand, crisscross­es the state in his family’s 2012 Ford, a navy blue Explorer with 158,000 miles on it. His staff follows behind in a 15- passenger Econoline van that may or may not break down any given day.

Nights in Washington for Loeffler are spent at the luxury Trump Hotel at her own expense. Collins sleeps on a cot for free in his Capitol Hill office. A recent evening on the campaign trail for Collins found him at theComfort Inn inWarner Robins, with staff bunking up two and three to a room to save money.

“We don’t have the luxury to pull up to a private airfield and get in the plane and make it to a campaign event in Savannah 30 minutes later,” said Chip Lake, a veteran strategist and adviser to Collins, who has bunked up with fellowstaf­fers on the road. “That’s an advantage that she has thatwe don’t, so we have to do it the old- fashioned way.”

Loeffler’s cash has also made it possible for her to vastly outspend Collins and other candidates in the special election with more than $ 14 million in television ads, plus millions more in polling and consultant­s.

Among her other expenditur­es, according to the latest disclosure­s: $ 342,068 for private jet travel; $ 36,428 for a campaign meeting at the Buckhead Club; $ 20,859 for catering at a donor retreat at the exclusive Sea Island Beach Club where she and Sprecher have a $ 4 million condo; and $ 1,500 for cookies fromthe Byrd Cookie Co.

Above and beyond Loeffler’s campaign spending, the super PAC Georgia United Victory has spent $ 13,770,781 on broadcast and digital ads specifical­ly targeting Collins. Sprecher has donated $ 5.5 million to the group, which is barred by law from coordinati­ng with the Loeffler campaign. Ken Griffin, a billionair­e hedge fund manager, has also put $ 3 million into the effort in the past several weeks.

More firepower is aimed at Collins fromSenate Majority

Leader Mitch McConnell’s Senate Leadership Fund PAC, which has spent $ 774,083 against the congressma­n, although that’s just a fraction of the $ 37 million the SLF has spent against Democrat Jon Ossoff in Georgia’s other Senate race. UnlikeColl­ins, Ossoff has the benefit of Democrats spending heavily on his behalf in return.

An issue from the start

Almost as soon as Kemp appointed Loeffler, whowas known by national Republican­s mostly as a large donor, the backlash against her among some in the GOP began.

Activists questioned how someone who owns a $ 10 million estate could connect with voters. Georgia House Speaker David Ralston, a Collins ally, said last week that Loeffler hadmerely “married well.” And Collins called her a “pretend farmer,” though she grew up on a modest farm in Illinois.

During a heated moment in their recent debate, Loeffler hit back at Collins for his attacks on her.

“You’ve attackedmy hair, my makeup, how I talk, my clothes, where I’m from. You’ve lied about me, you’ve lied about my family,” she said. “Let me tell you, here’s the truth: I’m here because I’ve earned everything I’ve got.”

Whenaskedw­hether Loeffler or Sprecher has contribute­d to “dark money” groups or nonprofits that allow donors to give unlimited amounts anonymousl­y, her campaign spokesman declined to comment.

Lake, the strategist advising Collins, swears that he and the congressma­n are unconcerne­d by what he calls “an obscene spend.”

“I told Doug when he got into this race that he could win despite being outspent 4- or 5- to- 1,” Lake said froma parking lot inMacon shortly after the campaign’s passenger van broke down.

“I did not think he could win this race by getting outspent 10- to- 1, but that’swhere we’re at,” Lake said, “and we’re going to win.”

 ?? MICHAEL HOLAHAN/ THE AUGUSTA CHRONICLE VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Sen. TomCotton ( right), R- Ark., speaks during a campaign event for Sen. Kelly Loeffler, R- Ga., earlier thismonth at the Recteq facility in Evans. Loeffler’s campaign says her ability to finance her reelection effort makes her amore independen­t senator, not less.
MICHAEL HOLAHAN/ THE AUGUSTA CHRONICLE VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS Sen. TomCotton ( right), R- Ark., speaks during a campaign event for Sen. Kelly Loeffler, R- Ga., earlier thismonth at the Recteq facility in Evans. Loeffler’s campaign says her ability to finance her reelection effort makes her amore independen­t senator, not less.

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