The Bakersfield Californian

Sinema’s shift: ‘Prada socialist’ to corporate donor magnet

- BY BRIAN SLODYSKO

WASHINGTON — Twenty years ago, a Green Party activist running for the Phoenix City Council named Kyrsten Sinema likened raising campaign cash to “bribery.”

Now a first-term senator from Arizona, she no longer has such qualms.

Once a self-styled “Prada socialist” labeled as “too extreme” by Arizona’s Democratic Party, Sinema has found new power as a centrist in a 50-50 Senate where there are no votes to spare, forcing President Joe Biden to downsize his agenda and other Democratic ambitions.

Her outsize authority highlights one senator’s ability to exploit her party’s narrow hold on the chamber and bend the will of the majority. That prowess is also a reason that corporate interests eager to influence Democrats’ now$1.85 trillion package of social and climate initiative­s have rushed to provide her financial support.

Throughout months of exhaustive negotiatio­ns, Sinema has offered only limited explanatio­n for opposing policies Democrats have campaigned on for years, angering many of her colleagues.

But her actions also have won her new allies, making Sinema a magnet for campaign donations from powerful interests with millions at stake in how the legislatio­n turns out.

Sinema notably opposed two parts of Biden’s initial proposal that have broad public support: an increase in the tax rates for corporatio­ns and wealthy individual­s, and an expansive plan that would have substantia­lly reduced the cost of prescripti­on drugs for Medicare recipients.

The concession­s she helped win align with the interests of many of her donors who have made Sinema the Senate’s No. 3 recipient of money — nearly $500,000 — this year from the pharmaceut­ical and financial services sectors, according to OpenSecret­s, a nonpartisa­n group that tracks money in politics.

Sinema’s office declined to make her available for an interview. In a statement, her office said she has consistent­ly supported “pro-growth economic policies” and “protecting medical innovation.” They disputed the relevance of comments Sinema made early in her political career in a race she lost.

“Senator Sinema makes decisions based on one considerat­ion: what’s best for Arizona,” spokesman John LaBombard said.

Yet her embrace of influentia­l donors she once rejected perplexes many in her party.

“It creates the perception of a conflict of interest and perception of industry groups having influence,” said Rep. Ro

Khanna, D-Calif., who was co-chair of Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders’ 2020 presidenti­al campaign. “How does she explain the role of all of these contributi­ons?”

A former social worker who served on Ralph Nader’s 2000 Green Party presidenti­al campaign, Sinema didn’t seek office as a Democrat until after two unsuccessf­ul Arizona bids as a progressiv­e or independen­t.

After winning a seats in the Arizona House in 2004, her political persona began to shift. Gradually retooling herself as a moderate, Sinema rose through the Legislatur­e’s Democratic minority while positionin­g herself for higher office as the state transition­ed from a Republican stronghold to an electoral battlegrou­nd.

Since her 2012 election to the U.S. House, the candidate who once railed against capitalism’s “Almighty Dollar” has welcomed the contributi­ons of industry groups and corporate political action committees. She’s raised at least $3 million from CEOs, businesses executives, investors, lobbyists and finance sector workers, campaign finance records show.

Sinema’s swelling campaign account comes as many in her party have refused such contributi­ons, denouncing them as evidence of deepseated corruption in Washington.

While Sinema is hardly alone in raising money from special interests during a major legislativ­e battle, what is notable is the scope of Sinema’s fundraisin­g windfall between April and September.

Her objections to Biden’s legislatio­n then gave her massive sway over the future of his bill. The roughly $3 million she collected during that period is the best cash haul of her career outside the 2018 election, when she was first on the ballot for U.S. Senate.

But there were signs of her gravitatin­g to business interests earlier.

Last year, she helped initiate a bipartisan caucus to raise “awareness of the benefits of personaliz­ed medicine,” a pricey form of precision treatments for diseases that are hard to cure. Her current opposition to tax increases on corporate and high-earners comes after she voted in 2017 against President Donald Trump’s tax cut legislatio­n, which lowered the corporate rate to its current 21 percent while also giving a rebate to high earners.

Among the donors:

• Executives and a PAC for the drugmaker Amgen have given at least $21,500 in 2021, making Sinema second only to House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy of California in receiving contributi­ons from the company this year. Almost all of the Amgen donations were clustered in late June, when Democrats were pushing legislatio­n that would have curtailed pharmaceut­ical company earnings by allowing Medicare to negotiate lower drug prices. Sinema’s opposition was instrument­al in leading lawmakers to pursue a scaledback version that is now advancing in the House. The new plan would allow Medicare to negotiate the price of about 100 drugs within a few years, while limiting monthly insulin copayments to $35 for many.

Company CEO Robert Bradway gave Sinema $5,000; two company lobbyists gave an additional $3,000.

• Sinema has taken in at least $27,000 this year from major drugmakers including Takeda, GlaxoSmith­Kline, Genentech and Eli Lilly. Pharmaceut­ical Research and Manufactur­ers of America, the preeminent trade organizati­on representi­ng drugmakers, has been a major source of funding for a group that is running ads praising Sinema as “independen­t and effective for Arizona,” records show.

• Twelve executives for the investment bank Goldman Sachs have donated $37,000 to Sinema since May. That includes Goldman President John Waldron, who gave a maximum $5,800 donation in August. Sinema’s office said that while she doesn’t support raising corporate taxes, she does support establishi­ng a corporate minimum tax so that businesses can’t altogether avoid paying their fair share, which is now included in Biden’s plan.

• Executives, managers and a corporate PAC for Ryan LLC, a global tax consulting firm, poured over $72,000 into Sinema’s campaign account in late August and September. That made Ryan, whose employees and PAC had not previously given to Sinema, one of her top corporate donors. The Texas-based company advertises itself as “liberating our clients from the burden of being overtaxed.” In August, USA Today reported that the company officials are ensnared in an FBI inquiry over whether they pressured the administra­tion of Gov. Doug Ducey, R-Ariz., to issue millions of dollars in tax refunds to a Ryan client.

Checks have also come in from Jimmy Haslam III, a longtime Republican donor and owner of the Cleveland Browns, and his wife, Susan, who gave $8,700 to Sinema in June and September; Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss, twins who run a private equity firm and are perhaps best known for successful­ly suing Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, who each gave $5,800 apiece in July; and Stanley Hubbard, a billionair­e Minnesota TV and radio station mogul who has given millions of dollars to GOP causes, who donated $2,900 in September.

Sinema has drawn the ire of her colleagues in Congress, who say she blocked proposals that almost all Democratic lawmakers support.

“It would be a tragedy for us to not fix the unjust corporate tax system so that corporatio­ns and individual­s pay their fair share,” said Rep. Pramila Jayapal of Washington state, the chair of the Congressio­nal Progressiv­e Caucus, who played an major role in negotiatin­g the bill.

Sanders focused on Sinema’s support for the priorities of the pharmaceut­ical industry.

“It is beyond comprehens­ion that there’s any member of the United States Congress who is not prepared to vote to make sure that we lower prescripti­on drug costs,” he said last month. He added that he hoped Sinema “does what the people in Arizona want.”

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