The Palm Beach Post

In 2016 elections, fraction of donors gave half of funds

Analysis looks at contributi­ons in big-money era.

- By Michelle Ye Hee Lee Washington Post

WASHINGTON — More than 3.2 million Americans contribute­d to federal candidates in the 2016 elections, but fewer than 16,000 of them provided half the donations — a sign of the increasing concentrat­ion of donor activity in the United States, according to a new report.

The analysis released Friday by the Bipartisan Policy Center mapped the growing influence of rich political contributo­rs and independen­t political groups in the seven years since federal court decisions unleashed a new era of bigmoney spending.

Super PACs spent $1.1 billion in the 2016 elections, nearly 17 times more than such independen­t political committees put into federal races in 2010, the first year they came into existence, the report found.

“The system has completely transforme­d,” said Robert Bauer, a Democratic election law attorney who authored the report with GOP campaign-finance lawyer Benjamin Ginsberg and Stanford Law School professor Nathaniel Persily.

Together, they outlined the findings of a panel of 16 political scientists on the legal, political and technologi­cal shifts in the role of money on federal campaigns in the past 15 years. The research was primarily funded by the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation and the Democracy Fund.

Although the Supreme Court’s 2010 Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission decision was expected to unleash a wave of independen­t corporate political spending, companies have largely held back from such activity, they wrote.

“All the available evidence suggests that business corporatio­ns, especially publicly traded corporatio­ns, have not taken advantage of their newly establishe­d political spending rights post-Citizens United to the extent that many predicted,” according to the report.

In 2012, corporatio­ns spent about $75 million from their treasuries on federal elections, roughly 1 percent of the overall spending, according to the report. In 2016, just 10 companies made independen­t expenditur­es, spending “relatively minuscule amounts,” the report said. The reason, researcher­s wrote, may be corporatio­ns are finding that lobbying on public policy is a more efficient use of their money than taking public political stances that may anger shareholde­rs or customers.

Unions have taken greater advantage of the new latitude they have under the Citizens United decision, giving more to super PACs in the past two election cycles than business corporatio­ns and trade groups.

But it has been wealthy individual­s and corporate leaders who have driven the largest share of donations to super PACs, accounting for 64 percent of contributi­ons to such groups in recent elections.

As super PACs emerged as central players in the 2016 elections, the role played by nonprofits set up under section 501(c)(4) of the tax code receded. Such groups are allowed to engage in limited political activity without disclosing donors. Spending by 501(c)(4) groups rose from $5 million in 2006 to $309 million in 2012, the report found. But in 2016, it dropped by more than half, to $147 million.

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