Chicago Sun-Times

SUPER PACE MERGES TO HELP LIP IN SKI RIVAL

Lipinski hasPAC support of his owninHouse­race

- LYNN SWEET | JAMES FOSTER/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES FILE Email: lsweet@ suntimes. com

WASHINGTON— Super PACS are now in play in the heated Democratic primary battle between Rep. Dan Lipinski, D- Ill., and Marie Newman, spending last week for negative cable TV ads and direct mail as the March 20 election looms closer.

A just- spawned super PAC, “Citizens for a Better Illinois,” last week spent $ 412,556 to produce ads opposing Lipinski, according to Federal Election Commission records.

The expenditur­e will bolster the cash- strapped Newman.

And “United for Progress, Inc., created in 2017 — with mega- donations from three Chicago area contributo­rs— reported last week spending $ 37,767 on direct mail designed to re- elect Lipinski.

According to FEC records, that was $ 20,237 to oppose Newman and $ 17,530 to support Lipinski.

FEC records show the 2017 megadonors to “United for Progress” include $ 200,000 from White Sox owner Jerry Reinsdorf; $ 100,000 from Craig Duchossois, the chairman and chief executive officer of The Duchossois Group, and $ 100,000 from Jim Frank, the CEO and president of Wheels.

This “Citizens for a Better Illinois” money— and any other super PAC jumping in— will be crucial for Newman because when it comes to fundraisin­g, she lags considerab­ly behind Lipinski, who has been stockpilin­g campaign cash.

As of Dec. 31, Newman had $ 236,612 cash on hand compared with Lipinski’s $ 1,648,912.

And even if Newman’s fundraisin­g has been on the upswing these past few weeks, as her allies claim, she has a big gap to bridge.

“I think it is fair to say reinforcem­ents are on the way,” a source close to the “Citizens for a Better Illinois” independen­t expenditur­e campaign told me.

Your super PAC refresher

The “Citizens for a Better Illinois” and “United for Progress, Inc.,” are what is known in campaign finance law as independen­t expenditur­e committees.

While federal law puts a cap on contributi­ons to campaigns from regular PACs and individual­s— and bans direct giving from corporate and labor sources — a super PAC can take unlimited donations from these sources.

The catch is a super PAC is banned from giving directly to or communicat­ing or coordinati­ng with the campaign it is trying to help. That’s why the giving is called an “independen­t expenditur­e.”

More about Citizens for a Better Illinois super PAC

FEC records show the new group “Citizens for a Better Illinois” filed its statement of organizati­on on Feb. 13. Donors were already lined up since the group told the FEC it spent $ 412,556 on Feb. 16 to produce television and digital ads.

The treasurer of “Citizens for a Better Illinois” is Steven Kravitz, the Washington- based chief financial officer at NARAL Pro- Choice America.

NARAL has taken on a leading role in helping Newman. Abortion is a factor in this 3rd Congressio­nal District race. Newman supports abortion rights; Lipinski is anti- abortion.

There will be other organizati­ons donating to this super PAC, I am told — more abortion rights and progressiv­e groups and unions whose agenda includes raising the minimum wage.

Lipinski has not taken a lead role on raising the minimum wage, and that is animating a segment of organized labor to contribute to this new super PAC, I am told.

Seeing political trouble ahead— with likely political spending against him— Lipinski in recent weeks has been reposition­ing himself on the wage issue.

On Jan. 29, Lipinski signed on as a co- sponsor of a main Democratic bill to raise the minimum wage to $ 15 an hour, House records show— a measure introduced on May 25, 2017. That came after Lipinski and Newman, who backs the $ 15 target, discussed the minimum wage at a Jan. 24 Sun- Times Editorial Board session, throwing a spotlight on their difference­s.

More aboutUnite­d for Progress, Inc.

The “United for Progress, Inc.” super PAC, based in Charlotte, North Carolina, is spending to aid Lipinski, the only 2018 candidate so far it is helping.

As of Dec. 31, the group had $ 1,066,564 cash on hand after raising some $ 1.3 million— with $ 400,000 of that from the Illinois donors.

A big chunk of money “United for Progress” spent last year was on research.

Lipinski’s incumbent advantage

Lipinski is so far ahead of Newman in fundraisin­g because he is the incumbent. Non- super PAC political action committees can donate directly to campaigns.

In 2017, Lipinski’s campaign had receipts of $ 696,149, of which $ 425,019 came from PACs. Newman took in only $ 16,000 from PACs.

 ??  ?? Democrat Marie Newman is challengin­g U. S. Rep. Dan Lipinski, D- Ill., in the 3rd Congressio­nal District.
Democrat Marie Newman is challengin­g U. S. Rep. Dan Lipinski, D- Ill., in the 3rd Congressio­nal District.
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