Los Angeles Times

California’s GOP donors disappoint­ed

Having spent millions on losing presidenti­al candidates, many are left reluctant to give.

- By Seema Mehta, Anthony Pesce and Kurtis Lee

California’s Republican donors have invested heavily in the 2016 presidenti­al race, with little return. The vast majority of the $55 million they have spent boosted candidates who have dropped out, according to a Times analysis of financial disclosure documents.

Now, as the nominating contest hurtles toward the state’s June 7 primary, most are no longer opening their checkbooks but rather observing the intraparty nomination fight from the sidelines, frustrated by the turns the race has taken.

“There won’t be any more money coming from me — none,” said Chris Rufer, who founded Morning Star Co., a tomato processing firm based in Woodland, outside Sacramento.

Rufer, who donated $662,400 to efforts supporting Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul’s unsuccessf­ul bid, said of the three remaining GOP candidates, “I’m just not all that impressed.”

Rufer is among more than 23,000 California­ns who have donated to Republican candidates or super PACs backing them in the 2016 cycle, according to financial disclosure documents that detail all contributi­ons over $200 through March 31.

More than 15,000 donors saw a candidate they favored leave the race, and of those, only about 1,200 have given to a candidate still

competing, or to the effort to stop GOP front-runner Donald Trump from winning the nomination.

“I think we’re taking a deep breath and trying to figure it all out. It’s gotten to be quite a tangle,” said Silicon Valley venture capitalist William H. Draper III, who gave $102,700 to former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush’s presidenti­al run.

“I’m going to be on the sidelines for a long time,” said Draper, former president of the Export-Import Bank of the United States.

If these donors remain on the sidelines, the eventual Republican presidenti­al nominee could end up with money problems in the general election. In the last two presidenti­al campaigns, California­ns gave more money than donors from any other state to the GOP nominee.

This year, some California­ns who contribute­d to one or more of the 14 Republican presidenti­al candidates who have withdrawn say they will now send their money where they believe it will have the most impact: fighting Democrats’ effort to retake the Senate and increase their numbers in the House.

“Republican donors shifting their money into House and Senate races is essentiall­y raising the white f lag on the Republican presidenti­al campaign,” said Dan Schnur, director of USC’s Jesse M. Unruh Institute of Politics.

Anthony Pritzker, a billionair­e heir to the Hyatt Hotel chain, spent $525,400 to support Florida Sen. Marco Rubio’s unsuccessf­ul bid. The Beverly Hills resident said he plans to focus on competitiv­e down-ticket races, such as the reelection of Republican Sens. Rob Portman of Ohio and Kelly Ayotte of New Hampshire.

The majority of California GOP money donated in this cycle went to three candidates and the political action committees supporting them: $15.1 million for Bush, $11.8 million for Rubio, and $9.5 million for former Hewlett-Packard chief and unsuccessf­ul 2010 Senate candidate Carly Fiorina.

As the field has narrowed, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz and Ohio Gov. John Kasich have seen an increase in the amount of money coming from California­ns to support their candidacie­s, but nothing close to what their vanquished rivals raked in.

Donors here — and across the nation — have not contribute­d significan­t sums to Trump, who does not have a traditiona­l fundraisin­g operation and has largely self-funded his campaign through loans.

Cruz, Kasich and Trump were never popular with California donors. The trio and their affiliated super PACs combined raised half the amount Bush and his super PAC did through March 31, according to the financial disclosure documents.

Cruz and his allies are the biggest beneficiar­ies of the donors whose preferred candidates have dropped out, collecting $1.8 million.

“He is one who can unify our party and bring us back together, so we are doing everything we can to support him and make sure Donald Trump doesn’t win,” said Margarita Palau Hernandez, a Pasadena attorney who was a major donation bundler for Bush and recently joined Cruz’s national finance committee.

Some prominent donors have lately focused solely on stopping Trump.

Billionair­e Bill Oberndorf Sr., a Mill Valley hedge fund manager who spent more than $1.5 million supporting Bush, donated $750,000 to Our Principles, the super PAC aimed at stopping Trump.

Hewlett-Packard Enterprise chief Meg Whitman, the billionair­e who unsuccessf­ully ran for governor in 2010, and her husband spent more than $300,000 supporting New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie’s presidenti­al aspiration­s before castigatin­g him for endorsing Trump. Since then, Whitman has donated $100,000 to the anti-Trump effort and is considerin­g giving more.

Kasich’s presidenti­al bid has accumulate­d only about $600,000 from donors who had supported other candidates. The Ohio governor, whose one victory this primary season came in his home state on March 15, is arguably more temperamen­tally and philosophi­cally aligned with California donors, but many are skeptical of his viability.

“The consistent donors who have been in the game a long time lean toward Kasich but don’t see the pathway,” said Jeff Randle, a GOP strategist and former senior advisor to 2012 nominee Mitt Romney who is deeply connected with the state’s Republican donors.

He said many donors were working their way through the five stages of grief. “Most are now getting to the acceptance stage that it’s going to be Cruz or Trump.”

Still, despite Kasich’s long-shot odds, he is winning over some big-money donors here.

Among them is Robert Day of Bel-Air, who founded the investment firm Trust Company of the West and according to Forbes sold 70% of it in 2001 for $2.5 billion.

He spent more than $1 million supporting Bush, Rubio, Fiorina and Christie before donating $50,000 to the super PAC backing Kasich.

“I think he’s the right guy; he’s been a governor,” Day said of Kasich in a phone interview. “I think governors make better presidents.”

What are his views on Trump, the most likely nominee? Day hung up without a comment.

‘There won’t be any more money coming from me — none.’ — Chris Rufer, founder of Morning Star Co. outside Sacramento, who donated $662,400 to help Rand Paul’s presidenti­al bid

 ?? Paul Sakuma Associated Press ?? MEG WHITMAN and her husband spent more than $300,000 supporting Chris Christie’s run for the GOP nomination. She’s now donating to efforts to stop Donald Trump rather than to a specific candidate.
Paul Sakuma Associated Press MEG WHITMAN and her husband spent more than $300,000 supporting Chris Christie’s run for the GOP nomination. She’s now donating to efforts to stop Donald Trump rather than to a specific candidate.
 ?? Stefanie Keenan Getty Images ?? A RUBIO BACKER, Anthony Pritzker, is turning his attention to down-ticket races.
Stefanie Keenan Getty Images A RUBIO BACKER, Anthony Pritzker, is turning his attention to down-ticket races.

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