San Francisco Chronicle

GOP’s elite seek blessing of ‘ kingmaker’

- By Carla Marinucci

Looks like the smoke- filled room has returned to national politics. At least at a party starting Friday in Las Vegas hosted by a billionair­e casino mogul that is attracting a parade of name- brand GOP politician­s.

The Republican Jewish Coalition at the Venetian Hotel & Casino will draw a VIP crowd that includes GOP presidenti­al hopefuls Texas Sen. Ted Cruz and former Texas Gov. Rick Perry, along with former President George W. Bush, former Massachuse­tts Gov. Mitt Romney, House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio and GOP House leader Kevin McCarthy of Bakersfiel­d. They’ll all be there at the invitation — and to

seek the blessing — of conservati­ve billionair­e mega- donor Sheldon Adelson, who dispensed $ 100 million to campaigns during the 2012 election cycle.

What’s known as the “Sheldon Adelson Primary” is expected to draw hundreds over three days and will feature poker and golf tournament­s and plenty of speeches. But most of the action — talks by Bush and Romney, for example — will be behind closed doors, with media coverage limited to a three- hour window on Saturday morning.

Outside the media’s view, politician­s will be rubbing elbows with Adelson, who has a fortune pegged at upward of $ 36 billion and was ranked last year as the eighth richest person on the globe by Forbes. His holdings include the Las Vegas Sands Corp., the Venetian Resort Hotel Casinos in Nevada and Macao, and the Israeli daily newspaper Israel HaYom.

In the 2012 election cycle alone, Adelson became the largest single donor to political causes in American history, dumping upward of $ 100 million into campaigns, according to a MapLight analysis of OpenSecret­s. org data.

Handpickin­g candidates

Adelson’s weekend convention underscore­s how “candidates are now being chosen by a few billionair­e kingmakers,” says Daniel G. Newman, president and co- founder of MapLight, a nonprofit that tracks money in politics. “Voters no longer have a choice to elect a candidate whose interests reflect their own. A candidate’s stated interests, instead, reflect that of their kingmaker.”

The gathering also dramatizes the growing clout of California’s neighbor, Nevada, in the presidenti­al election process. It holds the nation’s third primary — after New Hampshire and South Carolina — and voters there will see far more of the presidenti­al candidates up close than voters in the nation’s most populous state right next door. But California won’t be forgotten — candidates use it mostly as a stopover for lucrative fundraisin­g trips to the Bay Area and Los Angeles.

Earlier this year, conservati­ve billionair­e mega- donors Charles and David Koch held a similar kiss- the- ring tribal gathering in Palm Springs, where they appeared to have anointed Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker as their top choice to win the 2016 GOP nomination, the New York Times reported this week.

Neither Adelson nor the Koch brothers are reluctant to spend money. The Koch brothers are reported to be willing to spend up to $ 900 million on the 2016 cycle, on par with the two major political parties.

Citizens United impact

Candidates’ increasing willingnes­s to “bend the knee” to such mega- donors has emerged, critics say, after the controvers­ial Citizens United decision by the U. S. Supreme Court. By a 5- 4 vote, the 2010 ruling cleared the way for corporatio­ns and labor unions to spend unlimited amounts on ads for or against political candidates. Within months, the rise of the super PACs — political action committees that can accept unlimited contributi­ons from individual­s, corporatio­ns, unions and associatio­ns — were collecting millions of dollars as ammunition to advocate for, or attack, political candidates.

The result, Newman said, has been that “a very small number of extraordin­arily wealthy citizens are purchasing a greater level of influence over the policy agenda in this country.”

Bill Whalen, a fellow at Stanford University’s Hoover Institutio­n, said Adelson’s gathering confirms the more aggressive, offensive role of mega- donors.

$ 15 million infusion

He notes that in 2012, Adelson was “life support” for the campaign of former House Speaker Newt Gingrich — and MapLight figures confirm Adelson put more than $ 15 million into his Winning Our Future super PAC.

Foster Friess, a wealthy businessma­n who supports conservati­ve Christian causes who donated $ 2 million to Republican presidenti­al candidate Rick Santorum’s 2012 campaign, was another megadonor who proved in 2012 that “super PACs in the GOP were used to keep candidates alive,” Whalen said.

‘ Assault mechanism’

But in 2016, Whalen said, “Super PACs will not be a defense mechanism — but an assault mechanism” that wealthy donors will use to attack and eliminate candidates. Should an opponent “go to Sheldon and say, ‘ Rand Paul is really bad on Israel,’ ” Whalen predicts, “the next thing you know, $ 10 million will be dumped” into attack ads that could damage his candidacy.

Newman of MapLight says that kind of power is a disturbing developmen­t.

“The debate should really be about protecting ordinary citizens’ rights to elect the candidates they support,” he said.

Kathay Feng, president of California Common Cause, said, “The Supreme Court has clearly unleashed the flood of big money from special interests that are willing to spend hundreds of thousands, if not millions — not only to secure the outcome of the election but also to signal, whoever wins, that they’re a force to be reckoned with.”

Ripples in California

The impacts are rippling all the way to California, where big money is already being raised in the presidenti­al contest. While big Democratic donors like Tom Steyer have weighed in with their checkbooks — he donated upward of $ 76 million in the last cycle — the San Francisco billionair­e has not sponsored anything approachin­g the “Adelson Primary” or the Kochs’ Palm Springs cattle call to test candidates’ mettle.

No wonder “Republican bundlers” — the party insiders with connection­s to tap multiple donors for big checks — are unhappy with an event held in a Las Vegas casino, where the smoke- filled room still reigns, says Wade Randlett, a Democrat who is also one of President Obama’s most active bundlers in the Bay Area.

The message of the “Adelson Primary” appears to be that in the GOP, “unless you’re writing an opening check for millions, you don’t matter anymore,” he said.

 ?? Kin Cheung / Associated Press 2012 ?? Las Vegas hotel and casino magnate Sheldon Adelson and his wife, Miriam Ochsorn, point out features of a model of a resort they were building in China’s Macau region in 2012.
Kin Cheung / Associated Press 2012 Las Vegas hotel and casino magnate Sheldon Adelson and his wife, Miriam Ochsorn, point out features of a model of a resort they were building in China’s Macau region in 2012.
 ?? Jim Cole / Associated Press ?? Ex- Texas Gov. Rick Perry at a GOP leadership summit in Nashua, N. H., April 17, is set to attend the Las Vegas event.
Jim Cole / Associated Press Ex- Texas Gov. Rick Perry at a GOP leadership summit in Nashua, N. H., April 17, is set to attend the Las Vegas event.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States