10/21/13, "House GOP Leadership PACs Snub Conservatives," Breitbart, Kerry Picket
"Many conservatives on Capitol Hill find themselves left out in the cold by the current leadership when it comes to receiving campaign donations from leadership PACs.
CBS’ 60 Minutes aired an investigative report on Sunday by Steve Kroft who interviewed Government Accountability Institute (GAI) President and Breitbart News Senior Editor-at-Large Peter Schweizer which revealed how politicians on the hill abuse their leadership PACs by spending lavishly on themselves. However, when it comes to applying PAC money for its original proposed use of campaign contributions, some members can be downright stingy with their PAC donations.
The Center for Responsive Politics reported in early October that House Republican Leadership has raised a massive amount of funds through their various PACs. However, according to Open Secrets, twenty conservative Republican members, who The New York Times identified as a constant “thorn” in Boehner’s side, received very little if nothing at all from these leadership PACs and the National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) during the 2012 election cycle.
Most of these 20 Republicans were initially elected without the help of the NRCC, so they do not owe the Republican leadership much. However, it should be noted that every member of the Party has an assessment they are required to raise for the NRCC, but not every member gets money from the NRCC for their campaigns. Open Secrets notes the pattern of this giving is continuing into 2013:
"That fact is particularly striking because in the first six months of 2013, Cantor gave away $875,000 to other candidates through his leadership PAC, ERIC PAC. That's a record: No leadership PAC has ever given as much to candidates in the first six months of an election cycle. So far in the 2014 cycle, ERIC PAC has given money to 122 other House Republicans, but only eight members of the group of dissidents have received any cash from Cantor this cycle. Altogether those eight received $55,000 from Cantor's PAC. (A full list of donations from Cantor and other members of the leadership to the 20 is below.)
Boehner, whose leadership PAC, the Freedom Project, has given out $213,000 to 39 candidates this cycle, gave to just one member of this group of 20: Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio), who received $5,000.
The other top members of the House Republican leadership follow the same pattern. House Majority Whip Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) has given just $7,500 combined to two of the 20 (his leadership PAC has given a total of $155,000 to 38 members). Deputy Whip Peter Roskam (R-Ill.) has given $71,000 to other candidates this cycle, but no money to these 20."
In the meantime, House conservatives who were snubbed by leadership and their PACs are refusing to raise money for the NRCC in the 2014. “Here at the NRCC we continue to exceed our internal goals and beat our own records thanks to the hard work our dedicated members are putting into growing the Republican majority,” Andrea Bozek, an NRCC spokeswoman, told Politico.
She added, “Speaker John Boehner, Majority Leader Eric Cantor, NRCC Chairman Greg Walden and the rest of our leadership team in the House have personally put in extraordinary time and effort to ensure that Republicans have the resources necessary to go up against the Obama-Pelosi machine.”"
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What Politico calls the "Republican Establishment" is actually the same as the democrat establishment. By Nov. 2008 the GOP had merged with democrats. What Politico stenographers call 'hard line conservatives' are those annoying Tea Party people who gave the pathetic GOP House its majority. They try to carry out the wishes of people who elected them instead of selling out to thug lobbyists, Wall St., the radical left, and Politico:
10/20/2013, “House tea partiers not anteing up for 2014,” Politico, by ALEX ISENSTADT | 10/20/13 4:59 PM EDT
“Hard-line
conservatives aren’t just sticking it to the national GOP by shutting
down the government and bringing the nation to the brink of default —
they’re also refusing to pony up to help their party defend the House in
2014.
With a little more than a year until the midterm election, many leaders of the shutdown strategy have yet to donate to the National Republican Congressional Committee, records show. At least eight of the debate’s 20 or so most outspoken figures have not given any money to the NRCC, and others have forked over token amounts.
With a little more than a year until the midterm election, many leaders of the shutdown strategy have yet to donate to the National Republican Congressional Committee, records show. At least eight of the debate’s 20 or so most outspoken figures have not given any money to the NRCC, and others have forked over token amounts.
Their refusal to contribute to the House GOP’s political arm,
coming as Republicans are getting thumped by Democrats in the money
race, is causing heartburn and frustration among Republican strategists
charged with laying the groundwork for next year’s races. They say it is
reinforcing a perception of the conservative gang that they’re out only
for themselves and don’t much care about advancing the party’s larger
cause.
Take Michigan Rep. Justin Amash, the libertarian acolyte of former Rep. Ron Paul and one of the most outspoken lawmakers for a hard line on the budget and debt negotiations. Amash, who voted against the final deal to reopen the government, hasn’t contributed to the NRCC this year, according to Federal Election Commission reports. Nor has he given to the committee at any point during his two terms in Congress.
Freshman Rep. Jim Bridenstine (R-Okla.), who said Republicans would be seen as “heroes” for shutting down the government, also hasn’t contributed to the NRCC this year. Nor has Georgia Rep. Tom Graves or Kansas Rep. Tim Huelskamp.
None of the House Republicans mentioned in this story returned requests for comment on why they haven’t given or whether they would give to the NRCC in the future. Of course, many tea party members see their allegiance as being to the grass roots, not to the party establishment, and want to change business as usual in Washington.
(Also on POLITICO: Graham to House: Follow Boehner)
The NRCC also declined to comment but provided a statement thanking the House GOP’s leadership team for its fundraising help.
“Here at the NRCC we continue to exceed our internal goals and beat our own records thanks to the hard work our dedicated members are putting into growing the Republican majority,” said Andrea Bozek, an NRCC spokeswoman.
“Speaker John Boehner, Majority Leader Eric Cantor, NRCC Chairman Greg Walden and the rest of our leadership team in the House have personally put in extraordinary time and effort to ensure that Republicans have the resources necessary to go up against the Obama-Pelosi machine,” she added.
No one would call any of the lawmakers friends of the Republican establishment. All year long, they and other tea party-aligned lawmakers have given House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) fits.
But some GOP officials argue the conservatives are only hurting their cause by potentially threatening the party’s 17-seat hold on the House. Republicans are heavily favored to maintain control of the chamber after the midterms, but the combination of superior fundraising and recurring drama in Washington could give Democrats hope.
(PHOTOS: Republicans, 2016 contenders)
“These members can, and do, talk until they are red in the face about how this shutdown effort will somehow help Republicans in 2014, even though all the evidence is to the contrary,” said one House GOP leadership aide, who declined to criticize members of their own party on the record. “However, none of them have stepped up to the plate to make sure the party has the resources it needs to actually win races.”
Just because a member hasn’t contributed at this point doesn’t mean he or she won’t later on. Graves, for example, provided a $120,000 donation just weeks before the last election. But with tensions between the conservatives and leadership especially raw, many Republicans view the lack of giving as a proverbial middle finger to the establishment — and an indication that the money will very possibly never come.
Member fundraising isn’t the be-all, end-all of a political committee’s financial fortunes. Many members are expected to pay in the low six figures. If those dues go unpaid, however, it can be offset in other areas. The NRCC, for example, relies heavily on K Street dollars, on Boehner’s considerable fundraising muscle, and on a nationwide network of online donors.
Still, the lack of help from these members is heightening the already palpable anxiety about the party’s finances among Republicans leading its 2014 efforts.
On Friday, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee reported that it raised an impressive $8.4 million in September. It marked the DCCC’s best September ever in a year before an election and was nearly double its August haul.
On Sunday, the NRCC will report that it raised $5.3
million in September, according to figures provided to POLITICO. While
the sum represents the committee’s best off-year September total since
1994, the NRCC ended the month with $6 million less in the bank than the
DCCC.
Nearly all members of the House GOP Conference are expected to pay dues to the NRCC. In some instances, lawmakers who face competitive reelection campaigns are given leeway. But for nearly all the members who pushed the strategy that led to the shutdown — all of them represent deeply conservative districts and are unlikely to draw serious Democratic opponents — that’s not the case.
Among the other truants is Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann. As a retiring member, Bachmann doesn’t have to worry about funding an expensive reelection campaign next year. But so far, she’s refused to dip into her $1.7 million war chest for the NRCC.
It’s a similar story with Idaho Rep. Raul Labrador, a frequent critic of Boehner who through the end of September had nearly $300,000 available in his political account. Texas Rep. Louie Gohmert hasn’t given either, even though he has more than $260,000 on hand.
There are exceptions among the Republicans who were most outspoken about shutting down the government in order to defund Obamacare. Ohio Rep. Jim Jordan, for instance, has paid $45,000 to the NRCC. Others have made small contributions: Kentucky Rep. Thomas Massie, who at one point said that the shutdown would not be a “big deal,” has donated $6,000. Florida Rep. Ted Yoho has given $12,000.
Democrats have not been immune to the problem of lawmakers not kicking in to their political arm. In the run-up to the 2012 election, DCCC officials removed framed photos of a half-dozen delinquent House members from the lobby of party headquarters.”
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