ThinkProgress
ThinkProgress Logo

Politics

Gingrich Agrees To Meet With Rev. Sharpton After Being Confronted By Black Man In SC

As voters head to the polls today in South Carolina, an African-American man confronted Newt Gingrich outside a campaign stop on race issues, pressing the GOP candidate on his idea to make poor kids work as janitors in their own schools.

The Hill reports, “The man said what Gingrich was asking for amounted to a ‘new form of slavery’ and would force young African Americans to drop out of school.” Gingrich engaged with the man, who said he had spoken with Rev. Al Sharpton, asking Gingrich to meet with him, along with NAACP president Ben Jealous and black TV personalities Roland Martin and Juan Williams. “Sure — glad to do it,” Gingrich replied. “I’d be willing to do it. I know Al.”

Gingrich has come under increasing fire for rhetoric on food stamps and child labor than many view as racially-tinged. Yesterday, he said “work” was a “foreign, distant concept” to Williams, whom Gingrich scolded a few days earlier for asking about race.

In New Hampshire earlier this month, an African-American man confronted Gingrich at campaign stop, telling the former Speaker to “stop using blacks as a punching bag.”

Justice

Pawlenty Defends Unlimited Campaign Donations As Citizens United Celebrates Two-Year Anniversary

Two years ago today, the Supreme Court struck down longstanding restrictions on corporate money in American elections, paving the way for super PACs and major third party spending.

Since January 21, 2009, the Citizens United case has had a major effect on money in politics. Already in this year’s Republican presidential primary, we’ve seen a number of freespending super PACs play a major role in the race, including the pro-Mitt Romney Restore Our Future PAC, financed in large part by hedge fund billionaire John Paulson, and the pro-Newt Gingrich Winning Our Future, for whom casino mogul Sheldon Adelson recently cut a $5 million check. In fact, the total amount of money spent by outside groups thus far has outpaced spending by the campaigns themselves.

Despite the proliferation of super PACs and massive uptick in outside spending, former Republican presidential candidate Tim Pawlenty still sees our campaign finance laws as too restrictive.

ThinkProgress spoke with Pawlenty following Thursday night’s debate in Charleston, South Carolina. In a turn of phrase that would give George Orwell satisfaction, the former Minnesota governor defended the Citizens United decision as “leveling the playing field.” Pawlenty also said he supported allowing people to make unlimited donations directly to candidates – individuals are currently permitted to give no more than $2500 – rather than having to do so indirectly through third party groups:

KEYES: Saturday is the two-year anniversary of the Citizens United decision. Do you think that’s going to help defeat President Obama in the fall?

PAWLENTY: What it’s going to help is free speech. The history of campaign finance reform is difficult and checkered for this reason. Every time they try to contain speech, it pops up somewhere else. This is just me talking personally, I’m not speaking for Mitt’s position on this. The better position is to allow full and free speech in whatever form, but have instant disclosure.

KEYES: You’re talking completely unlimited donations?

PAWLENTY: We have that now, it’s just a question of where the money gets pushed to the third party groups. This leveling the playing field to some extent because in the past, unions in particular and other interest groups had an advantage in the old system. Now the playing field’s being leveled a little bit.

KEYES: Just to clarify, you’re talking about allowing, for instance, a millionaire to be able to give a million dollars directly to Mitt Romney’s campaign?

PAWLENTY: Right now, with super PACs and third party groups, there’s essentially unlimited giving to various aligned super PACs and groups. The point is, the United States Supreme Court has spoken. They have said we’re going to have free speech as it relates to political contributions. The First Amendment should be respected and protected, but I think we should also have full disclosure.

Watch it:

Read more

Green

Forecast The Facts Exposes America’s Climate-Denier TV Weathermen

America’s television meteorologists are the primary source of climate information for most Americans, and are second only to scientists — who have much less access to the general public — in the level of trust they are given. Yet more than half of TV weather reporters don’t believe in human-induced climate change, even as our poisoned weather grows more extreme.

Forecast the Facts, a new campaign of 350.org, the League of Conservation Voters, and the new Citizen Engagement Lab, aims to turn the tide. The first call to action challenges the American Meteorological Society to vote next week for a strong climate change statement that rejects science denial:

It’s a big problem: weather reporters reach millions of people every night, and right now they’re not telling their viewers the full story. We can change that. Meteorologists are meeting this month at the annual conference of the American Meteorological Society, where the AMS Council will vote on a new official statement on climate change. Denier meteorologists don’t want the statement to pass, and are doing everything they can to derail the process. We can’t let that happen.

In 2009, ThinkProgress Green exposed weathermen James Spann and Joe D’Aleo as Marc Morano’s go-to climate deniers. Forecast the Facts has identified dozens more zombie weathermen (yes, they’re all male) from around the country. These climate denier meteorologists are betraying the public’s trust and distorting America’s airwaves with ideological science denial:
Read more

Justice

How The Republicans On The FEC Are Making Citizens United Even Worse

Federal Election Commission logo
Three Republican appointees to the Federal Election Commission may be as responsible as anyone for the lack of transparency of post-Citizens United political spending.

Two years ago today, when the Supreme Court issued its Citizens United ruling, one bright spot was that the majority explicitly endorsed the constitutionality and necessity of disclosure rules that inform voters who paid for the political ads they see. “Disclosure is the less-restrictive alternative to more comprehensive speech regulations,” they affirmed.

Federal statutes require that for all significant “independent expenditures” and “electioneering communications” — the two major classifications for political expenditures made by outside groups unaffiliated with political candidates — the names and addresses of large donors must be identified.

But the FEC, through its rulemaking process, gave these groups a loophole. They said that the identities of donors behind the outside spending must be identified, but only if the money was specifically earmarked for the political expenditure. This means that a secretive right-wing group like the Karl Rove-linked Crossroads GPS need only identify the funders who pay for their attack ads if those donors explicitly say the money should be used for attack ads. Few do.

In April, Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-MD) asked the FEC to close the loophole for “independent expenditures” and filed a lawsuit challenging the loophole for “electioneering communications.”

Last month the six FEC commissioners killed — on a 3-3 vote — a motion to begin consideration of Van Hollen’s suggestions. By law, the agency may have only three members of any political party. By tradition, the president chooses three commissioners and the other party’s Senate leader chooses three. The three Republican appointees — Commissioners Caroline Hunter, Donald McGahn II and Matthew Petersen — were the three “no” votes. The same trio also made headlines last month when they took the view that even coordination between Super PACs and candidates might not qualify as coordination between Super PACs and candidates.

The lawsuit is still pending.

Because of these loopholes, virtually none of the funders behind the Super PAC attack ads in Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina will be disclosed until well after the voters there have cast their ballots. And the funders behind 501(c)(4) attack ads may never be known.

So while it was the Supreme Court’s majority that opened the floodgates for corporate money in our elections, it is the deadlocked FEC that is keeping voters from even knowing where that money comes from.

Economy

How The GOP Candidates Would Affect The People Of South Carolina, By The Numbers

Tomorrow, South Carolina will hold its First in the South primary to determine the state’s pick for the GOP nomination. But while most of the state’s focus is on who people will be voting for, what about those who are actually doing the voting?

With the state’s unemployment rate well above the national average and more than 18 percent of residents living in poverty, economic security is certainly a driving concern for the majority of voters. But, given the GOP field’s stances, it doesn’t seem to be a concern candidates are taking to heart.

Here’s a look at how the GOP candidates’ positions would affect the vulnerable populations of South Carolina, by the numbers:

–Over 3,000,000: There are at least at least 3,380,000 eligible voters in South Carolina, but many students, seniors, low-income voters, and minority voters may find it difficult to actually cast a ballot thanks to the state’s new voter ID law. Rick Santorum called it a “common-sense anti-fraud” measure that prevents the vote of “people who probably shouldn’t be voting.” Newt Gingrich blasted President Obama’s rejection of the law as trying to “steal elections.”

–Over 200,000: There are at least 213,000 unemployed South Carolinians contributing to the state’s 9.9 percent unemployment rate. While those receiving unemployment insurance actually work harder to find a job, according to studies, Gingrich equates joblessness with laziness and demands that any benefits come through a work-training program — or a drug test.

–Over 400,000: There were at least 408,000 veterans living in South Carolina in 2009. veterans increasingly need to be treated for traumatic brain injury, PTSD, and other health consequences of war. While Mitt Romney briefly flirted with turning the VA into a voucher system, Gingrich adopted the idea wholesale, stating we should “find a way to have a voucherized system for those who want it.”

–Over 650,000: In 2009, there were over 650,000 people in the state participating in the food stamp program, and the economic recession has no doubt only increased those numbers. Rather than address the need of vulnerable South Carolinians, Gingrich and Santorum traffic in “ugly, racial stereotypes” to justify calls to drug test recipients and cut funding for the needy.

NEWS FLASH

Huntsman’s Exit Leaves GOP Climate Moderates Adrift | Despite some wavering near the end of his distressed campaign, Jon Huntsman Jr. represented the most rational voice on climate science and policy in the GOP primaries. His exit leaves a field of climate-denying candidates that has openly questioned the harm of carbon pollution and threatens to reverse gains in clean air and public health by lifting industry regulations. “The minute that the Republican Party becomes the anti-science party, we have a huge problem,” Huntsman said in August appearance on ABC’s “This Week.” “We lose a whole lot of people who would otherwise allow us to win the election in 2012.” Mitt Romney, Newt Gingrich, Rick Santorum, and Ron Paul all have accused scientists of cooking up the fact of man-made climate change from the burning of fossil fuels.

LGBT

Fox News ‘A-Team’ Psychologist: Being Married Three Times Could Make Gingrich A Better President

Assuming Marianne Gingrich’s allegations are true, Newt Gingrich reacted to news of his own wrongdoing by attempting to justify his deplorable behavior (asking for an “open marriage” after he’s already cheating) and then proceeding to continue down that path anyway (dumping Marianne for Callista). While most would be repelled by such actions, Dr. Keith Ablow of Fox News’ “Medical A-Team” believes Gingrich’s personal choices would not negatively impact his performance as president. In fact, Ablow argues’ that Gingrich’ ability to attract so many women is a sign that the rest of the country will fall for him too:

You can take any moral position you like about men and women who cheat while married, but there simply is no correlation, whatsoever—from a psychological perspective—between whether they can remain true to their wedding vows and whether they can remain true to the Oath of Office. [...]

Conclusion: When three women want to sign on for life with a man who is now running for president, I worry more about whether we’ll be clamoring for a third Gingrich term, not whether we’ll want to let him go after one.

Ablow’s words speak for themselves, and should not be surprising. Here’s a look back at how Fox News’ resident psychologist regularly insists on letting men off the hook for failed marriages:

NEWS FLASH

Bob McDonnell: I Endorse Mitt Romney…And Would Like To See His Tax Returns | In a remarkably quick political two-step, Gov. McDonnell (R-VA) endorsed Mitt Romney this morning, and told Politico the multi-million dollar candidate should speed up the disclosure of his tax returns this afternoon. “He said he’ll release them in April, that’s when most people have done it, that’s up to him,” McDonnell said. “I’d say the sooner the better, but look, that’s a call for him.” This follows Sen. Scott Brown (R-MA), who also piled on Romney earlier today concerning the same issue.

Justice

Gingrich Says ‘Work’ Is A ‘Strange, Distant Concept’ To Juan Williams

Newt Gingrich launched a now-infamous tirade against moderator Juan Williams during Monday night’s GOP debate after Williams dared to ask him if he could understand why some African-Americans were offended by Gingrich’s obsession with food stamps and child labor. “No, I don’t see that,” Gingrich sneered back.

Williams later insisted he wasn’t offended by Gingrich’s pointed defense, but did say his food stamps rhetoric is “very racial and…unless I missed it, black people haven’t been out there demanding food stamps, or marching for food stamps.”

Today, during a campaign stop in South Carolina, Gingrich recalled his exchange with Williams and used the same kind of suggestive language that Williams had objected to — this time directed at Williams himself:

GINGRICH: I had a very interesting dialogue Monday night in Myrtle Beach with Juan Williams about the idea of work, which seemed to Juan Williams to be a strange, distant concept.

Watch it:

Many pundits have seen racial undertones in Gingrich’s belittling of Williams during the debate. “That’s the way I like to spend my Martin Luther King, Jr. Day: watching Newt Gingrich sneer at Juan Williams, a black man, for having the temerity to ask him” a tough question, New York Times columnist Charles Blow wrote.

Gingrich’s equally insulting assessment of the debate exchange likely won’t help.

Economy

Newt Gingrich’s Tax Plan Gives Newt Gingrich A $540,000 Tax Break

In urging a reluctant Mitt Romney to finally release his tax returns, Newt Gingrich produced his own last night during the debate. His 2010 returns reveal an adjusted gross income of $3.1 million with an effective tax rate of almost 32 percent. That’s more than twice the rate that Romney said he pays — unless, of course, Gingrich gets his way.

Seeking to overhaul the U.S. tax code, Gingrich announced his plan last month to introduce a new, parallel tax system with what he calls a “flat” 15 percent rate. But as the Tax Policy Center notes, that plan would mean that millionaires would actually pay much lower tax rates than those below them on the income scale — millionaires like Newt Gingrich.

According to calculations by Center for American Progress Action Fund’s Seth Hanlon, Gingrich’s own tax plan would slash his effective tax rate from 31.6 percent down to 14.6 percent, right around where Romney sits comfortably under the existing code. That amounts to a $536,000 tax cut that Gingrich is proposing to give himself.

It is important to note that while Gingrich released his individual return as well as the one for his charitable foundation, he chose not to disclose the returns from his multiple business entities like Gingrich Holdings, which constitutes the primary source of his wealth. Together, they brought in $2.6 million for the Gingriches. Because his proposal includes business tax cuts as well, it is possible that his tax break would be even larger.

Meanwhile, middle-class families would pay significantly higher federal taxes than one-percenters like Gingrich and Romney. In fact, because Romney essentially admits he accrues nearly all of his wealth from investments, which are tax-free under Gingrich’s plan, Gingrich’s plan would allow Romney to pay almost no taxes at all.

And while Gingrich tries to sell his plan as a one that will “allow Americans the freedom to choose to file their taxes on a postcard,” middle-class families will have to do their taxes under the regular system and Gingrich’s system to see which actually affords them a better return.

Incidentally, that $500,000 windfall from his tax plan also happens to be the amount of credit Gingrich and his wife had at Tiffany and Co., the jewelry store. Whether to feed a high-end habit or provide a tax “choice” to American families, Gingrich definitely walks away from his tax plan a much richer man.

NEWS FLASH

Scott Brown: Romney Is From ‘A Different World,’ He Should Release His Tax Returns | In a fairly stunning departure from his political ally, Massachusetts Republican Sen. Scott Brown called on Mitt Romney to release his tax returns, and said the multi-millionaire presidential candidate is in “a different world from me.” Speaking on a local radio show, Brown said of Romney, “He’s in a category, a lot of those folks are in categories that we don’t really understand. “And certainly he has to release his returns. I understand he’s going to do that like everybody else when they become ready and available in April,” he added. Romney and Brown share a top aide, Eric Fehrnstrom, and Romney aggressively campaigned for his fellow Massachusetts Republican in 2009.

Economy

Kentucky Gov. Cuts Education Funding While Preserving Tax Breaks For Biblically-Themed Amusement Park

When Kentucky Gov. Steve Beshear (D) proposed his 2012-2013 budget this week, he admitted that it was “inadequate for the needs” of the state’s people. “We should be making substantial investments in our physical and intellectual infrastructure to bring transformational change to our state,” Beshear said. “This budget does not allow us to do enough of that.”

Beshear’s assessment of his own budget is, unfortunately, correct. The budget makes $286 million in cuts, including a 6.4 percent cut to a higher education system that has been plagued by funding cuts and rising tuition for years. And though it attempts to preserve K-12 education funding, it will result in less spending on Kentucky’s students and schools, the Lexington Herald-Leader reports:

Although the main funding formula for K-12 schools wouldn’t be cut, population growth means spending per student would decline. Also, education officials say the current year’s population estimate was low, resulting in a cut of more than $50 million to that funding formula.

At the same time, the $43 million tax break Kentucky approved for a Bible-themed amusement park — which will include a 500-foot by 75-foot reproduction of Noah’s Ark — could go into effect for the first time under Beshear’s budget. In addition, the budget includes $11 million to improve a highway interchange near the park. Proponents of the park, Beshear included, have claimed it will boost tourism and create jobs, but those assumptions are based on a report done by the park’s developers.

While Beshear’s budget isn’t guaranteed to pass as proposed, it will likely go through mostly unchanged. Unfortunately, that means lawmakers could jeopardize Kentucky’s substantial gains in K-12 education and ensure ballooning tuition rates at its colleges and universities, all while they preserve tax breaks for what critics have dubbed the “Ark Park.”

  • Comment Icon

NEWS FLASH

Kansas GOP Speaker Apologizes For Email ‘Praying’ For Obama’s ‘Wife To Be A Widow’ | ThinkProgress reported a week ago that Kansas House Speaker Mike O’Neal (R) forwarded an email to House Republicans that referred to President Obama and a Bible verse that says, “Let his days be few” and, “May his children be fatherless and his wife a widow.” O’Neal’s office had initially refused to apologize, insisting that the message was only referring to Obama’s days in office. Yesterday O’Neal finally apologized for his actions, but said he would not resign. Nick Sementelli notes that religious leaders around the country condemned O’Neal’s exploitation of faith, and 30,000 people signed Faithful America’s petition demanding that he resign.

Economy

Catholic Leaders Call On Gingrich And Santorum To ‘Stop Perpetuating Ugly Racial Stereotypes’ About Poverty

Faith in Public Life reports that more than 40 Catholic leaders and theologians across the country are calling on two of their “fellow Catholics,” GOP contenders Newt Gingrich and Rick Santorum, to stop using divisive rhetoric about race and poverty on the campaign trail.

Noting that Catholics consider racism an “intrinsic evil,” the open letter confronts the two candidates about their comments singling out minorities who receive welfare:

As Catholic leaders who recognize that the moral scandals of racism and poverty remain a blemish on the American soul, we challenge our fellow Catholics Newt Gingrich and Rick Santorum to stop perpetuating ugly racial stereotypes on the campaign trail. [...]

Labeling our nation’s first African-American president with a title that evokes the past myth of “welfare queens” and inflaming other racist caricatures is irresponsible, immoral and unworthy of political leaders.

Some presidential candidates now courting “values voters” seem to have forgotten that defending human life and dignity does not stop with protecting the unborn. We remind Mr. Gingrich and Mr. Santorum that Catholic bishops describe racism as an “intrinsic evil” and consistently defend vital government programs such as food stamps and unemployment benefits that help struggling Americans.

Gingrich frequently derides President Obama as a “food stamp president” and recently said he would go to the NAACP and tell African Americans they should “demand paychecks and not be satisfied with food stamps.” He also said “really poor children…have no habits of working and have nobody around them who works,” and don’t know how to earn an income “unless its illegal.”

In Iowa, Santorum proclaimed, “I don’t want to make black people’s lives better” through government aid — conveniently ignoring that only 9 percent of Iowans on food stamps are black. After facing criticism for his remarks, he tried several times to deny he had ever made them.

Despite the fact that 39 percent of Americans on welfare are white, Gingrich and Santorum have directed their vitriol toward minorities in speeches before mostly-white audiences. Instead of acknowledging that millions of American families are looking for help in difficult times, the candidates have played up stereotypes of “lazy blacks” who prefer a government handout to hard work.

Those stereotypes are inaccurate as well as offensive. As Tanya Somanader notes, an increasing number of food stamp beneficiaries actually do have jobs and receive paychecks that are the primary source of their income — but most of those incomes still keep them below the poverty line. The Catholic leaders who signed the letter call it “misleading and insulting” to suggest that the unemployed would rather collect benefits than work at a time when there are four job seekers for every job opening.

  • Comment Icon

Politics

Romney Calls On Gingrich To Release Ethics Report

Seeking to turn the tables on an opponent who has demanded to see his tax returns, Mitt Romney called on Newt Gingrich to release of the congressional ethics report that helped force the former speaker out of office in the 1990s.

Former New Hampshire Gov. John Sununu, who has endorsed Romney and often speaks for him as campaign surrogate, made a similar statement on a conference call with reporters yesterday, saying the ethics records were a “very important piece of opaque material” that could hurt Gingrich in November if he won the nomination.

But Romney escalated the issue today when asked about it in South Carolina:

REPORTER: Others have mentioned that Newt Gingrich should release his congressional ethics report. Do you think he would release those?

ROMNEY: Of course he should, of course he should. One of the issues in this race raised last night by Rick Santorum was the fact that he was pushed out of the House by his fellow members. I think over 80 percent of Republican Congressman voted to reprimand the Speaker of the House. The first time in history.

Watch it:

That must be so damning that that’s the kind of thing that would be an October surprise,” Sununu said yesterday.

Gingrich was the first House speaker in American history to be disciplined for ethical wrongdoing. A total of 84 ethics charges were filed against him on a host of issues, including violating federal tax law and House ethics rules. Most of the charges were dropped, but he was eventually sanctioned $300,000 by a overwhelming 395–28 House vote, with included many of Gingrich’s allies voting against him.

The 1,280-page ethics report is available online here, but there are many documents used in the House Ethics Committee investigation that have yet been publicly released.

  • Comment Icon

NEWS FLASH

McCain, Feingold Issue Statement On Two-Year Anniversary Of Citizens United | Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) and former Sen. Russ Feingold (D-WI) issued a joint statement today on the anniversary of the Supreme Court’s Citizens United ruling. The co-sponsors of the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act, commonly known as Mccain-Feingold and which was partially overturned by Citizens United, called the decision “one of the worst, and most radically activist decisions in the Court’s history,” and urged both parties “to work together to remedy the obvious damage to our political system caused by the Citizens United decision.”

Zachary Bernstein

  • Comment Icon

Green

Meet The 40 Members Of The Congressional Koch Caucus

Rep. Tim Walberg (R-MI), top of the Koch Caucus with $27,000 in Koch contributions.

Five senators and 40 congressional representatives received a perfect 100 percent score from the Koch brothers’ astroturf group Americans For Prosperity for the first half of the 112th Congress. AFP judged Congress on their votes to protect the Koch brothers’ right-wing petrochemical empire on such issues as the repeal of President Obama’s new health care law, pre-empting EPA’s authority to regulate greenhouse gases, Chairman Paul Ryan’s budget to end Medicare, ending ethanol subsidies, several Congressional Review Act resolutions of disapproval to overturn new regulations, and the fiscal year 2012 appropriations bills.

In a previous post, ThinkProgress Green reviewed the five Koch senators and their massive haul of campaign contributions from the Koch empire. Below is a compilation of the 40 members of the Congressional Koch Caucus, in addition to their contributions received from Koch Industries, according to data compiled from OpenSecrets.org.

The Koch Caucus
Representative Koch Cash
Akin, Todd (R-MO) $2000
Amash, Justin (R-MI) $2500
Brooks, Mo (R-AL) $0
Buerkle, Ann Marie (R-NY) $1250
Burton, Dan (R-IN) $0
Chabot, Steve (R-OH) $21000
Chaffetz, Jason (R-UT) $2500
Coffman, Mike (R-CO) $0
Flake, Jeff (R-AZ) $12300
Fleming, John (R-LA) $0
Franks, Trent (R-AZ) $7500
Garrett, Scott (R-NJ) $23000
Gowdy, Trey (R-SC) $7000
Graves, Tom (R-GA) $7500
Harris, Andy (R-MD) $15000
Herger, Wally (R-CA) $6000
Huelskamp, Tim (R-KS) $15900
Huizenga, Bill (R-MI) $2500
Jordan, Jim (R-OH) $5000
Labrador, Raul (R-ID) $3500
Representative Koch Cash
Lamborn, Doug (R-CO) $20000
Landry, Jeff (R-LA) $0
Lummis, Cynthia (R-WY) $7500
Manzullo, Donald (R-IL) $0
Marchant, Kenny (R-TX) $19000
McClintock, Tom (R-CA) $1000
McHenry, Patrick (R-NC) $2500
Mulvaney, Mick (R-SC) $7000
Neugebauer, Randy (R-TX) $24000
Pence, Mike (R-IN) $20750
Quayle, Benjamin (R-AZ) $6000
Ribble, Reid (R-WI) $10000
Ross, Dennis (R-FL) $12500
Schmidt, Jean (R-OH) $0
Schweikert, Dave (R-AZ) $10000
Southerland, Steve (R-FL) $5000
Stutzman, Marlin (R-IN) $2500
Walberg, Tim (R-MI) $27000
Walsh, Joe (R-IL) $0
Wilson, Joe (R-SC) $1000
All U.S. Representatives who were given perfect records from Americans For Prosperity for their 2011 votes. Lifetime Koch Industries political contributions, from Center for Responsive Politics data.

Fourteen members of the Koch Caucus are members of the Tea Party caucus. The average contribution to the Koch Caucus was $9,869.

  • Comment Icon

Older

Switch to Mobile