Campaign Finance - Platte Institute
Transcription
Campaign Finance - Platte Institute
Platte Institute policy STUDY October 2012 Capitol Gains A Review of Money in Campaigns for the Nebraska Legislature in the Term-Limits Era Capitol Gains | Platte Institute Policy Study Table of Contents Section Introduction Page Introduction 2 Campaign Disclosure 3 Findings 4 Incumbency Stifles Competition 5 Incumbency Diminishes Demand for Individual Contributions 5 Individual Contributions Make a Difference for Non-Incumbents, But Impact Has Diminished 6 The Timing of Contributions Effects Outcomes 6 Business-Affiliated PACS Are the Greatest Contributors to Legislative Candidates 7 Business Contributions Are Diversified Across Party Lines; Labor Contributions Favor Democrats 7 The Influence of Out-of-State Business Interests Is Exaggerated 7 Democrat Candidates Are Competitive with Republican Candidates 7 Political Party Influence 8 PAC Independent Expenditures Are Increasingly Prevalent 8 Most Negative Independent Expenditures Come from the State Teachers' Union 9 Conclusions Endnotes 9 10 This analysis of campaign spending in Nebraska Legislative races is based on public information predominantly gathered from mandatory disclosures made with the Nebraska Accountability and Disclosure Commission. The data gathered and evaluated includes all legislative races and related campaign financing for the 2006, 2008 and 2010 election cycles. In the spring of 1992, then State Senator DiAnna Schimek of Lincoln co-sponsored the Campaign Finance Limitation Act (CFLA) introduced by Speaker of the Unicameral Dennis Baack, transforming the way state political campaigns would be conducted in Nebraska.1 The CFLA was an attempt to limit contributions to and spending by campaigns. According to Speaker Baack, the CFLA was intended to provide limits on spending by candidates for legislature and other “covered elective office” to encourage competition by lowering the cost to mount a viable campaign and limit reliance on large contributors.2 Indeed, the Legislature’s findings explicitly state that “many qualified candidates are excluded from the democratic system as a result of such rising cost … and that the utilization of public financing of campaigns is a constitutionally permissible way in which to encourage candidates to adopt voluntary spending limitations.”3 In addition to limits on contributions and spending the CFLA also established a public funding mechanism. Statutorily, any legislative candidate who abides by the CFLA’s aggregate spending cap and is able to raise one quarter of the cap is eligible to receive public funds equal to the difference between the spending cap and his or her opponent’s aggregate spending amount.4 The inclusion of public funding, arguably the most notable provision of the CFLA, is now constitutionally suspect because of a recent Supreme Court decision in Arizona Free Enterprise Club's Freedom PAC v. Bennett.5 In Bennett, the Court found matching fund provisions, like those found in Nebraska’s CFLA, to pose a substantial imposition to the political speech of privately-financed candidates.6 As a result, both the Nebraska Accountability and Disclosure Commission and the Nebraska Secretary of State have effectively suspended enforcement of the CFLA for the 2012 election period.7 2 Platte Institute Policy Study | Capitol Gains This analysis explores the impacts of both the CFLA and the constitutional amendment passed by Nebraska voters in 2000 to adopt term-limits of two, four-year terms for state senators. As a result, this analysis provides a reference point to examine how the suspension of the CFLA’s restraint will impact legislative campaigns and political speech in future legislative races. The institution of term-limits and the suspension of the CFLA have resulted in various hypotheses and assumptions about how campaigns for the Nebraska Legislature will be waged and won. Using the rationale of the Bennett decision, since the CFLA does not factor independent expenditures into its spending restrictions, its campaign contribution limits could result in increased independent expenditures by third party groups like labor unions, corporate separate segregated political funds (PACs), and political parties. Moreover, if PACs and political parties make more independent expenditures it is possible that the content of those expenditures could be increasingly negative and that the expenditures could be timed to prevent rebuttal. Analysis of public data from the Nebraska Accountability and Disclosure Commission compiled from 2005 through 2010 leads to several key findings about the role of money in legislative races in the period after the implementation of term-limits and before the suspension of the CFLA. 1. Term-limits have not diminished financial support for incumbents seeking their second term, despite decreased contributions from individuals in nearly every instance. 2. The majority of contributions received by incumbents of both political parties are made by business-affiliated PACs from within Nebraska. 3. Contributions made by labor-affiliated groups are highly partisan. 4. A decrease in contributions from individuals in nonpresidential election cycles translates to diminished influence of state political parties. 5. Independent expenditures by business and labor PACs have increased each election cycle and are increasingly negative. 6. Labor PACs spend significantly more on independent expenditures than business PACs. These findings paint a portrait of a political landscape in Nebraska where individuals are less engaged in legislative races, contributions heavily favor incumbency in spite of term-limits, and races are increasingly influenced by thirdparty expenditures. The evidence over the last three election cycles strongly suggests that the objectives of the CFLA have not only failed to be realized but also that the CFLA has contributed to the “problems” it was designed to curtail. Campaigns waged for a political position that pays $12,000 annually have not experienced any significant increase in the ability of challengers to adequately compete with incumbents, nor have such campaigns required less money to be waged, nor have such campaigns become less reliant on large donors. Rather, it appears, that the opposite is now even more prevalent than it may have been two decades ago and that the most significant determinate of a competitive race for legislature is whether or not the incumbent has any reelection opportunity for a second term. From the analysis below, in addition to being unconstitutional, it appears that the CFLA is also a misguided effort to regulate the marketplace of political speech that is ultimately not only ineffectual but also wrong-headed and counterproductive. Campaign Disclosure The Nebraska Political Accountability and Disclosure Act (the Act) of 1976, is divided into three separate areas: campaign financing, lobbying, and public sector conflicts of interest. Analysis of campaign finance in this paper is heavily reliant on information from the Nebraska Accountability and Disclosure Commission in the campaign financing area. The Act requires candidate committees with aggregate receipts and expenditures of $5,000 or more to report all contributions in excess of $250, including details about the source of the contribution. Under Nebraska law, there is no limit on contributions from a single source. The CFLA did impose limits on corporate, business and PAC contributions but since it is not being enforced due to constitutional questions, there is effectively no limit on contributions from corporations, partnerships, PACs, or labor unions in 2012. The Nebraska Political Accountability and Disclosure Act requires reports to be filed by political parties, independent committees, out-of-state contributors, PACs, corporations, 3 Capitol Gains | Platte Institute Policy Study independent expenditure “late” if it falls within either of these two time periods, regardless of the amount spent. Because some contributions are made following the general election to the winners of a given race simply due to the candidate winning, effort has been made to delineate between late contributions meant to influence the outcome of the election and contributions made due to victory or to retire campaign debt. unions and other associations. Committees must report whether they support or oppose a candidate and delineate which candidate each expenditure was made for or against. These reporting requirements create a decent record of contributions made to or on behalf of a candidate. This study reviews the filings of 133 candidate committees for office of state senator on the general election ballot, 107 PACs registered with the Nebraska Accountability and Disclosure Commission, and state and local political parties. The filings of candidates who did not advance beyond the primary election cycle are beyond the scope of this study. Campaign statements were analyzed for the three legislative election periods between 2005 and 2010.8 This study does not take into account money received by incumbents in years prior to these election cycles. Discussion of money in politics is a challenge due to the varying ways committees report contributions. For the purposes of this study, all contributions received by a candidate committee that are not attributable to a corporation, union, separate segregated political fund (PAC), other candidate committee, or political party, are deemed individual contributions. These individual contributions could be in the form of loans or donations from individuals, loans or donations from the candidate, or “in-kind” contributions. Individual money is distinct from contributions, in-kind donations, and independent expenditures made by any entity that is not an individual. This study examines not only the amount, but also the timing and type of contributions and independent expenditures to review how expenditures are made during the weeks immediately prior to an election. A “late” contribution or expenditure occurs within the two weeks prior to the election through the end of the calendar year. Unlike the Act, this study deems a contribution or 4 These delineations are intended to identify the source of negative campaigning. A determination of whether an independent expenditure is “negative” is based on whether the PAC, union, or corporation making the independent expenditure states that the expenditure is made in opposition to a given candidate on its “B-4” form at the Commission. This study also attempts to differentiate between sources affiliated with business interests and those affiliated with labor interests. To safeguard accuracy, entities that either have no such affiliation, those that have an approximately equal proportion of both “labor” and “business” clients, or candidate committees regardless of political affiliation, are not labeled as either “labor” or “business.” Findings Contributions to Nebraska's legislative races have fluctuated over the past three election periods. In 2008, total campaign spending hit a high of over $3.6 million, up nearly half a million dollars from 2006. In 2010 spending declined to just over $2.1 million. The downward spending on legislative campaigns is attributable to a drop in spending by individuals from approximately $1.4 million in 2008 to just over $600,000 in 2010. The 2006 and 2008 election periods exhibited individual contributions that were competitive with contributions made by nonindividuals such as corporations, unions, and political action committees. One contributing factor is likely the fewer number of competitive legislative races. When termlimits first took effect in 2006, twenty-one of the twentyfour legislative seats up for election had no incumbent and only one was uncontested. In 2010, of those same twentyfour legislative districts, fifteen were contested and only three were without an incumbent candidate. Platte Institute Policy Study | Capitol Gains Incumbency Stifles Competition It is difficult for challengers to raise funds against incumbents. Only during the 2008 calendar year did total contributions directed to challengers by organizations exceed that provided to incumbents, and only by a ten percent margin.9 Individual spending on challengers exceeded incumbents during 2008 and 2010, but at a negligible margin and, in 2010, not nearly enough to overcome organizational contributions to candidates.10 This disparity between incumbent and challenger fundraising ability is perhaps best illustrated in the fact that of the twenty contested races in which an incumbent was challenged, only Susan Scott in 2007 (who ran against a gubernatorial appointee versus someone elected on the ballot) and former State Senator Thomas Baker in 2009 were able to raise contributions from any source in the first year of their election periods, and neither exceeded $12,000.11 Moreover, Baker was the only candidate to gross more contributions than his incumbent opponent, Sen. Mark Christensen of Imperial, in any election period.12 The overwhelming financial advantage enjoyed by incumbents is a leading reason why there have been only three successful attempts to unseat an incumbent recently: Scott Price in 2008, and Lydia Brasch and Tyson Larson in 2010. As noted below, Price's win over Gail Kopplin in 2008 can be attributed, in part, to an advantage in support from individuals, business interests, and expenditures made by the Nebraska Republican Party. Senator Brasch did not have the advantage of greater support from individuals or business interests in her successful bid to oust Kent Rogert but did have an advantage in independent expenditures from the Republican Party and like-minded independent expenditure committees, such as Nebraskans for Fiscal Accountability.13 Senator Larson, in facing fellow Republican, Cap Dierks of Ewing, was not a beneficiary of political party expenditures but did garner an advantage over Dierks in contributions from business entities. Incumbency Diminishes Demand for Individual Contributions When term-limits were implemented, total individual contributions to legislative candidates reached $285,000 in 2005 and nearly $1 million in 2006.14 Among winning candidates in open races in 2006 the average total contributions from individuals was approximately $33,000 per candidate. The average total individual contribution to those same candidates when they ran as incumbents in 2010 was just 35 percent of what was four years earlier.15 This decrease in individual contributions is most apparent in the filings for the year prior to the general election year. At the start of 2006, candidates who would ultimately win their elections saw their contributions from individual donors average just under $10,000. Those same candidates showed average individual contributions for 2009 of just one-third of that amount. By contrast, the average amount for contributions to these incumbents in 2010 from PACs, corporations, unions, and other organizational contributors increased over three times from the average contribution in 2006. Interestingly, this dramatic difference in organizational contributions does not persist throughout the election period in that such contributions, on average, are only sprinkled through the general election year. The result is that the average organizational contribution to incumbents in 2010, just over $35,000, is nearly identical to that when they ran in 2006.16 These figures may be explained, at least in part, from an offset of funds created by an increase in business entity contributions and a corresponding decrease in labor interest contributions, a topic to be examined further.17 Senator Annette Dubas of Fullerton exemplifies both individual versus organizational contributions and labor versus business contributions as she moved from openseat candidate to incumbent. Dubas entered the 2006 5 Capitol Gains | Platte Institute Policy Study election with over $10,000 in individual contributions and no organizational contributions and ended the cycle with approximately $15,000 more from individual contributions than from organizations. As an incumbent, however, Senator Dubas raised over $12,000 from organizational contributors entering into her re-election campaign. Senator Dubas completed the 2010 election with less than $19,000 in individual contributions and over $41,000 in contributions from third-parties. Likewise, Senator Dubas received substantial assistance from organized labor when first seeking office in 2006 and relatively little from business interests. In 2010, however, her contributions from business entities totaled nearly $29,000, while labor contributions dwindled to approximately a third of her total from her first campaign.18 Individual Contributions Make a Difference for Non-Incumbents, But Impact Has Diminished Contributions from individual donors are critical for nonincumbents in open races. Of the thirty-nine open races from 2006 through 2010, winning candidates out-raised their opponents in individual contributions twenty-eight times. The importance of individual contributions is particularly clear for non-incumbent candidates who faced a general election opponent registered with the opposing political party.19 In 2006, six candidates won election to the unicameral despite less contributions and independent expenditures than their opponents.20 Four of those races were between candidates of opposing parties, and in each case the candidate with greater monetary support from individuals was the winner.21 In 2008, two victorious candidates, Scott Price and Bob Giese, held the individual contributions advantage over their betterfunded opponents. However, Price and Giese were only two of the five under-funded candidates that prevailed in 6 2008.22 In 2010, despite five successful underdogs, only one, Jim Smith of Papillion, held an individual contribution advantage.23 The 2008 challenger, Senator Scott Price of Legislative District 3 in Sarpy County, managed an $8,000 advantage in individual contributions against his incumbent rival, former Senator Gail Kopplin, despite Kopplin's nearly $20,000 overall advantage over Price. A former schooladministrator, Kopplin received considerable support, over $28,000, from the Nebraska’s teachers’ union as well as lobbying and PAC money typically given to incumbents.24 The vast majority, 95 percent, of the support Kopplin received from the NSEA's PAC was in the form of independent expenditures supportive of Kopplin with approximately one-third of those expenditures occurring within the last two weeks of the election.25 Price, however, garnered more contributions from individuals and business-affiliated PACs, and was the beneficiary of more independent expenditures opposing Kopplin from the state’s Republican party.26 Although significant, Price’s advantage in individual contributions likely did not determine the outcome of the race. The Price-Kopplin contest is notable not only because a challenger defeated an incumbent, but also because it is indicative of several recurring themes, particularly the partisan nature of support from labor organizations, the role of party expenditures in the 2008 cycle, and the degree of influence of PACs. The Timing of Contributions Effects Outcomes In the fifty-nine competitive races during the term-limits era, the candidate who raised more money over the course of the election period won 81 percent of the time. Those candidates who raised more than their opponents during the period from the beginning of the election year through the primary or from the beginning of the election year to submission of the second general election statement won 68 percent of the races. Yet those candidates who raised more than their opponents in the first year of the election period—the “run-up” year—secured victory at a rate of nearly 80 percent. This suggests candidates with a “war chest” at the beginning of the election year, historically incumbents, have an advantage and late contributions have less of an impact. Late independent expenditures, however, appear more significant. Platte Institute Policy Study | Capitol Gains average contributions by labor interests per Democrat candidate were nearly five times greater than the average received by Republican candidates in 2006 and nearly ten times greater in 2010. Labor contributions in 2008 showed a Democrat advantage less than twice that of Republican contributions, however, that cycle can be largely attributed to significant labor-affiliated contributions made to Republican candidate Carl Lorenzen in his race against Republican Business-Affiliated PACS Are the Greatest Contributors to Legislative Candidates Over the course of the term-limits era, the total itemized contributions to legislative candidates from non-individual sources is nearly $3.5 million, just slightly more than the aggregate contributions from individual donors. Business entities have contributed the bulk of these campaign dollars with a total of over $2.6 million over the course of three election cycles, and reports reveal nearly three-quarters of these contributions are made by business-affiliated PACs. In contrast, direct contributions from Nebraska corporations and small businesses to legislative candidates comprise less than half a million dollars.27 Despite multiple PACs affiliated with business interests and new PACs each cycle, approximately half of contributions made by business PACs are from six long-established business PACs that clearly favor incumbents.28 Business Contributions Are Diversified Across Party Lines; Labor Contributions Favor Democrats Although business-interest contributions comprise a majority of overall campaign dollars from non-individuals, the recipients of business money are not monolithic in terms of party affiliation. Average contributions by business interests per Republican candidate were approximately twice that received per Democrat candidate in 2006, only onethird greater in 2008, and actually showed a significant advantage for Democrat candidates in 2010. In contrast, gubernatorial appointee Sen. Scott Lautenbaugh.29 Data suggests a political bias for Democrats by labor, while business-affiliated contributions favor incumbents regardless of party affiliation. In both 2008 and 2010, both with greater numbers of incumbents than 2006, the average business contribution to incumbent candidates, regardless of political affiliation, was greater than that of the average contribution to either Democrats or Republicans. The Influence of Out-of-State Business Interests Is Exaggerated The bulk of non-individual contributions originate from corporations and business-affiliated PACs, but not by national corporate interests. Although contributions from outside corporate interests increased 27 percent from 2006 to 2010, these contributions made up less than 12 percent of all business-affiliated contributions.The influence of outside corporate interests on legislative campaigns is approximate to the influence of outside labor interests in contributions—around 8 percent. Democrat Candidates Are Competitive with Republican Candidates The disparity in contributions between business and labor donors to Republican and Democrat candidates creates parity in the total non-individual contributions of Republicans and Democrats. In 2006, the average total non-individual contribution to a Republican candidate was less than $1,000 more than the average total non-individual 7 Capitol Gains | Platte Institute Policy Study contribution to a Democrat candidate.30 In 2008, the margin increased for Republican candidates to just over $3,000. In 2010, the average total non-individual contribution added up in favor of Democrat candidates to nearly double that received by Republican candidates. Total contributions from both individuals and nonindividuals were roughly parallel in both 2006 and 2008, with Republicans averaging just slightly more total contributions. With the previously noted decline in individual contributions in 2010, average total contributions favored the incumbent Democrats who had first won office in 2006.31 $147,000 and Republicans spending over $196,000 on negative independent expenditures. In 2008, Republicans spent over $56,000 against Rex Moats, and Democrats spent nearly $30,000 against Republican James Jeffers – both efforts were rewarded with Sen. Beau McCoy defeating Moats and Sen. Ken Haar defeating Jeffers by a mere twenty votes.33 Democrats continued directing expenditures into negative messages in 2010. However, the total expenditures by Democratic sources was less than $18,000. Republican independent expenditures also decreased in 2010, but the amount spent on supportive advertising nearly doubled from 2008 to 2010. PAC Independent Expenditures Are Increasingly Prevalent Political Party Influence The influence of political parties on legislative races has fluctuated over the last six years. Over the course of all three cycles, direct contributions from political parties totaled less than $14,000. In 2006, independent expenditures by the Nebraska Republican Party were nearly ten times more than the expenditures made by Nebraska Democrat Party.32 In 2008, Republican independent expenditures remained constant, but Democrats significantly increased expenditures. In 2010 expenditures by both parties decreased significantly, with Republican and Democrat expenditures falling below 2006 levels. Also of note is the changing nature of partisan expenditures. In 2006, the GOP spent almost double on positive expenditures supporting GOP candidates than on negative expenditures against Democratic candidates; in the same year, Democrat expenditures were 90 percent supportive of Democratic candidates and only ten percent negative against Republicans. In 2008, both parties spent approximately the same amount on positive expenditures but the level of negative advertising rose to unprecedented levels with Democrats spending over 8 Independent expenditures have increased during the term-limits era by both business and labor. In 2006, business-affiliated independent expenditures totaled over $85,000, increasing to nearly $167,000 in 2008, and remaining at just under $120,000 in 2010. Labor-affiliated independent expenditures have outpaced business sources during each cycle, with labor spending over $137,000 in 2006, nearly $185,000 in 2008, and over $215,000 in 2010. Platte Institute Policy Study | Capitol Gains funding Nebraskans for Responsible Government’s negative advertising efforts, the NSEA PAC also spends more than any other PAC on supportive expenditures. It appears negative expenditures may have had some effect over the outcome of two of the four legislative races that Nebraskans for Responsible Government contributed to in 2010.35 Conclusions Most Negative Independent Expenditures Come from the State Teachers' Union A trend has emerged of greater negativity in expenditures by PACs, particularly those PACs affiliated with labor interests. In 2006, labor PACs outspent business PACs on independent expenditures by over $50,000, with no expenditures made in opposition to a candidate. But in 2010, negative expenditures from labor PACs skyrocketed to $107,500, constituting half of total labor expenditures. Negative expenditures by business PACs totaled $19,737, less than one fifth of labor in 2010. These negative expenditures are increasingly made the two weeks prior to the general election. The only source of negative expenditures from labor affiliated PACs in 2008 and 2010 was Nebraskans for Responsible Government. This PAC is funded primarily by the Nebraska State Education Association (NSEA) PAC, the Nebraska Trial Lawyers Association, and the Teamsters' Union's state PAC (NE State Transportation Political Education) which received over $142,000 for the 2010 election cycle.34 In addition to The Nebraska Supreme Court’s finding that the state’s campaign finance law is unconstitutional will likely result in more corporate and union contributions and expenditures being made earlier in the campaign cycle. However, because incumbency seems to be the primary driver of fundraising success and third-party support, the chance that the political landscape will experience a notable change is low. No pervasive relationship can be established between the CFLA and the incidence of independent expenditures, but if trends continue, independent expenditures are likely to continue to increase and be negative. Business and labor contributions are likely to fluctuate based on the number of open seats, but the reality is that business interests heavily favor incumbents and labor interests heavily favor Democrats. The CFLA should be viewed not in light of what it was intended to accomplish, but rather in light of the fact that its misguided regulation accomplished little more than adding bureaucracy. The CFLA didn’t create electoral competition when only three challengers in six years were successful. The CFLA didn’t diminish the importance of large contributors when individual contributions trailed off as PAC expenditures increased. The CFLA didn’t lower the cost of waging a campaign, in fact, the cost increased each election cycle. In short, the CFLA was both unconstitutional in its restraint on political speech and unsuccessful in its quest to level the electoral playing field. As lawmakers undoubtedly will review the law and consider alternatives, they should note that while its reporting requirements increased transparency – the other tenants of CFLA resoundingly failed. In Nebraska it appears that retail politicking has real importance, out-of-state financial influence is relatively minimal, and the individual contributor’s dollar can prove influential. State campaigns, like financial markets, function best when not overly regulated. 9 Capitol Gains | Platte Institute Policy Study 1 See, LB556, 92nd Legislature , 2nd Session (1992). 19 The forty-nine senators that comprise the unicameral legislature are officially non-partisan. A general election ballot for legislature thus may have two candidates from the same party. 2 See, Nebraska Attorney General Opinion 11003, issued August 17, 2011, Page 5, citing Committee Records on LB 556, 92nd Leg. , 1stSess. , (Introducer’s Statement of Intent) (February14, 1991). 20 Senator Steve Lathrop (LD12), Senator Amanda McGill (LD26), Senator Bill Avery (LD28), Senator Annette Dubas (34), Senator Tom Carlson (LD38), Senator Tom Hansen (LD42). 3 See, Neb. Rev. Stat. 32-1602(1). 21 Senator Steve Lathrop, Senator Amanda McGill, Senator Bill Avery, Senator Annette Dubas. 4 See, Neb. Rev. Stat. 32-1604 through 32-1606. 5 Arizona Free Enterprise Club's Freedom PAC v. Bennett, 564 U.S. 2818 (2011). 6 Id., at 2823. 7 See Nebraska Accountability and Disclosure Commission, “Important Information for 2012 Election Candidates About the Campaign Finance Limitation Act.” August 30, 2011, http://nadc.nol.org/pdf/CFLACandidateLtrAug11.pdf Endnotes 8 See, Neb. Rev. Stat. 49-1455(2); Neb.Rev.Stat.32-1603(1)(a). 9 In 2008, the total contributions to candidates challenging an incumbent was $230,813.30, whereas the total contributions to incumbents in 2008 was $209,999.55. 10 Individual contributions to candidates challenging an incumbent totaled $111,445.10 and $170,445.24 in 2008 and 2010, respectively. Contributions from non-individuals to incumbents in 2010 was $340,095.80 and far exceeded the $154,493.63 contributed by individuals to incumbents in 2010. 11 Baker for Legislature committee reported a total of $1,240 in contributions for 2009. Susan Scott for Legislature committee reported $10,385 in total contributions for 2007. 12 Total reported contributions for the 2010 election period for Baker for Legislature committee was $81,252.68, whereas the total reported contributions for the 2010 election period for the Mark Christensen for Legislature committee was $57,731.46. 13 Lydia Brasch received a total of $44,621.95 in both supportive and negative independent expenditures from Nebraskans for Fiscal Accountability. Kent Rogert received a total of $43,592.26 in both supportive and negative independent expenditures from Nebraskans for Responsible Government and the Nebraska State Education Association PAC. 14 Aggregate spending by individual donors to candidates running without an incumbent was $285,801.22 in 2005, and totaled $966,007.61 in 2006. 15 Average contributions by individual donors to incumbent senators in 2010 was $11,670.63. Average contribution by individual donors to the same candidate in 2006 was $32,920.84. 16 Average contribution from non-individual donors for the election period of 2009-2010 was $34,922.30. Average contribution from non-individual donors for the election period of 2005-2006 was $34,305.11. Average donation from non-individuals for 2009 was $13,516.34, while the same was $3,697.28 in 2005. 17 Business interest contributions for incumbents in 2010 averaged $25,017.02 per candidate and averaged $22,574.31 in 2006, whereas labor interest contributions for candidates in 2006 averaged $8,108.91 and decreased to $5,494.56 in 2010. Total non-individual reported contributions averaged $31,609.64 in 2006 and remained steady at $31,085.71 in 2010. 18 Senator Annette Dubas raised $20,850 from labor interests in 2006 and only $7,600 in 2010. Her contributions from business interests increased from $5,013.15 in 2006 to $28,933.28 in 2010. 10 22 Senator Tanya Cook (LD13), Senator Ken Haar (LD21), Senator Colby Coash (LD27). 23 Senator Jim Smith, Senator Paul Schumacher, Senator Lydia Brasch, Senator Tyson Larsen, Senator Mark Christensen. 24 The Nebraska State Education Association reported $28,394.12 in support of the Kopplin for Legislature committee in 2008. 25 Independent expenditures by the NSEA PAC in support of Kopplin for Legislature amounted to $26,878.93 with $8,956.22 in independent expenditures in the final two weeks of the general election. 26 The Nebraska Republican Party reported $31,972.89 in independent expenditures opposing the Kopplin for Legislature committee in 2008. 27 Total contributions by businesses with situs in Nebraska to candidates reviewed in this analysis was $405,877 from 2005 through 2010. 28 Total aggregate contributions from: AGC (Highway Improvement) PAC, NE Bankers State PAC, NE Chamber of Commerce and Industry PAC, Nebraska Farm Bureau PAC, Nebraska Realtors PAC, and the NEBRASKA PAC, totaled $1,489,368 and comprises contributions made to candidates who both were and were not listed on a general election ballot in 2006, 2008, or 2010. 29 In 2008, labor-affiliated contributions to the Lorenzen 2008 committee totaled $23,950 or approximately 8 percent of the total for such contributions during the 2008 election period. Labor contributions to republican Carl Lorenzen in 2008 were only surpassed by contributions to democrats Jerry Joy and Robert Giese. 30 The average aggregate non-individual contribution amount to democratic candidates was $28,591.24, whereas the average aggregate non-individual contribution amount to republican candidates was $29,449.48. 31 In 2010 the average aggregate non-individual contribution amount to democratic candidates was $43,070.24, whereas the average aggregate non-individual contribution amount to republican candidates was $24,223.63. 32 Republican party independent expenditures totaled $256,154.11 in 2006. Democratic party independent expenditures totaled $26,873.44 in 2006. 33 James Arthur Jeffers' total combined contributions in 2008 equaled $132,527.76 to Ken Haar's combined contributions of $87,433.22. The final vote count was Haar (7806) to Jeffers (7786). 34 See B-4 Campaign Statement of Nebraskans for Responsible Government, February 11, 2011. http://nadc.nol.org/ccdb/search.cgi?page=formb4&IDNO=06IRC0047 5&OFFREC=02/01/2011. 35 In 2010 Nebraskans for Responsible Government expended the following amounts in opposition to the opponents of: Teresa Whitehead ($27,325 against Sen. Jim Smith); fmr. Sen. Kent Rogert ($26,719 against Sen. Lydia Brasch); Sen. Norm Wallman ($28,329 against John Knabe); and Sen. Danielle Conrad ($25,125 against Chad Wright). Platte Institute Policy Study | Capitol Gains The Platte Institute for Economic Research: Leading the Way Our Mission: Advance public policy alternatives that foster limited government, personal responsibility and free enterprise in Nebraska. By conducting vital research and publishing timely reports, briefings, and other material, the Platte Institute will assist policy makers, the media and the general public in gaining insight to time-proven free market ideas. Platte Institute Board of Directors: Pete Ricketts Director and president of Platte Institute. He is the founder of Drakon, LLC, an asset management company in Omaha, Nebraska. He is also a member of the TD Ameritrade Board of Directors. Pete serves on the board of the Chicago Cub’s baseball team. Gail WernerRobertson Warren Arganbright Director and prominent Omaha businesswoman and philanthropist. Director and noted northcentral Nebraska lawyer and water resources activist. He has practiced throughout Nebraska and South Dakota and has represented the Niobrara Council since its creation. Michael Groene Travis Hiner Director and farm equipment sales representative. He is co-founder of the Western Nebraska Taxpayers Association. Former president and chairman of Hiner Implement, Inc., and president/chairman of Hiner Lease Company. He has served as a board member of the Kosman Banking Family since 1990 (now Platte Valley Companies). Executive Director: Jeff Dinklage Owner and operator of Herman Dinklage, Inc. A 4th-generation cattle feeder, he served on the Nebraska Cattle Board for four years and was a bank director for 20 years. He is also an avid Husker fan and enjoys flying. John S. McCollister He recently capped a 35-year career with McCollister & Co. and served five terms on the publically elected Metropolitan Utilities District Board of Directors. 900 South 74th Plaza Suite 400 Omaha, NE 68114 402.452.3737 www.platteinstitute.org A non-profit foundation, the Platte Institute relies on the resources and innovative thinking of individuals who share a commitment to liberty and the best possible quality of life for Nebraskans. 11 www.platteinstitute.org