Tuesday, July 24, 2018

Should Democrats stop doing fundraisers? Seriously.

The wine and cheese fundraiser may be dangerous for Democrats. The Bernie Sanders wing of the progressive left is skeptical of them.


Golden
A fundraiser is a signal that the Democrat is comfortable with the financially comfortable. 

Does it suggest the candidate is not really progressive enough?

A goal of this blog is to notice the things that are so obvious they are un-noticed.  We have taken the wine and cheese fundraiser for granted as a source of good, clean money. The best money. 

Now it is being noticed, and not everyone on the left likes them.

There has been a division between clean money and unclean money.  Unclean money comes from people or groups with an obvious self-interest in policy. We understand that a group, say the Oregon Gasoline Dealers Association, might have an agenda of reversing rules monitoring gasoline spill runoff. They give money to politicians based on who agrees and disagrees with penalties on spills into nearby waterways.  People consider this distasteful, but legal campaign financing. Dirty money.

Then there is clean money. Call up people who generally share your party and point of view and ask them for money for your campaign. There is no implied policy commitment, just general agreement. Candidates call people with capacity to give, perhaps inviting them to an event where a certain amount of social affirmation takes place.  There it is: the wine and cheese fundraiser.

Click.
In the local State Senate race between Democrat Jeff Golden and Republican Jessica Gomez, the distinction between these two forms of campaign financing is shaping up to be a major issue. Gomez is receiving money from PACs. For example, the Oregon Business and Industry PAC just gave her $25,000. That PAC itself aggregates money from businesses around the state. Oregon has an excellent, easy to navigate system for looking at contributions and expenditures. Try it yourself. Go to Oregon Secretary of State's Orestar system.  Here is a link to the 
"Transaction Search" screen: 
https://secure.sos.state.or.us/orestar/gotoPublicTransactionSearch.do

Just Click on the Link for PAC. It shows who donates to them.
On the second line, for "Filer" 
type in either "Jessica Gomez" or "Jeff Golden." Then click "Search." Bingo!  Up comes the transactions for expenditures and contributions. 

If the contribution comes from a PAC you can click on the PAC name and get a detail of who gives to them, like this one from the Oregon Business and Industry Candidate PAC.

A point that is instantly apparent when one compares the two candidates is the simple fact that Gomez gets lots and lots of business and industry PAC money, and Golden does not. Golden has money from familiar local names who have made contributions of $250, $500, and $1,000, plus some out of state people (marked in red). Don't trust my observation. Look for yourself.

"Clean money" and "dirty money."  Voters can decide for themselves if the distinction between the sources of money is important. Many will not. Still, the difference is transparent thanks to the reporting system Here is the main link to Orestar. Click: Main Page. Look on the left for "Transactions"  

I think voters notice the content of the ad not the source of the money. If the source is to move up to voters' consciousness, it will be because media in its various forms bring it to light. 

That includes this blog.

The source of money is important because it reflects what kind of people and political interests support the candidate. It reveals who the candidate really is.  Gomez gets money from business PACs.  Golden gets money from prosperous politically involved people.  Gomez also gets contributions from prosperous politically involved people, but the overwhelming majority comes from PACs. Look for yourself.


So, is this a big winner for Golden. Maybe not. For one thing, lots of people want a pro-business candidate.

Getting so-called "clean money" from individual donors has become controversial within 
progressive Democratic circles. Bernie Sanders just sent out a fundraising appeal titled "A Tale of Two Different Meetings." He spoke of his own well attended rally in Kansas City, that headlined both him and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. He contrasted and condemned a Democratic event elsewhere. "There was quite a different event in Columbus, Ohio. Two hundred and fifty wealthy invited Democratic donors" attended a event. Sanders' enemy? Democratic "Party members and fundraisers."

Click: Esquire
People writing in Facebook's various progressive sites had condemned Kate Brown's event in Medford last week, one I helped host. How dare she hobnob with the donor class? Sellout.

Charles Pierce, writing in Esquire, says that Democrats need to be bolder, more progressive, and to choose between the "millionaires and billionaires"--i.e. the comfortable people who have succeeded in the current economic structure--and the working people who have been squeezed by the system. The people who show up at wine and cheese fundraisers for people like Jeff Golden are people who are financially comfortable enough to write a campaign check. 

Bernie Sanders' way to raise money.
Bernie Sanders has a different fundraising technique: emails to a national audience that likes and supports him. People click a donate button and send $10, $25, $40. It is nice clean money--donations from people with a general amorphous agenda of support. It works for him. It won't work for everyone, and certainly not new local candidates.

The distinction between two ways of raising money by Democrats relates both to potential policy direction--incremental change vs. big change now--and to the tribes within the Democratic Party, Hillary vs. Bernie. Wine and cheese fundraisers imply moderation. The people who write $250 checks are not struggling working people waiting for payday to buy groceries. Bernie Sanders says the future of the Democratic Party is to abandon those people and to embrace a real, large, motivated constituency of working people who understand that those comfortable physicians and lawyers and business people at the wine and cheese fundraisers are part of the problem.

Both Jessica Gomez and Jeff Golden have campaign finance problems they will need to negotiate. Gomez's is that she is inundated by money from business and industry PACs and will need to explain it. How can she be independent of them? She has plenty of money but it will look "dirty" to some people who look closely at it. Who will she represent?

Golden's is that the only plausible way for him to compete is to get lots of local money from individual contributions, money sufficient to get his own message out. He will need money from some version of the wine and cheese fundraiser, and the people who can attend those and write checks are the "donor class”.  In the current environment some people on Golden's left will wonder what is wrong with him, that so many prosperous Medford and Ashland liberals seem to like him.




11 comments:

Rick Millward said...

People with assets have a greater stake in the political process, as well as corporations so it's no mystery why they donate. Where Progressives run into trouble is that they are in part advocating for principles that favor social welfare programs and a lot of people with money have a hard time understanding why, though it should be obvious.

The Regressive worldview is not adapted to the modern age. Case in point: I have observed that in general family owned enterprises tend to be "conservative" (broadly speaking) and include the children. This builds generational wealth and insulates them from the trials of the working world and reinforces the view that they deserve the prosperity they enjoy above those with lessor resources. Rightly or wrongly, politics follow. Could this be a fundamental factor in the Republican lock on ORD2?

Art Baden said...

In a perfect world, politicians wouldn’t have to compete for money; they would only have to compete for hearts and minds. But in the America we live in (vis a vis the one we may wish we lived in), the path to hearts and minds runs through the media - tv, radio and social media - and that takes money, lots of money. Wealthy people have a good and selfish reason to support progressive candidates - they understand that the current system is unsustainable and they want their children to live in a better world. When progressives conflate wealth with corruption, they are being intellectually lazy. Rule number one of politics: determine who are your friends and who are your enemies. Rule number two: Don’t make the perfect the enemy of the possible.

Diane Newell Meyer said...

I agree a lot with Art. I wish we would focus on a candidate's positions on the issues, and on the track record they have of living good values. Jeff meets those standards, as does Kate Brown. Who donates money has become a bigger issue than looking at where the candidates stand. That hurt Clinton, and other candidates.
Bernie is at it again, adding fuel to the division within the liberals and progressives, when he of all people should know how harmful that is.

Anonymous said...

We need major reform that will get money out of our political system. Until then, we cannot expect our candidates to win without playing the game as it is currently designed. We may think that it's more noble and "cleaner" to avoid the big money, but it's also a more likely path to defeat. Who does that serve? This is why democrats tend to lose. Republicans can coalesce around a candidate because they are perpetually focused on the end game. They know that it's better for them to elect a republican that it is to fight among themselves and have the other guy win. We STILL don't do that very well . . . even after the "protest vote", or lack thereof, disaster of 2016.

Anonymous said...

Establishment Democrats, mentally conceive of a “Blue Wave”: Ginormous amounts of money from the Donor Class to fund the Air War. That’s very different from the “knock on doors” Ground War espoused by AOC and the left generally.

Peter, you are conflating two ideas in one post, I'm sure you realize.

Up Close: Road to the White House said...

Ground wars cost money. Brochures need to be printed. Staff needs to be hired to coordinate volunteers. I am conflatingfundraising from individual donors and grassroots because grassroots needs money, too. No one spoke of a big Air War.

How about you write a good guest post comment with a viable strategy for winning a grassroots campaign in an Oregon House or Senate District without fundraising from individuals. Please. I am tired of writing checks, and readers would benefit from your counsel.

Curt said...

I spent $2,858 total in my GOP senate primary campaign versus Jessica Gomez, and I got 48% of the GOP vote. Gomez spent almost $100,000. If you have decent name recognition (which I think I have), then I don't think that you need to spend $400,000 (like Dave Dotterrer did) to win this senate race. I think that I lost in most part to the smear campaign waged by the dirtbag Mail Tribune. I don't think that Jeff Golden will face a smear campaign from the Mail Tribune, but he will get smeared mightily from the GOP Senate Leadership Committee. I think that Jeff Golden already has good name recognition in the district, and the majority of voters already have an idea of where he stands on many issues. Golden is definitely more well-known than Gomez. I think that Golden will get the bulk of the democrat vote, just because they are active and loyal. I don't think Golden even has to spend $100,000 to win. I think that Golden can win this senate race on $50,000. You have to spend wisely, like on radio ads. Conversely, I think that Gomez will be spending $750,000, because she's a shitty candidate who needs lots of money to sell herself. In my mind, if Golden wants to win, then he needs to avoid his EXTREME positions (like on oil and climate change), and focus instead on the middle class, and making their lives better. That's what really matters. Focus on the masses. Gomez clearly is the puppet (whore) of big business and PACS. I would paint Gomez as a "ho". Golden needs to focus on Main Street and families if he wants to win.

Anonymous said...

Climate change or Global warming that 99% of scientists agree on is "extreme"?
I always wondered why Republicans hate science. Or is it just economics? Sell more coal. Some people have even sold the idea of "clean" coal. No such thing. It's dirty and pollutes the air. You can't fool nature.

Curt said...

Science is not a poll, and it's a false and ignorant statement to say that 99% of scientists agree (that it's human-caused), because they don't. I don't hate science. I hate stupidity, ignorance, and people who follow the crowd. Climate change is not human-caused. The climate has been changing for billions of years (before humans even existed).

Anonymous said...

Does anyone but me think it's strange that Curt is giving such good advice to Jeff Golden? (What was that quote about "strange bedfellows"?)
According to the SOS, Golden has already raised $60.000, so it's in the bag (according to Curt), move along folks, nothing to see here and no need to return those mail in ballot thingies ...

Curt said...

Why is it strange? Two liberal democrats are running for the senate seat (Gomez is a liberal democrat), and I want the lessor of the two evils to win. I think that Gomez (and the corrupt criminal gang that she fronts) are that dangerous. I hate bought government, and that's what Gomez is about. Besides that, I don't want RINOs like Gomez to become the new face of the republican party. Glad you think my advice is good. I've already have a continuing dialog with Cathy Shaw, so my intentions are real. I want Golden to win this race (just this one time versus Gomez).