CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“NO LIMIT TO STATE PARTIES’ MONEY LAUNDERING”
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“NO LIMIT TO STATE PARTIES’ MONEY LAUNDERING”
Just in case anyone wonders what the
real issue was in the very close race between Eric Bauman and Kimberly Ellis
over who would become the next chairperson of the California Democratic Party,
it was money.
No, not salary or other personal
emoluments, although Bauman – the party’s longtime Los Angeles County leader –
has received his share of payments from ballot initiative campaigns. This was
really about who would control the purse strings of the nation’s most
successful state party and thus decide who gets its many millions of laundered
dollars in each election cycle.
It’s all because the year-2000
Proposition 34 made party heads in California the state’s most powerful
unpublicized political kingmakers, allowing huge contributions to party
committees which then parcel funds out where they like. It’s a way for donors to
circumvent campaign donation limits with identities partially concealed. This
is money laundering, plain, simple and also legal.
The current dicey system is now sure
to continue at least another two years, too, as state legislators (about
two-thirds of them Democrats) the other day killed a bill making gifts to
political parties subject to the same limits imposed on donations to
candidates.
In 2014, for example, the state
Democratic Party passed out $10.4 million, while also influencing where the
party’s many county central committees funneled their millions. Republicans,
meanwhile, doled out just a little more than half as much as Democrats, as
billionaires, big unions and big business donors realize the GOP has little
chance to retake control of state government anytime soon.
The biggest recipients of party money
that year included Democrat Luis Chavez, ranked No. 1 with $2.35 million in
party money, who lost a tight Hanford/Fresno-area state Senate race to
Republican Andy Vidak, the No. 5-ranked recipient of party money with $2.1
million. Over the years, the bigger-money recipients in close races have
usually won.
Yes, ideology also had a lot to do
with the extremely close Bauman-Ellis contest, where establishment candidate
Bauman eked out a 60-vote win over Richmond political organizer Ellis. (It’s
sign of California’s times that Bauman, an openly gay man favoring gun
controls, easy access to abortions and strong environmental protections, was
considered the more conservative candidate.)
This was essentially a re-run of last
year’s Hillary Clinton-Bernard Sanders primary election contest, where the
liberal feminist Clinton was not liberal enough for many Democrats. Ellis, a
Sanders supporter, benefited from that faction’s strong turnouts at district
meetings where many party convention delegates are chosen. Weeks after the
state party convention, she still had not conceded the outcome of the
convention vote.
Bauman’s apparent win probably will
see many more moderate Democrats get party backing and money than if Ellis had
won. It means Sanders backers will at least have to bide their time before
making another try at taking over the state party and being able to funnel
party cash to ultra-liberals.
But the Legislature’s refusal to clean
up the current system is what really cries out for change. On the Republican
side, for example, billionaire Charles Munger in 2014 gave $3.3 million to the
party, with the ability to request privately where it would end up. This means
there is no public record of who benefited from his largesse, while there would
be if he’d given directly to candidates. Essentially, Munger and other big
donors like the Service Employees International Union ($2.3 million),
California Teachers Assn. ($676,000), Philip Morris USA and affiliates
($650,000) and PG&E Corp. ($526,000) can give to whoever they like without
anyone holding the eventual winners’ feet to the fire over where they’re
getting their funds and whether they later vote to benefit their benefactors.
Among last year’s biggest donors were
Indian casinos, utilities and healthcare companies, each interest having a huge
stake in the makeup of the Legislature. As in 2014, there was no public
accounting last year of where their money went.
This disgraceful system is a major
legacy of former Democratic Gov. Gray Davis, recalled in 2003 partly because of
his own political fund-raising practices. Since Prop. 34 passed, one tally
shows, the state Democratic Party has spent fully $401 million on candidates
and campaigns.
With that kind of money and
commensurate influence at stake, it’s no wonder this spring’s contest to head
that party was so hotly contested.
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Elias is author of the current book “The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It,” now available in an updated third edition. His email address is tdelias@aol.com
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