Deep Democracy Thursday: Just 10 Groups Are Responsible for More than Half the $176.1 Million Spent in Midterm Elections

Oct. 27, 2010

Election Spending by Outside Groups Is Concentrated and Hidden, New Public Citizen Analysis Shows

Just 10 Groups Are Responsible for More than Half the $176.1 Million Spent in Midterm Elections

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Of the $176.1 million spent by outside groups using
large, often undisclosed contributions to influence the current
elections, just 10 groups are responsible for the bulk of the spending,
according to a new analysis released today by Public Citizen.

 What’s more, 59.9 percent of the money comes from undisclosed
sources. Of those contributions that have been disclosed, nearly
two-thirds has come from just 0.12 percent of the contributors. The
analysis of data from Public Citizen’s Stealth PACs database, available
at http://www.citizen.org/documents/2010-Independent-Electioneering-Activities.pdf, shows that:

• At least 149 independent groups have spent money to influence this
year’s elections  (according to Federal Election Commission (FEC)
reports through Oct. 25) in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court’s
decision in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, which
permitted corporations, unions and organizations they fund to spend
unlimited money to influence elections.
• Those groups have spent $176.1 million. Of that, $114.6 million, or 65 percent, was spent by only 10 groups.
• From the 10 groups, money spent on behalf of Republicans has outpaced
money spent on behalf of Democrats $79.4 million to $28.5 million.
• Five groups have spent money on more than 35 races each. Eleven groups have spent money on more than 20 races each.
• Eighty groups have not disclosed any information about the sources of
their money. These groups have spent $105.4 million of the $176.1
million total. Only $70.7 million of the spending – just 40.1 percent –
has come from disclosed sources.
• Thirty groups have entered the fray for the first time in 2010 in the past two weeks.

 “Outside group funding is shaking the foundations of our electoral
democracy, but the situation is far worse than it seems at first blush,”
said Robert Weissman, president of Public Citizen. “A tiny number of
organizations, relying on a tiny number of corporate and fat cat
contributors, are spending most of the money on the vicious attack ads
dominating the airwaves. The vast majority of donors remain hidden
behind a veil of secrecy, in many cases of doubtful legality. The
biggest surge in funding will come in the next week. And this election
cycle’s spending is merely a prelude to something far worse in 2012. The
trigger for all this was the Supreme Court’s decision in Citizens
United; the key to repairing our democracy is a constitutional amendment
to undo the decision.”

The analysis includes charts identifying the groups spending the most
to influence this year’s elections, the groups engaged in the most
contests, the races that have been the subject of the most outside
spending and the contests focused on by the independent groups that have
sprung up in the past two weeks.

The Stealth PACs site, available at http://www.citizen.org/stealthpacs,
allows users to search the expenditures and limited contribution data
of independent groups that are intervening in this year’s elections
using contributions of more than $5,000 or undisclosed contributions.

The site also enumerates the outside groups’ expenditures on each
race, discloses the vendors and other recipients of expenditures of
$1,000 or more, and provides links to the FEC filings on expenditure
data.

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Public Citizen is a national, nonprofit consumer advocacy
organization based in Washington, D.C. For more information, please
visit www.citizen.org.