Keeping an Eye on the Billionaires in YOUR State
Normally, MeanMesa is reluctant to simply "re-post" a lengthy newspaper article, but this one has made itself a startling exception to that rule. This is copied directly from The Guardian. As a visitor to Short Current Essays, MeanMesa emphatically suggests that you take a few minutes to read the entire thing.
Be confident that future MeanMesa posts will reference this excellent reporting. All the links in the original Guardian article are left enabled in the content as it is quoted in this post. You can visit the site here.
• State Policy Network co-ordinating plans across 34 US states
• Strategy to 'release residents from government dependency'
• Revelations come amid growing scrutiny of tax-exempt charities
• Read key excerpts from the SPN proposals
• Portland Press Herald: group's plan to eliminate taxes
• Texas Observer: the money behind the fight to wreck Medicaid
• Strategy to 'release residents from government dependency'
• Revelations come amid growing scrutiny of tax-exempt charities
• Read key excerpts from the SPN proposals
• Portland Press Herald: group's plan to eliminate taxes
• Texas Observer: the money behind the fight to wreck Medicaid
Ed Pilkington in New York and Suzanne Goldenberg in Washington
theguardian.com,
The State Policy Network has an annual war chest of $83m drawn from major donors like David Koch, above, and food giant Kraft. Photograph: Mark Lennihan/AP |
The
strategy for the state-level organisations, which describe themselves
as "free-market think tanks", includes proposals from six different
states for cuts in public sector pensions, campaigns to reduce the wages
of government workers and eliminate income taxes, school voucher
schemes to counter public education, opposition to Medicaid, and a
campaign against regional efforts to combat greenhouse gas emissions
that cause climate change.
The
policy goals are contained in a set of funding proposals obtained by
the Guardian. The proposals were co-ordinated by the State Policy
Network, an alliance of groups that act as incubators of conservative
strategy at state level.
The documents contain 40 funding proposals from 34 states, providing a blueprint for the conservative agenda in 2014. In partnership with the Texas Observer and the Portland Press Herald in Maine,
the Guardian is publishing SPN's summary of all the proposals to give
readers and news outlets full and fair access to state-by-state
conservative plans that could have significant impact throughout the US,
and to allow the public to reach its own conclusions about whether
these activities comply with the spirit of non-profit tax-exempt
charities.
Details of the co-ordinated approach come amid growing
federal scrutiny of the political activities of tax-exempt charities.
Last week the Obama administration announced a new clampdown on those groups that violate tax rules by engaging in direct political campaigning.
Most
of the "think tanks" involved in the proposals gathered by the State
Policy Network are constituted as 501(c)(3) charities that are exempt
from tax by the Internal Revenue Service. Though the groups are not
involved in election campaigns, they are subject to strict restrictions
on the amount of lobbying they are allowed to perform. Several of the
grant bids contained in the Guardian documents propose the launch of
"media campaigns" aimed at changing state laws and policies, or refer to
"advancing model legislation" and "candidate briefings", in ways that
arguably cross the line into lobbying.
The documents also cast
light on the nexus of funding arrangements behind radical right wing
campaigns. The State Policy Network (SPN) has members in each of the 50
states and an annual war chest of $83m drawn from major corporate donors
that include the energy tycoons the Koch brothers, the tobacco company
Philip Morris, food giant Kraft and the multinational drugs company
GlaxoSmithKline.
SPN gathered the grant proposals from the 34
states on 29 July. Ranging in size from requests of $25,000 to $65,000,
the plans were submitted for funding to the Searle Freedom Trust, a
private foundation that in 2011 donated almost $15m to largely right wing
causes.
The trust, founded in 1998, draws on the family fortune
of the late Dan Searle of the GD Searle & Company empire – now part
of Pfizer – which created NutraSweet. The trust is a major donor to such
mainstays of the American right and the Tea Parties as Americans for
Prosperity, the American Legislative Exchange Council (Alec), the
Heartland Institute and the State Policy Network itself.
SPN's
link to Searle, the Guardian documents show, was Stephen Moore, an
editorial writer with the Wall Street Journal. Moore, who advises Searle
on its grant-giving activities, was asked by SPN to rank the proposals
in two halves – a "top 20" and "bottom 20". It is not known how many of
the 40 proposals were approved for funding, nor which may have been
successful.
Moore told the Guardian that he is an unpaid adviser
to the Searle Foundation, having been a lifetime family friend to Dan
Searle. He said the grant decisions were made by Searle's sons and
grandsons based upon the late businessman's "commitment to the
advancement of free enterprise and individual rights".
The
proposals in the grant bids contained in the Guardian documents go
beyond a commitment to free enterprise, however. They include:
•
"reforms" to public employee pensions raised by SPN think tanks in
Arizona, Colorado, Minnesota, Missouri, New Jersey and Pennsylvania;
• tax elimination or reduction schemes in Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Maryland, Nebraska and New York;
• an education voucher system to promote private and home schooling in Florida;
• campaigns against worker and union rights in Delaware and Nevada;
• opposition to Medicaid in Georgia, North Carolina and Utah.
SPN's
president, Tracie Sharp, told the Guardian that "as a pro-freedom
network of think tanks, we focus on issues like workplace freedom,
education reform, and individual choice in healthcare: backbone issues
of a free people and a free society."
In its grant bid, the Maine
Heritage Policy Center asked for $35,000 to support a "research and
demonstration project" that would "release residents from extreme
government dependency". It would turn the state's poorest area into what the Portland Press Herald describes in its report from Washington County as "a gigantic tax-free zone".
Dubbed "Free ME", the initiative would eliminate state income tax and
sale taxes from residents and businesses until the economic conditions
in the county rise to the state wide average. The hole in the county's
income from lost tax revenues – estimated at $35m a year by the think
tank – would be filled through budget cuts.
Medicaid is the target
of a grant proposal coming from the Texas Public Policy Foundation
(TPPF), an influential think tank funded largely by right wing foundations
and corporations including the energy tycoons the Koch brothers,
tobacco company Altria and the telecoms giant Verizon. The Texas
Observer has investigated the contents of the document and points out
that in its request for $40,000 from Searle, TPPF claims credit for
blocking Medicaid expansion in the state.
"[S]topping Medicaid
expansion is just the first step," the proposal says, adding that the
"missing piece to complete our message is an economic forecast" showing
how block-granting Medicaid would "bring significant savings" to the
state. That information would then be used to garner attention from the
media.
The Observer describes TPPF as "one of the most influential
state-level think tanks in the nation". One of its former executives was
Ted Cruz, now US senator for Texas, who today is the keynote speaker at
the national conference in Washington of SPN's sister organisation, the
American Legislative Exchange Council (Alec).
Several hundred
miles to the north east in Massachusetts, the Beacon Hill Institute
requested $38,825 from Searle to weaken or roll back a five-year effort
by states in the region to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The
institute said it would carry out research into the economic impact of
the cap-and-trade system operating in nine states known as the Regional
Greenhouse Gas Initiative.
BHI appeared to have already arrived at
its conclusions in advance, admitting from the outset that the aim of
the research was to arm opponents of cap-and-trade with data for their
arguments, and to weaken or destroy the initiative. "Success will take
the form of media recognition, dissemination to stakeholders, and
legislative activity that will pare back or repeal RGGI," the funding
proposal says.
The Beacon Hill Institute, technically an affiliate rather than a
full member of the SPN, operates out of the economics department of
Suffolk University in Boston. David Tuerck, its executive director,
denied the group had engaged in lobbying. "There is never any lobbying,"
he told the Guardian. "Maybe I need to look up the definition again,
but lobbying consists of buttonholing legislators and other policymakers
to get a particular result on a particular issue, and we never do
that."
But Suffolk University, which hosts the Beacon Hill
Institute as a research arm of its economics department, sharply
criticised the research proposal to the Searle Foundation. In a
statement to the Guardian, the university said the grant bid had not
been submitted to the university, as required, and that the university
would never have approved the proposal. "The stated research goals, as
written, were inconsistent with Suffolk University's mission."
Watchdogs
that monitor the work of SPN and other conservative networks in the US
said that the centralised coordination of state-level campaigns showed a
significant attempt to build local activism into a nationwide movement.
Lisa Graves, executive director of the Center for Media and Democracy,
which issued a recent report on SPN,
said that the local identity of the network's members belied a larger
purpose. "They appear to be advocating purely local interests but what
they are promoting is part of a larger national template to radically
remake our government in a way that undermines public institutions and
the rights of workers," she said.
The SPN said that its
co-ordinating role was justified because local and state issues were
increasingly impinging on national politics. "There's no mystery here,"
Sharp said. "The whole idea of a state policy network is that individual
thinktanks can be in communication, share best practices and analysis,
and combine their efforts when they see a benefit from doing so."
Some
of the grant bids to Searle focus specifically on prominent local
politicians the thinktanks hope to influence. The grant bid that
emanated from New Jersey, from the Common Sense Institute
(CISNJ), another tax-exempt "research and education organization",
floats the idea of a campaign to support the efforts of the Republican
governor Chris Christie in ending the ability of public employees to
claim untaken sick days and vacation leave in their retirement packages.
"Governor
Chris Christie has been waging a war to eliminate this practice; and
CSINJ would like to provide ammunition," the proposal says. The
thinktank plans to produce a "research study" which it would call
"Busting the Boat Checks" – an allusion to the phrase Christie uses to
denote the watercraft retirees are claimed to buy on the back of sick
and holiday leave payments.
The institute conceives a "media campaign" with its aim being the "full elimination of unused sick and vacation leave payouts".
"We believe our study can be used to sway public sentiment further and be used as a brandisher for reform in Trenton," it says.
CSINJ's president, Jerry Cantrell, denied that the grant bid involved any element of lobbying, insisting instead that his group was providing a service that in the past might have been done by the decimated local media.
"CSINJ is an education organization focused
on providing the public with facts and the truth. We don't represent
any interest besides the folks who are burdened by this practice – the
taxpayers," he said.
He said the proposal was focused on the
"abusive practice of accumulating sick or vacation day payments over an
entire career and using them as retirement bonus. We've seen too many
instances of high level individuals working out the door with
$500,000-$750,000 claiming to have never missed a day in 30 years of
employment."
The proposal from the Illinois Policy Institute for a
campaign to deal with Chicago's government worker pensions crisis by
switching to 401(k)-style retirement plans similarly focuses on a
politician – in this case Mayor Rahm Emanuel. The proposal says that
"Mayor Emanuel has privately expressed the need for 401(k)-style changes
to truly achieve reform."
The institute plans to "leverage the leadership potential of Mayor
Emanuel … as the spark for wider pension changes in Illinois." It adds
that "friendly legislators would be welcome to draft legislation
modelled on our policy work and work in tandem with Mayor Emanuel to
move it forward in the legislative process."
John Tillman, CEO of
the Illinois Policy Institute, told the Guardian that Emanuel had been
"an outspoken proponent of pension reform that includes moving to a
401(k)-style, defined contribution system." He saw no problem with the
lobbying that the think tank undertakes.
"We are not allowed to do
any campaigning or electioneering, and we don't. We are allowed to
spend a significant percentage of our expenditures on lobbying and we
are very proactive in lobbying for liberty-based policy, including the
urgently needed pension reform. We report our activities accordingly."
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