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The GOP's Money War: the Tea Party vs. Business
Monday, October 21, 2013 2:53 PM
NIKI2
Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...
Quote:Frustrated that party leaders haven't been able to corral the Tea Party, Republican business donors are taking matters (and their money) into their own hands. Tea Partiers in Congress showed little regard for big business when they threatened to blow through the debt ceiling — a move that many biz leaders see as the final straw. As David French, the top lobbyist at the National Retail Federation, told The New York Times on October 9: "We are looking at ways to counter the rise of an ideological brand of conservatism that, for lack of a better word, is more anti-establishment than it has been in the past. We have come to the conclusion that sitting on the sidelines is not good enough." That was a week before Congress reached a budget deal to reopen the government and raise the debt ceiling (without any GOP "wins" like delaying or chipping away at parts of Obamacare). Now that the shutdown is over, wealthy donors are not ready to forgive and forget. Official talks to develop some kind of fundraising entity (thought probably not a super PAC) have begun. Politico reports on Friday: "New York City GOP mega-bundler Paul Singer has held a series of informal, and a few very formal, discussions in recent months with other extremely wealthy donors about how best to spend their cash in 2014, including debating the idea of forming a new entity to play a serious role in the midterm races." It should be noted that Singer is a major donor to the Club for Growth, which backed Sen. Ted Cruz. The American Bank Association gave thousands of dollars to Tea Party candidates in the 2012 cycle, but is beginning to regret those investments. The Daily Beast reported on Thursday that Cruz, Rep. Ted Yoho (perhaps the most outspoken default denier in the GOP), Rep. Scott Garrett, and Rep. Mick "there is no default" Mulvaney all received donations from the ABA. The ABA would not comment on this giving history, but its president, Frank Keating, warned of the catastrophe default would bring during the shutdown. "One thing about Wall Street, it is very aware of who is working in their best interest," Michael J. Driscoll, a former managing director of Bear, Stearns & Co, told Politico. "What we want [in a candidate] is a conservative business person, but someone who in many respects will be more realistic, in our opinion," Bruce Josten, the top lobbyist at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce (which is the biggest lobbying organization in Washington), told The New York Times. Business donors aren't ready to abandon the Republican party, they just want the party not to be controlled by a House ready to blow through the debt ceiling. So how will big business successfully funnel money like Tea Party groups Freedomworks and Heritage Action? Well, by acting like the Tea Party and focusing on grassroots activism, according to the National Journal's Alex Roarty. So they’re talking about taking an approach with a smaller footprint, about regaining leverage in GOP circles by encouraging grassroots business activism. That means getting local (and politically moderate) business owners to pressure their tea-party lawmakers toward negotiation and compromise, and nudging these local (and more politically moderate) business leaders to run for office themselves. Anything, lobbyists and Republican strategists say, to create the impression that this is an organic development—that Washington and national business interests are keeping their heavy hands out of the districts. And so a different kind of funding battle begins. http://www.theatlanticwire.com/politics/2013/10/war-between-tea-party-and-its-business-donors/70686/
Monday, October 21, 2013 3:22 PM
Tuesday, October 22, 2013 2:27 PM
Quote:Investors around the world are weighing the implications of a Republican-engineered standstill on raising the U.S. Treasury's borrowing power, and it wouldn't be surprising if major financial market dealers on Wall Street are in the process of re-thinking their political allegiances. Will America's largest banks be forced to taper their support of the Republican party and embrace a Democratic caucus that has been accused of vilifying the financial services industry? If the U.S. government's credibility survives the latest bout of budget brinkmanship, financial heavyweights such as Goldman Sachs (GS_), JPMorgan (JPM_), Bank of America (BAC_) and Citigroup (C_) may conclude it is in their self-interest to stand behind an often adversarial Democratic party in upcoming mid-term and presidential elections. Such a scenario, while counterintuitive, would actually be in line with recent trends in the political largess of Wall Street's most powerful players. The last time major financial intermediaries were staring down an abyss of total collapse -- the 2008 financial crisis -- their lobbying budgets and employee contributions tilted decidedly toward the Democratic party and presidential candidate Barack Obama, who was running on a platform that counted financial regulation as a centerpiece issue. There was a clear rationale at the time. While Obama and his Democratic colleagues made no secret of their intent to drive regulatory stakes through the heart of Wall Street's proprietary and derivative trading desks, at least there was a hope that those lawmakers could propel the industry from the brink of collapse. The alternative, after all, was a Republican party that voted down the first iteration of then-Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson's Troubled Asset Relief Program just days after the collapse of investment bank Lehman Brothers. As weeks dragged on between the failure of Lehman Brothers and the eventual implementation of TARP, which included the support of a only small minority of Republican legislators, many lawmakers in the party took to the House and Senate floor to advocate balancing the federal budget and letting banks fail as an alternative to the extraordinary measures eventually taken by the Treasury and the Federal Reserve. Wall Street political spending went roughly 60% toward the Democratic party in the 2008 election. But nearly a year after Romney's decisive defeat in the 2012 presidential elections, the Republican party has moved far to the right. Junior lawmakers like Sen. Ted Cruz (Texas, R) and Sen. Mike Lee (Utah, R) are now torch bearers for a strain in the party that is willing to shut the federal government and put the U.S. Treasury on the verge of default as a means to negotiate a de-implementation of the Affordable Healthcare Act (ACA), otherwise known as "Obamacare." Similar manufactured crises may re-emerge given the short-term accord that has emerged. If so, it wouldn't be surprising to see a pendulum of support swing decidedly toward a more organized and governable Democratic party. The debt ceiling crisis may be over for now, however investors may soon begin to see evidence of a financial impact. There also could be a political reckoning. http://www.thestreet.com/story/12071602/1/wall-street-stares-into-democratic-abyss.html
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