By Paul Abowd
The Center for Public Integrity
Voters haven’t had a clue who is behind American Tradition Partnership — the Colorado group pushing to rewrite Montana’s campaign finance laws — and that’s just the way the secretive nonprofit wants it.
A 2010 fundraising pitch to its donors promised that “no politician, no bureaucrat, and no radical environmentalist will ever know you helped,” and “the only thing we plan on reporting is our success to contributors like you.”
“Montana has very strict limits on contributions to candidates,” reads the document, obtained by The Center for Public Integrity. “but there is no limit to how much you give to this program.”
As for the state’s ban on corporate money in elections?
“Corporate contributions are completely legal,” the pitch assures potential funders. “This is one of the rare programs you will find where that’s the case.”
“You can get some traction with that pitch,” says Dennis Unsworth, who led the state’s investigation of the group in 2010 that unearthed the document. “If you can offer to influence the elections outside the law, that’s a great calling card.”
For three election cycles, ATP has plastered the state with mailers attacking "radical environmental groups" and moderate Republicans.
While ATP’s funders are still mostly a mystery, the Center for Public Integrity has identified what records indicate is the secretive organization’s founding donor — an anti-union owner of Colorado’s largest furniture chain — and discovered a long list of affiliations with national tea party groups funded by the conservative billionaire Koch brothers.
This election, ATP has vowed to keep Attorney General Steve Bullock out of the governor’s mansion. In October, voters received a brazen multi-page newspaper-style flier placing the Democratic candidate in a photo lineup with three registered sex offenders.
But the group hit the national spotlight thanks to three landmark court battles with Bullock and the state of Montana.
The U.S. Supreme Court in the Citizens United decision invalidated a federal ban on corporate spending similar to what 24 states had on their books, but Montana held fast to its law. ATP sued to overturn it, losing to Bullock in the state’s high court. But in June, the nonprofit prevailed on appeal to the nation’s highest court.
ATP is pushing past its Citizens United challenge with two more suits to eliminate Montana’s low contribution limits and disclosure rules, setting up a potential challenge to contribution limits nationwide.
Tea party ties
One of ATP’s founders is former Montana Congressman Ron Marlenee, who served from 1977 until the state dropped from two House seats to one in 1992. Marlenee used his D.C. Rolodex to raise money for the fledgling pro-energy group, which registered in Colorado in 2008.
Marlenee rallied a tea party crowd in Bozeman in 2010, appearing on stage with a half-burned American flag, which he said he wrestled away from a “liberal Marxist” protester.
ATP has joined tea party lobbying efforts, signing at least two letters to Congress in the last year urging an end to tax credits for renewable resource industries. The letters were signed by Koch-funded groups including Americans for Prosperity and tea party boosters FreedomWorks, Club for Growth and Art Pope’s John Locke Foundation.
In its 2008 application for tax-exempt status as a 501(c)(4) “social welfare” organization, ATP listed its “primary donor” as Jacob Jabs, Colorado’s largest furniture retailer and a donor to Republican candidates and causes. Jabs pledged a $300,000 contribution to get ATP on its feet, according to IRS records obtained by the Center for Public Integrity.
Jabs, through a spokesman, on Monday said he did not make a donation and has "never heard of" ATP or the group's previous incarnation.
"He did not commit to the funds indicated by Athena Dalton in the filing so clearly he did not give them funds," wrote Charlie Shaulis, director of communications for American Furniture Warehouse, Jabs' company, in an email to I-News Network in Colorado.
Dalton wrote a letter to the IRS asking the agency to speed up the process for awarding it nonprofit status. The letter states that the approval was needed quickly, otherwise Jabs would not make a contribution. The agency gave it the thumbs up four days later.
The amount of the gift would be double Jabs’ total federal campaign contributions since 1997, which have gone exclusively to Republican candidates and party organizations, according to FEC records.
Jabs also poured money into a failed “right to work” ballot initiative in Colorado, becoming a television spokesman for the 2008 anti-union effort.
ATP shares resources and a D.C. mailing address with an affiliated 501(c)(3) educational nonprofit called the American Tradition Institute, which works in tandem with a network of Koch-funded think tanks to oppose wind energy and dispute the reality of climate change. It has launched lawsuits against state mandates for renewable energy usage and targeted climate scientists in academia.
The libertarian Koch brothers, Charles and David, have become better known in recent years with the rise of the tea party. They are principal owners of Koch Industries Inc., the second-largest privately owned company in the U.S., with major investments in the energy industry.
ATI has accepted donations from the Atlas Economic Research Foundation, a free-market think tank underwritten by Exxon Mobil and Koch foundation money, according to a report by the Institute for Southern Studies.
Its director of litigation Chris Horner is also a fellow at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, a free-market think tank that has taken a half-million dollars from Koch foundations since 1998, according to the report.
‘We won’t be shut up, or shut down’
In 2008, American Tradition Partnership flooded the state with mailers attacking ten state legislators, but reported only $12,000 in spending for the entire election.
An investigation by the state’s Commission on Political Practices concluded that the group had broken state law requiring outside spending groups to register as political action committees and disclose all donors and spending.
Commissioner Unsworth concluded in October 2010 that ATP had registered a “sham organization” called the Coalition for Energy and Environment and vastly under-reported its activity. The PAC’s reported spending, said the state, would have barely covered the cost of postage for the raft of glossy, full-color mailers ATP sent out.
ATP filed forms with the IRS the same year, reporting more than $600,000 in spending.
ATP maintains that its spending on mailers, most targeting moderate Republicans running for state legislative seats, is “educational” and therefore falls outside the state’s definition of “express advocacy” that would require it to disclose its funders and its spending on the mailers.
ATP did not face penalties and did not disband. Instead, it changed its name from Western Tradition Partnership and sued to strike down Montana’s disclosure laws.
The case is set for trial in March 2013.
“We won’t be shut up or shut down,” ATP said in a press release in June.
ATP’s years-long court battles have pushed the group into the public spotlight, threatening the secrecy of its donors. The group has vigorously resisted discovery proceedings in court, missing several deadlines to produce evidence requested by the state.
Lawyers in Bullock’s office filed a motion to compel ATP to present evidence, including bank records, or drop their lawsuit. It has not complied. According to a court filing, ATP’s lawyer Jim Brown emailed the state’s lawyers in late August, explaining, “I have a difficult client."
Nonetheless, the state has won access to bank records for the organization. If a judge makes them public, they could offer voters a glimpse at the group’s funders.
‘I was the screen’
The group rarely communicates with the press and it hires unknowing lawyers to sign campaign finance reports and its 2008 nonprofit incorporation documents in Colorado.
Scott Shires has been sued and fined for his election activities, but the Colorado political consultant says his reputation really took a hit after he signed ATP’s forms. When Montana released the results of its 2010 investigation, Shires’ name began showing up in the press, and he says he cut ties to the organization.
“The operatives writing these stupid ads and mailings don’t want to be identified,” said Shires. “I was the screen that allowed them to hide — plausible deniability is something a lot of these groups are interested in.”
Shires listed himself as “President” of ATP when he signed the group’s request for exempt status with the IRS in 2008.
He is widely known for registering hundreds of political committees in Colorado, mostly Republican groups. The work involves some risk. He pleaded guilty to filing false tax returns for a client in 2008, a misdemeanor charge. He was also caught up in a scandal that linked former U.S. Rep. and 2008 Senate candidate Bob Schaffer with the beneficiary of a questionable congressional earmark.
As of May 2012, an IRS filing still listed Shires as the group’s president, and he remains one of the few names publicly associated with the group.
ATP Executive Director Donald Ferguson did not return numerous calls for comment.
‘Not really sure who is in charge’
The left-leaning Montana Conservation Voters claims ATP was unfazed by the 2010 investigation and is “right back to doing the same thing,” according to the group’s board member Ben Graybill, who filed the original complaint.
This year, ATP has registered a PAC in the state. It sent mailers prior to the June primary election, but has reported zero spending to the state.
Its filings are signed by Montana attorney Chris Gallus, who was “surprised” to receive a call from the Center regarding ATP. He claims no leadership role in the organization, and said he’s “not really sure who is in charge.”
Gallus said he has not been contacted by ATP since being hired to sign their PAC reports, and does not anticipate filing any spending reports on their behalf. “Until that changes, my involvement is the same as the date I signed their forms.”
The organization sent out a questionnaire to candidates in early October, asking about their stance on land development and environmental regulations in resource-rich Montana.
“Will you oppose legislation which would categorically limit development of any specific energy resource?” reads one. “Will you oppose legislation that would rescind, reduce or shorten the tax holiday on oil & gas wells?” reads another.
Candidates who don’t respond, or don’t respond with answers favorable to ATP’s interests, are often targeted by a direct mail campaign similar to those launched at Bullock.
Its adversary, the Montana conservation group, endorses candidates for the state legislature who align with its mission to “protect clean water, public health, and our incredible outdoor heritage.” Its mid-October mailers praise Bullock for leading “the fight against corporate control of our elections.”
Unlike ATP, the group reports its direct and independent spending to the state and lists its donors.
“They’re scofflaws,” said Theresa Keaveny, executive director of the Montana conservation group.
Keaveny says ATP is not only in violation of Montana law, but also IRS rules for 501c(4) groups, which dictate ATP must not spend a majority of its funds on political activity.
According to its 2008 application for exempt status, obtained by the Center, ATP promised not to “spend any money attempting to influence” elections. It also promised not to “directly or indirectly participate or intervene on behalf of or in opposition to a candidate for public office.”
It would, however spend “70 percent” of its time and resources to “educate citizens” about “land and resource development issues.”
Jabs did not return a request to comment for this story.
Governor’s race a toss up
Bullock, a Democrat, is running against Republican Rick Hill. It’s expected to be a close race despite Montana’s majority-Republican voting population.
“We want citizens deciding elections, not corporations,” said Bullock in an October debate during which he touted his record as a campaign finance crusader.
While outside spending groups, including the Republican and Democratic governors associations, have swarmed the state with ads, the two candidates have had to abide by Montana’s low contribution limits — for most of the campaign.
In October, ATP made national news when a federal judge agreed with the organization and its high-profile campaign finance lawyer, James Bopp, and struck down contribution limits on individuals, PACs, and parties — including the $630 cap on individual giving to Bullock and Hill.
"The political establishment can no longer tell citizens to shut up because they've reached their speech limit," said ATP Montana Director Doug Lair in a press release.
Montana joined the ranks of 12 other states with no limits on contributions to candidates, but only temporarily. A week later, a federal appeals court stayed the lower court decision pending a full appeal, putting the state’s contribution limits back in force.
Bullock’s opponent took advantage of the six-day free-for-all between the ruling and the stay, accepting a $500,000 contribution from the state’s Republican Party. The gift dwarfed Montana’s $22,600 limit on party giving to candidates.
‘Who’s saying these crazy things’
A month before the vote, Montana residents woke up to a fake newspaper on their doorstep called “The Montana Statesman.”
The publication calls itself “the largest and most trusted news source” but is actually a series of ATP-funded attacks on Bullock. It leads with a giant headline that reads “Bullock Admits Failure.”
The “news” story claims that the attorney general has let “1 in 4 sex offenders go unregistered.” It includes four photos: three registered sex offenders and Bullock.
The group can continue to raise money on the promise that “no politician, no bureaucrat, and no radical environmentalist will ever know you helped make this program possible,” as its 2010 briefing to donors reads. “You can just sit back on election night and see what a difference you’ve made.”
Unsworth says his 2010 investigation did not stop ATP, and outside spending that has already flooded the state, is sure to intensify, particularly in light of the Citizens United decision. He calls the advertising a “mess of trash that lays at the feet of the public,” paid for by “funny money with no legal constraints.”
“We don’t know who’s saying these crazy things,” he added, “so the public has to suffer and our political system suffers as a result.”
The Center for Public Integrity is a non-profit independent investigative news outlet. For more of its stories on this topic go to http://www.publicintegrity.org/politics/consider-source.
Update (Oct . 22, 7:00 p.m. ET): This story was updated to reflect that Jabs, through a spokesman, denied making a contribution to ATP.
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I am so glad you found something wrong all the way in Montana! :))
Ya know, I think all this is BS and really, as American citizens, we're totally screwed, I don't think the Founding Fathers could foresee this. They gave us a an opportunity to succeed, and we has a country, squadded it. It really doesn't matter if your Dem, Rep, Lib, or Ind, we're screwed. If I was still in medicine, I would put a DNR on our bed(Do Not Resuscitate). How stupid have we become? We used to be first in everything. Now instead of the great experiment, I think we're just another Rome and will fall when God see's fit to put us down. He's a cool Dude and won't let us suffer long. Just sorry that the "Great Experiment" didn't work because of people's greed for money and want for control. I still think God is a cool Dude, and won't let us suffer too long, ain't sure about the guys that have greed for money or want for control. They have to answer to Him, not me. Oh, and before I forget Have A Nice Day? I'm pretty sure I've pissed off everybody, so I'll leave for now, don't want to screw up your dreams and whatever.
This only proves what unlimited money can and will do to this country. Citizens United case was nothing more than the Supreme courts legalization of bought elections. Corporations can and will overthrow OUR country and do whatever they want. The era of checks and balance is over,when our kids are dying because environmental laws were cast aside it will be to late. I am glad i am the age i am because hopefully i will be gone before the real damages haunt us. Want proof just turn to China. They are a manufacturing giant, but are poisoning their people in the process.
What happens in Montana doen't stay in Montana. The Koch brothers want to spread their robber baron mentality to city, state and country. It will keep on spreading until we no longer have a government "by the people". They must not be able to buy our politicians at a local, state or federal level .It is "we the people" and not "we the richest corporations".
The right wants to buy what it couldn't win in the Civil War: the enslavement of a nation.
Of course this organization is backed by the Kochs via the TEA party, and of course the contributors don't want to be known for their support of the corporate citizen.
That support comes at the expense of the real citizens who actually serve in the military, work in the factories, build our roads, maintain our infrastructure, and do all those other things which make all that lovely profit possible to start with.
The irony of using the "don't tread on me" flag when it should be a Confederate banner is lost on most- but if anyone has successfully set the stage for economic and social instability, it is this group. The Kochs and their tin-whistle puppets clearly want to replace a meritocracy with the recidivist and feudal system of inherited wealth and privilege.
As a result, all the money that once went to the middle class is now going to Washington- and, like global warming, we appear to be past a tipping point; it seems quite unlikely that mere votes can turn back this tide of corruption.
You have to laugh...their fake "revolution" may end up causing the real thing.
Sic semper tyrannis indeed....
Jimmy Hoffa disappeared and was never found, why not the Koch brothers? Money buys power but not eternity!
The SUpreme Court was wrong! Corporations, unions and other organizations should be blocked from contributing. Only individuals should be allowed to contribute and their names should be public record.
I know this is going to sound paranoid as hell, but isn't this usually where huge scandals start? In out-of-the-way spots where the controls may be a little lax?
In Montana, it's dirty politics and big money in the face of state laws put in place to prevent big money from playing dirty.
On a national scale, it's the opening of the political playing field to unlimited money and all the unpleasant things that often go along with unlimited money.
Why is there not more outrage over Citizens United? The political process has been handed over, in the most brazen and open fashion imaginable, to the moneyed elite. The average citizens of this country, a group which includes the vast majority of Fox News viewers by the way, now has less ability to impact decisions at a national level than at any time in American history. Why aren't people in the streets? Why aren't we all Occupiers?
You can (and it seems like most have) get lost in the rhetoric about health care, tax reform, public debt, Iran, etc - all of it is obviously important. But the central issue right now, the one that will not be addressed in this election nor any other election until major changes are made, is the one that concerns who really controls this country. It isn't the people.
Jesus, man. It's time to get angry. Why aren't you?
Koch brothers are libertarian...right. The day they die, liberty, justice and righteousness prevail.
Montana had good reason to enact the law 100 years ago, just as they had good reason to support the 17th Amendment to allow for the direct electing of our US Senators. William Clark, known as one of Montana's "copper kings", bribed enough of the Montana legislators to appoint him to the US Senate. The truth eventually came out and Clark did resign, but that helped to cement the passing of the amendment so legislators would not be able to be bribed to make Senatorial appointments. It also keeps business and the wealthy from being able to completely overrun the will of the people. It has worked for a very long time in Montana, although the Republicans have been trying to overturn the law for as long. Perhaps people should ask themselves why it is that one political party wants to do away with such limits? Why is it that very wealthy Republicans are taking advantage of the Citizens United ruling (& the few days of opportunity in Montana) to spend outrageous amounts to try to buy the elections? People like the Koch brothers have spent much more than they would have if their taxes went up to previous levels, so ask yourself what other benefit there is for them? Perhaps the lifting of regulations that protects our life, health and safety? Lifting of regulations that protect workers? Regulations that keep banks from gambling with your 401K in risky investments? Do away with consumer protection laws? What all do they want if they succeed in buying the 2012 elections? You know they are not doing it just because they support a candidate, since many of them didn't support Romney to begin with. But they certainly see themselves getting a lot out of it but I sure won't be helping them to screw the rest of us. The party that wants to retain election limits is the Democrat party and I'll be voting for them across the board come election day.
Montana,
Really good thoughts on some of the objectives, but I suspect that the Koch brothers really want the power to virtually name the President. The history of the TeaParty is one where Koch financed cadres of political activists who established "independent" TeaParties in various communities and counties. These were especially easy to start in areas that felt left out of economic progress or victimized by closings of union shops, which left small business people and non-union employees of suppliers and contractors to those plants in the lurch. 'See what the bad union did, it destroyed our town.' Likewise, local taxes and property rights restrictions were used as government intrusions into private property rights. After the first election cycle started, the independent groups began to be coalesced into state groups, often meaning a change in the local group leadership, often with 'founding members' finding themselves forced out entirely. And what had been groups with local issues to contest, became local groups serving as flag-bearers for the state, and ultimately the national party executive's issues. This process was detailed on NPR about 8-9 months ago, with a focus on the TeaParty in Michelle Bachmann's district. And the report included interviews with some pretty angry former TeaPartiers who felt betrayed as they found out that their neighbor who inspired the party was actually a paid hack, and after spending considerable time, effort and money that they were being forced out for a new face from out of the area or a Republican Party committee-man.
Often TeaParty campaign stances are counter-productive, as they protest proposed ordinances or laws that actually serve their own good. And there is a strong sense of good old boy, don't need that book learning, from many of the groups, especially in Indiana. And a strong sense of racism mixed in as well, as we still see the occasional anti-Obama sign with the ever evocative noose depicted.
An example of working against their own good interest. After a tornado destroyed a small town in my county, the county health officer had the nerve to insist that as the homes were rebuilt, the septic systems had to be recertified (which meant replaced in most cases, as some were nothing more than an outhouse pit with a pipe leading to it). Admittedly, the officer was not the easiest person to deal with, but he had provided clear instructions and a list of certified contractors to conduct inspections and perform corrective work. The TeaParty folks hounded the county into firing him. Apparently these folks would rather drink a fine brown tea recycled from their own offal, than invest in a safe, disease-free septic system.
If you want an insight into the TeaParty, rent (or check it out of the library - where it may be easier to find) the movie "Meet John Doe". Aside from the ending collapse of the party, it gives an excellant view the process of combining wealth, easy popular media exposure, and an experienced political hack. The film was made about 75years ago, but if you drop the names Koch, Murdoch, and Rove into the roles; it sounds remarkably similar.
This election season we've seen more than enough out-of-control spending by secret donors, some of whom may be foreign nationals, to convince all but the hardcore right-wing nutcases that a constitutional amendment to overturn Citizens United is badly needed. We need to start gathering signatures and pressuring state legislators to get that amendment on the books ASAP, while we still have a (somewhat) functional democracy here in the USA.
Otter....... are you stating or suggesting that these secret (possibly some foreign and corporate) donors pouring forth mega millions of dollars, are actively working to OVERTURN their hard fought for and bought Citizens United ruling in which the SCOTUS awarded/gave corporations personhood and all that comes with that and also gave voice/speech/ vocal ability to money?
Why would these corporate, rich etc secret donors work to overturn something that they have wanted, have worked for, have donated enormous amounts of money to make law- i.e. give corporations the same rights as people and money as speech and thus whoever has more money can speak louder and longer, drowning out everyone else, in the first place?
Otter,
Foreign nationals? How do we know that we are not dealing with foreign governments? The good Lord knows that many of the multi-national corporations consider themselves above simple national governments, but the Citizens United decree allows them to play. Why can't another government like China, Germany, Saudi Arabia or Iran move into the same game through a schill?
RICO anyone?
"...if you must break the law, do so to seize power." Julius Caesar.
This is a very troubling problem... When "voter intimidation"--by any means--is allowed to occur IN SECRET, then our days as a free people may well be at an end. I suppose that we have to tolerate corporate involvement in the election process (kind of like having a bad case of gas at a public function), but this sort of thing has to be investigated ruthlessly and exposed completely. If we are so confused about this, why expect anything better out of our court system? Judges are only human, after all, just like we are. This should be an absolute red alarm about this sham group and we should be reacting accordingly.
Of course the Koch brothers would be behind this. They are a combination of Scrooge, slave holders and Darth Vader. Every United States citizen, from all political parties, should fear them. They are the epitome of corporate greed. They want no regulation of their super-polluting industries and want to be the puppet master that defines what regulation of industry consists of - NO REGULATIONS. It is time for every state to pass strong laws to stop this madness and pass stronger political contribution laws. The Koch brothers only concern is not our future, it is their their bottom-line. But maybe I'm wrong in believing that candidates should be elected on their merits and that public office cannot be bought. Every group that supports a candidate should be a grass-roots, homegrown intuitive and we need to say no corporate giants who want to but elections. Who is a bought and paid for office holder beholden to?
doagooddeeedaday,
I live about two miles from the Ohio River in Southeastern Indiana. For 15-20 miles on either side of the river, it is rare to find a tree of any sort over 100 years old. The steambosts that worked the river from the 1850's until well after 1900 all burned wood. As time passed, the margin of trees cut for fuel just kept getting larger. Then, someone had the bright idea to bring in sheep to graze of the now barren hills and stream valleys. It is easy to see the erosion damage as photographs had been taken of these hills since the Civil War. But what was once a mixed hardwood, old-growth forest clear enough to graze pigs and hold cattle, is now just a tangled thicket of mostly trashy hardwoods (soft maple and 'water' maple) some cottonwood, oak, ash, and dying elms, undergrown with pine and cedar.
That is the legacy of uncontrolled, unregulated consumption of a resource without regard to the needs of others or the environment.
The victims of de-funded school systems are now old enough to vote!
The best government money can buy. If we are not careful we will end up with the government we deserve. Dan i too am glad that I'm as old as i am & most likely wont see the worst, but hate to see the third world country that we are fast becoming.
It makes me sick to my stomach to read how much money the right wing is putting into subverting and destroying our democratic process, as well as putting our planet and citizens' health at dire risk because of their unending greed. It's too bad the internet didn't come along sooner, because it seems to have become too entrenched to end this anti-American behavior. I'm sure they think of themselves as "patriots" too, but nobody should be mistaken that they do this out of any other concern than lining their pockets with dough.
I have received lots of propaganda in the mail regarding this ...They don't even have the guts to put their name behind it, you can't find anyway to contact them....and of course I knew the Koch Brothers were behind this. These billionaire's won't be happy until they are running the country..If anyone cares maybe you should watch Koch Brothers exposed on current TV and see the damage they have caused and how they have no regard for human life..
I have said for years that if you are interested in buying my vote, skip the junk mail and just send me a check.
The begining of the enslavement of middle class America.
Let's poison rivers and ground water...here's how to buy voters OK before the toxins kill them or lead to them having children with birth defects.
Let's be clear what the consequences are to the Koche brothers quest for higher profits; death and disease. It's ugly what the enti-environmentalists would do their fellow Americans, ugly, immoral, unethical killing and harming for profit. Should be criminal and will be one day!