From Hilary Braseth, OpenSecrets <[email protected]>
Subject OpenSecrets Newsletter: Tracking the foreign-influenced dollars pouring into state elections
Date January 25, 2024 9:40 PM
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Your weekly money in politics newsletter. Donate Today [[link removed]]
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January 25, 2024
Foreign-Influenced Corporate Money in State Elections
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In a groundbreaking new report on political giving by foreign-influenced companies across multiple key states, OpenSecrets sheds light on the escalating influence of foreign-influenced companies in U.S. state-level elections.
(A Case Study of State-Level Corporate Political Contributions in Colorado, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, New York & Washington.)
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Outside spending in presidential primary continues surge, with little effect
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No matter how you slice it, spending on the presidential primary is historic, outpacing previous election cycles and reaching nearly $307.7 million — largely benefitting Nikki Haley and dwarfing the $168.2 million in outside spending by this point in the 2016 presidential primary.
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Chart of the Week
Dive deeper into the data behind the headlines
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In recent years, concerns about foreign influence in U.S. elections have grown, and several states have proposed laws to restrict foreign-influenced companies (FICs) from engaging in political spending in state or local elections.
Washington attracted more foreign-influenced dollars.
According to OpenSecrets' analysis, Washington attracted more than $67.8 million in contributions from foreign-influenced companies — more than any of the other five states.
Minnesota passes the first statewide ban on FIC spending.
Among the six states, OpenSecrets tracked the lowest sum of 2018-2022 cycle contributions from foreign-influenced companies in Minnesota, a state that recently passed the nation's first statewide ban on FIC spending.
Minnesota's FIC contributions between the 2018 and 2022 cycles totaled $258,000 . Minnesota already bars corporate contributions to state-level candidates as well as party committees and is the only one of the six that didn't have ballot measure contributions in elections in 2021 or 2022, which are likely components factoring into the low total.
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OpenSecrets in the News
See our media citations from outlets around the nation this week:
Watchdogs urge presidential candidates to disclose top campaign fundraisers (The Hill) [[link removed]] [[link removed]] [[link removed]] [[link removed]] [[link removed]]
Fourteen organizations across the political spectrum signed onto the letter: American Promise, Business for America, Campaign Legal Center, Common Cause, Democracy 21, Issue One, League of Women Voters of the United States, Michigan Campaign Finance Network, National Legal and Policy Center, OpenSecrets, Project On Government Oversight, Public Citizen, RepresentUs, and Take Back Our Republic Action.
Investors Are Betting on Defense Startups. The Pentagon Isn’t. (Wall Street Journal) [[link removed]]
Tech startups get cool reception from Defense Department despite its rhetoric that it will buy more from Silicon Valley. Last year, the most highly valued, venture-backed defense startups spent a combined nearly $6 million on lobbyists, nearly double the lobbying spend in 2019, according to OpenSecrets, which tracks political spending.
4 things to know about Elise Stefanik, as VP rumors swirl (NPR) [[link removed]]
As she sharply defended Trump during his first impeachment hearings in 2019, Stefanik saw her campaign donations more than quadruple, from $2.8 million in her 2018 race to $13.3 million in 2020, according to data compiled by OpenSecrets.
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