Your weekly newsletter on money in politics.
View this email in your browser
 
DONATE
April 29, 2021
This week in money-in-politics
 
Biden proposals spurred Q1 lobbying blitz
 

Washington lobbyists remain a hot commodity under President Joe Biden, whose massive spending packages are attracting an influx of lobbying activity.

Lobbying spending totaled $886 million from January through March, according to OpenSecrets’ initial review of lobbying reports filed with Congress.

That figure — which will rise after firms file late reports — is a slight increase from the $868 million spent in the first months of Donald Trump’s presidency in 2017. It’s down from the record $942 million spent in the first quarter of 2020, when firms in every industry scrambled to influence the government’s COVID-19 response.


Read More

Have a friend you think would like our money-in-politics newsletter? 
Click here to forward this email! 

Texas special election will test Trump’s GOP legacy


Voters in Texas’ 6th Congressional District will head to the polls on Saturday to choose a successor to former Rep. Ron Wright (R-Texas), who died after contracting the coronavirus in February. And the contest may prove to be a referendum on former President Donald Trump. A whopping 23 candidates — 11 Republicans, 10 Democrats, one Libertarian and one independent — are on the ballot. If no single candidate wins more than 50 percent, voters will return to the polls later to decide a runoff between the top two candidates. Wright’s widow, Susan Wright, picked up a key endorsement from Trump earlier this week.
Read More

Former Biden aide sees green as renewable energy lobbyist

Renewable energy companies are deploying a former aide to President Joe Biden to lobby the White House on the specifics of its proposed $2 trillion infrastructure package that would provide huge windfalls for the industry. Christopher Putala, a former Biden staffer on the Senate Judiciary Committee from 1989 to 1998, more than doubled his client list and lobbying revenue under the new president. Putala’s one-man lobbying firm raked in $770,000 in the first three months of 2021, up from $310,000 during the same period last year. That first-quarter haul was a personal best for Putala, who primarily represented telecom companies before Biden’s win.
Read More

FEC explores measures to expose ‘scam PACs’
 

The Federal Election Commission is exploring ways to tackle so-called “scam PACs,” committees that route donors’ cash to their own operatives while spending relatively little on actual political activity. The commission is considering adding new data categories to the FEC website showing what percentage of a committee’s spending goes to supporting candidates and the proportion of spending going to each vendor. Those measures are meant to educate donors on how much political activity a given PAC really engages in, and whether their money is being funneled to one or a few political firms. Scam PACs are increasingly popular amid historically expensive elections.
Read More
Support investigative journalism serving the public interest.
Share Share
Tweet Tweet
Forward to Friend Forward to Friend

OpenSecrets in the News

See our media citations from outlets around the nation this week:  

The Washington Post
The New York Times
CNBC
Fox Business
MSNBC
The Financial Times
Forbes
New Jersey News Network
The Nevada Independent
The San Diego Reader
The Ledger
New Jersey Advance
WFAE
Business Insider
E&E News
Sludge

 

See more here

tryu2.jpg
count-cah-make-change.png Chair-nave.jpg
4 star rating for 8 consecutive years
Copyright © 2021 Center for Responsive Politics, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you opted in at our website, OpenSecrets.org.

Our mailing address is:
Center for Responsive Politics
1300 L Street NW
Suite 200
Washington, District of Columbia xxxxxx

Add us to your address book


unsubscribe from this list    update subscription preferences