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June 03, 2021
This week in money-in-politics
 
Preeminent money in politics watchdogs unite to form OpenSecrets
 

The nation’s two leading money-in-politics data organizations have joined forces to help Americans hold their leaders accountable at the federal and state levels, they said today.

The combined organization, OpenSecrets, merges the Center for Responsive Politics (CRP) and the National Institute on Money in Politics (NIMP), each leading entities for three decades. The merger will provide a new one-stop shop for integrated federal, state and local data on campaign finance, lobbying and more, that is both unprecedented and easy to use.

“This merger brings together decades of expertise, massive data sets, and the kind of analysis that researchers, journalists, advocates and individuals rely on to understand the influence of spending on politics,” said OpenSecrets Executive Director Sheila Krumholz, who previously led CRP. “At a time when our country is being tested, this is a good day for democracy.”

“Transparency fuels the accountability that’s necessary to ensure the healthy evolution of our fragile democracy,” said OpenSecrets Executive Advisor Edwin Bender, who previously led NIMP. “Combining our work into a singularly robust and comprehensive tool will be invaluable for helping all of us take the measure of who our elected officials truly represent.”

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New bill aims to shut the FARA revolving door


Former government officials would be prohibited from representing foreign corporations and governments as lobbyists under new bipartisan legislation introduced by Reps. Mike Gallagher (R-Wis.) and Jared Golden (D-Maine). The ‘‘Congressional and Executive Foreign Lobbying Ban Act’’ seeks to prohibit federally elected lawmakers and senior-level government appointees from registering as lobbyists for foreign agents after they leave the government.
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Super PACS and candidates spend big in upcoming NYC mayoral primaries

With the 2021 New York City Democratic primary for mayor less than a month away, candidates have already spent over $33 million with $32 million left to spend. Super PACs have also already spent nearly $16 million through mid-May in support of New York City mayoral candidates despite the city implementing sweeping campaign finance reforms aiming to minimize money-in-politics influence.
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How to cite the new OpenSecrets
 

So you're using data you got from OpenSecrets? Great! We've prepared guidelines for how to cite our NEW organization. Our Creative Commons license (legal code) spells out the Terms of Service in legalese. In short, you can remix, tweak and build upon our work non-commercially, as long as we are credited and your new creation is licensed under the identical terms. Our guide (linked below) shows you how OpenSecrets prefers to be credited and what we consider to be insufficient credit.
See the full guide here
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Save the Date!
 
June 14 at 11:00 a.m. ET

Join panelists A’shanti F. Gholar, Emerge; Kira Sanbonmatsu, Rutgers University (CAWP); Jennifer Pierotti Lim, Republican Women for Progress; Mariel Padilla, the 19th News; and OpenSecrets’ Sarah Bryner, for an online discussion on the glass ceiling in US electoral politics. 
Introducing two new members of the OpenSecrets Team:
Journalism Interns Nuha Dolby (left) and Maggie Hicks (right)

Nuha is a rising senior at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, pursuing a degree in English. Alongside her work at OpenSecrets, she also is a Campus Consortium International Reporting Fellow with the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting.

Maggie is a rising junior at Syracuse University studying magazine, news and digital journalism in the Newhouse School for Public Communications. Prior to her time at OpenSecrets, she worked as an assistant news editor at The Daily Orange, SU’s independent student newspaper, where she covered stories on campus as well as in the greater city of Syracuse.

OpenSecrets in the News

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

Roll Call
Politico
The Hill
CNBC
Indiana Public Media
Tulsa World
Wisconsin Examiner
The City
The Nation
PolitiFact
The New York Post
The Counter

 

See more here

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