From Sheila Krumholz <[email protected]>
Subject The people we power
Date August 26, 2022 2:59 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
For our data experts, a record-setting political fundraising year means more financial reports to collect, standardize, classify and investigate.

Dear Friend of OpenSecrets,

Following the money in politics requires a constant watchdog, but every election year feels like a race for our staff. In order to produce the free public resource that is OpenSecrets.org, thousands of hours of behind-the-scenes work is required to gather money in politics data across all jurisdictions.

For our data experts, a record-setting political fundraising year means more financial reports to collect, standardize, classify and investigate. And gathering state and federal records across the country is no simple task. Some states still key in paper reports; others don’t have bulk data downloads (looking at you, Rhode Island).

All of this work is worth it when the data gets put to good use. And luckily for us (and for U.S. democracy), our readership is filled with users like you, and journalists and researchers who access the OpenSecrets database to produce compelling investigations with evidence from primary research into the money that shapes our government.

Thousands of individuals get the information they need from OpenSecrets.org, and support the continuation of this public resource through donations. When you make our work possible, it also benefits newsrooms, scholars and advocates who rely on our one-of-a-kind resource to do their jobs. Will you join our efforts to keep money in politics data relevant and accessible to all? ([link removed])

Support OpenSecrets with a donation → ([link removed])
Journalists and researchers rely on OpenSecrets’ website, which has been cited over 5,000 times by news organizations so far this year. Every time a story breaks, our inbox fills with requests for custom data. We’ve worked with major publications on abortion rights fundraising data, and released a comprehensive spreadsheet on all gun rights and gun control ([link removed]) contributions and lobbying at the federal level.

Here are some other ways our meticulous data has been put to good use:
* In partnership with OpenSecrets, The Wesleyan Media Project released a report documenting two million political television ads that ran this cycle ([link removed]) , and who’s funding their production. We provide custom research that enables them to include detailed information in their reports, and also work with WMP to capture online ad data, which is made available on OpenSecrets.org.
* Our investigation into the defense industry led to Public Citizen reporting that the military-industrial complex has a nearly 450,000% return on their lobbying investments ([link removed]) in 2022.
* Our own researchers used lobbying data to reveal coordination amongst federal and state lobbying firms who push the same special interests ([link removed]) , using the same language, across state legislatures.

One of our data experts compared our work to building with Lego’s, where you first need to sort the pieces, arrange them, and then put them together in order for the picture to become clear. We’re lucky to be surrounded by a community committed to putting the pieces together with us, and building a transparent, accountable government for the good of all.

Please join us in maintaining this public resource and all the important work that originates from it, and keeping it free and accessible by making a donation today. ([link removed])
With gratitude,

Sheila Krumholz
Executive Director
[link removed] Share ([link removed])
[link removed] http%3A%2F%2Feepurl.com%2Fh9F_GD Tweet ([link removed] http%3A%2F%2Feepurl.com%2Fh9F_GD)
[link removed] Forward ([link removed])
Want to change how you receive these emails?
Update your preferences ([link removed]) or unsubscribe ([link removed]) .

============================================================
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis