From Energy and Policy Institute <[email protected]>
Subject Latest campaign reports show Arizona utilities funding GOP gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake
Date November 1, 2022 12:04 PM
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** Latest campaign reports show Arizona utilities funding GOP gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake ([link removed])
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By Keriann Conroy on Oct 31, 2022 12:41 pm
The political action committees for Southwest Gas and Pinnacle West, Arizona Public Service’s parent company, have maxed out their contribution limits to Kari Lake, Arizona’s Republican gubernatorial candidate, according to third-quarter campaign finance reports that the companies filed on October 15. Both utilities have also given to the Republican Governors Association, a political committee which is supporting Lake.

Southwest Gas’s Arizona PAC contributed $ ([link removed]) 5,300 ([link removed]) to Kari Lake’s campaign, the maximum contribution ([link removed]) for a PAC giving to a statewide candidate. Pinnacle West’s PAC contributed $10,600 ([link removed]) to Lake, the maximum contribution in Arizona for PACs with “mega-PAC” status. According to Arizona campaign finance reporting ([link removed]) , a PAC can qualify for mega-PAC status through the Secretary of State if it can prove receipt of at least $10 from at least 500 individuals for the four years prior to applying.

Lake, falsely claims ([link removed]) President Biden’s election was “stolen,” and adheres to a far-right platform built on anti-abortion policies ([link removed]) , increased border control ([link removed]) , and concerns ([link removed]) over critical race theory, vowing ([link removed]) to rid schools of “woke teaching.” The gubernatorial candidate also has refused
([link removed]) a pledge to accept the results of the election in Arizona, saying that “I’m going to win the election, and I will accept that result.”

Lake has not released a climate or energy plan; she has focused on opportunities to expand water access in Arizona in the face of a decades-long drought in the Southwest. In a September town hall ([link removed]) , Lake stated her preference for nuclear energy. In an interview with E&E News ([link removed]) earlier this month, her policy advisor, Sam Stone, noted she would oppose renewable mandates.
Lake’s opponent, Democrat Katie Hobbs, has released a “Resilient Arizona plan ([link removed]) ,” with goals of carbon-free energy by 2050 through residential renewable incentives, upgrading building codes and reestablishing a state-wide energy office.


** AZ utilities contributed to Republican Governors Association
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One month after Lake won her primary election on August 2, Pinnacle West gave $100,000 to the Republican Governors Association (RGA), which brought the utility’s total ([link removed]) to $250,000 this year and $351,350 this election cycle. An RGA spokesperson reportedly said ([link removed]) the group had plans to spend $11 million in advertisements to ensure a Lake victory.

RGA also received $10,000 from Southwest Gas and $50,450 from Salt River Project, an Arizona public power utility, this election cycle.

Lake is not the only candidate contesting the integrity of elections who received support from the Pinnacle West PAC. Republican state senator Sonny Borrelli prompted an attorney general investigation to investigate (among other issues), the routers and passwords used for vote-tabulation machines. Borrelli’s committee received ([link removed]) $1,000 ([link removed]) from Pinnacle West this year. In 2018, Borrelli introduced legislation ([link removed]) intended to allow APS and other utilities to ignore a 50% renewable energy requirement by 2030 if voters passed it by ballot initiative. APS has since changed course and pledged to achieve 65% clean energy and 45% renewable energy by 2030.

Other Arizona recipients of Pinnacle West PAC money who have questioned the integrity of the 2020 election – despite lack of evidence – include Republican state representatives Kevin Payne ([link removed]) and John Fillmore ([link removed]) and Republican state senator J.D. Mesnard ([link removed]) .


** No utility money in ACC elections
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Two of the five seats ([link removed]) at the Arizona Corporation Commission– the utility regulatory body in the state– are up for election. Arizona is one of 10 states where commissioners are elected statewide by voters. The ACC sets rates for electric and gas utilities and has jurisdiction over a variety of other energy policies.

In 2019, in response to Commissioner Sandra Kennedy’s subpoena, Pinnacle West revealed how the utility sought to influence prior ACC elections. One disclosure ([link removed]) showed that in 2014, Pinnacle West gave $12.9 million to 16 different political groups. The company said in its letter to the commission that $10.7 million went to groups that sought to influence both primary and general elections at the ACC that year. The 2014 ACC election was contentious and pitted candidates with different views on how APS and other utilities should treat solar customers against one another. The candidates that APS secretly funded, Tom Forese and Doug Little, won their elections. In the ensuing years, the ACC voted to approve of a rate increase on customers and other changes that harmed rooftop solar adoption, all of which APS had sought – Forese and Little voted in favor.

This year, the Republican and Democratic ACC candidates are participating in the Clean Elections candidate program, which means they have agreed to forgo special interest and high dollar contributions. APS or other utilities could still make independent expenditures to promote or oppose candidates, but they have not done so thus far. APS’ current CEO, Jeff Guldner, pledged ([link removed]) that the company would not seek to influence ACC elections when he assumed leadership of the company in 2019.

In February 2022, Kennedy– who is running for reelection – again requested ([link removed]) details about APS’s political spending. In response, APS provided details ([link removed]) about its past 9 years of political spending, including $4.8 million in outside lobbying expenses, $93.2 million on advertising and marketing, and $73.6 million spent on political groups. APS said ([link removed]) that it has included some of its marketing and advertising spending in customers’ rates.

The post Latest campaign reports show Arizona utilities funding GOP gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake ([link removed]) appeared first on Energy and Policy Institute ([link removed]) .
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