From CBS News...
It's going to be a big weekend in the world of big conservative
money: Both Mitt Romney and billionaire industrialist brothers David and Charles
Koch are holding hush-hush events with wealthy donors designed to keep the
dollars coming in.
Romney's three-day retreat, which is being held at the Deer Valley Resort in
Park City, Utah, is an opportunity for about 700 Romney's biggest fundraisers to
get some face time with the presumptive Republican presidential nominee. (Many
of them are "bundlers" - wealthy and well-connected individuals who call on
their family, friends and associates to max out their contributions to Romney
and the GOP - who have raised in the area of $250,000 for Romney.) Some of the
biggest names in the Republican Party, and many of the top contenders to be
Romney's running mate, are also coming to Park City: CBS News has confirmed that
attendees will include former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, Ohio Sen. Rob
Portman, South Dakota Sen. John Thune, Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan, 2008 GOP
presidential nominee John McCain, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, Virginia Gov. Bob
McDonnell, Republican strategist Karl Rove, former Reagan chief of staff James
Baker, Home Depot co-founder Ken Langone and Tennessee Sen. Bob Corker.
Republican strategist Mary Matalin, Weekly Standard editor Bill Kristol and
former Utah governor Mike Leavitt are among the other big names expected to
attend. The Romney campaign would not discuss who is attending the retreat,
which is not open to the press. Spokespersons for two top contenders for the
vice presidential slot - Florida Sen. Marco Rubio and New Jersey Gov. Chris
Christie - told CBS News the politicians were invited but would not attend for
scheduling reasons. CBS News has also confirmed that Olympic champion figure
skater Dorothy Hamill, who participated in the Romney-run 2002 Olympics in Salt
Lake City, will attend.
Romney was not expected to compete in terms of fundraising with President
Obama, who broke records in raising nearly $750 million in the 2008 cycle. But
he has largely kept pace thanks in part to his personal engagement with wealthy
donors, which has come in the form of dozens of intimate meetings around the
country and, as the New York Times notes,
invitations to his summer home at New Hampshire's Lake Winnipesaukee. The Romney
campaign, which has garnered a reputation for aggressive and prompt engagement
with potential donors, outraised
the Obama campaign $78.6 million to $60 million in May.
While Romney and his Republican allies are busy cultivating donors in Utah,
the Koch brothers will be in San Diego holding a convention designed to help
them generate hundreds of millions of dollars to advance conservative causes. At
least we think they will: The event is shrouded in secrecy, and neither
representatives for Koch Industries nor a number of expected attendees contacted
by CBS News would even confirm that it is taking place.
Word got out last week that it was indeed happening, when Minnesota
television station owner Stanley Hubbard confirmed
its existence - and San Diego location - to Politico. In an apparent attempt
to head off protesters and potential infiltrators, organizers and attendees will
not say exactly where the convention will be held; a San Diego alternative
newspaper is holding a "Find the Koch
Brothers Confab" contest in order to figure it out. (CBS News' attempts to
confirm the venue have thus far been fruitless, though we have our suspicions.)
Liberals have their own version of the Koch brothers' confab called The
Democracy Alliance, where security is similarly strict; both events are awash in
security personnel looking to escort uninvited guests (such as reporters) off
the premises.
Organizations tied to the Koch brothers are reportedly
planning to spend nearly $400 million on the 2012 campaign cycle, and their
conferences are largely designed to garner contributions to the cause. Last
year, Mother Jones infiltrated a Koch conference in Vail where Christie was a
speaker and recorded Charles Koch thanking donors who had given more than $1
million; the list, which is here,
includes more than thirty names. According to a leaked
invitation, Koch conferences have attracted conservative heavy hitters such
as Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas, Govs. Jindal and Haley Barbour
of Mississippi, Sens. Jim DeMint of South Carolina and Tom Coburn of Oklahoma,
Rep. Ryan, Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck.
The semi-secrecy of the Romney retreat and extreme secrecy of the Koch
conference mirror the secrecy that currently exists in the world of campaign
financing. The Romney campaign, unlike the Obama campaign, refuses to disclose
its bundlers, which makes it more difficult for the public to assess what his
biggest donors might expect in exchange for their money. The Koch brothers
funnel money into groups like Americans for Prosperity, a non-profit "social
welfare organization" that does not need to disclose its donors because it is
incorporated as a 501(c)(4) nonprofit with the Internal Revenue Service. (More
on that here.) And while the super PACs that the Supreme Court freed up to
spend unlimited amounts to influence the election do have to disclose their
donors, they can simply funnel donations through 501(c)(4) groups - which in
many cases are their sister organizations - effectively allowing the super PACs
to get around that pesky disclosure requirement. (There is also anonymity on the
other side of the spectrum: The Federal Election Commission does not require the
campaigns to identify donors who give less than $200 in an election cycle.)
In this election cycle, the Republicans appear to have a significant
advantage when it comes to outside group spending - though because 501(c)(4)s
and related organizations only have to file with the IRS once per year, it's
impossible to know exactly how much money is flowing into the system. The Obama
campaign, which says
it expects to be outspent overall, estimated Wednesday that Romney, the
Republican National Committee and the outside groups will spend $1.225 billion
on ads alone before November.
Meanwhile, Romney and Mr. Obama continue to spend much of their time
traveling the country to attend fundraisers, many of them closed to the press.
CBS News' Mark Knoller reported earlier this month that the president has
participated in 160 fundraisers since filing for re-election last April, and he
has a number scheduled for next week; Romney, whose campaign frequently holds
fundraisers it doesn't let the media know about, plans to follow his weekend
retreat with his big donors in Utah by heading to Phoenix, Arizona for another
fundraiser on Monday.
Caroline Horn, Rebecca Kaplan, Laura Strickler, Jenna Gibson and Chris
Leyden contributed to this report.
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