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With Roger Sollenberger, Political Reporter

Pay Dirt is a weekly foray into the pigpen of political funding. Subscribehere to get it in your inbox every Thursday.

 

The Big Dig this week… The Senate GOP Has a 2024 Plan. Will Sunshine Laws Ruin It?

The Senate GOP’s campaign arm seems to have stumbled upon a novel strategy this cycle: recruit rich candidates who will pour their fortunes into their own campaigns. 

 

But there’s one wrinkle to that gambit—and it may dampen Republican hopes to enlist the ultra-wealthy, self-funding candidates they want: financial disclosure laws.

 

Every candidate for federal office—as well as the officeholders themselves—are required to submit their finances to the public’s microscope by filing personal financial disclosures (PFDs) to congressional authorities. 

Schedule A

 

For Senate candidates, they must file a thorough accounting of their finances within 30 days of becoming a candidate, and that accounting requires much more detail than the disclosures most states mandate for their candidates.

 

For instance, the federal disclosure forms ask candidates to disclose any earned income above $200, any assets worth more than $1,000, liabilities costing over $10,000, any position they’ve held—paid or not—within the last two years, all agreements about future employment arrangements (like book deals), and all compensation over $5,000 for the last two years.

 

And if these candidates did win, they’d just be subject to even more disclosures, like reporting any stock or security transaction over $1,000, gifts over $415, and travel reimbursements over that same threshold.

 

Recruit the suits

 

Politico recently reported that “at least 10 candidates with sizable net worth are seriously considering self-funded Senate campaigns in more than a half-dozen swing states—many of them at the behest of the National Republican Senatorial Committee.”

 

In Montana, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia, the GOP has already lined up several formidable cash cows going into 2024. The crop of potential self-funding candidates includes Montana’s Tim Sheehy, a former Navy SEAL and CEO of Bridger Aerospace, West Virginia Gov. and coal industry titan Jim Justice, Wisconsin real estate magnate Eric Hovde, and hedge funder Dave McCormick of Pennsylvania, who came just 951 votes shy of Mehmet Oz in the Keystone State’s 2022 GOP Senate primary.

 

For most people, these requirements aren’t too onerous. They may have a couple bank accounts, a 401K, maybe even a few stocks or a rental property. But for the ultra-wealthy individuals that the Senate GOP is trying to recruit, things are much more complicated.

 

Just look at some of the PFDs of the wealthiest individuals already in Congress, like Rep. Michael McCaul (R-TX). McCaul married Linda Mays, the daughter of Clear Channel Communications founder Lowry Mays. Because spousal assets must also be disclosed, McCaul’s PFD is typically 60 or 70 pages long, with more than 50 assets listed on each page.

 

And Justice for All

 

For some ultra-rich Senate hopefuls, their first PFD would offer the clearest-ever glimpse of their complicated finances. That could get uncomfortable fast. 

 

Justice, for instance, is set to launch his campaign against Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV) on Thursday. Once considered a billionaire, Justice—whose sprawling business portfolio includes coal, agriculture, and hospitality—reportedly owes an array of “substantial debts,” some stemming from lawsuits. A West Virginia bank even went after him last month to garnish his wages as governor over an unpaid $850,000 loan. 

 

It’s possible some candidates might glance at the stiff requirements—and recent political history—and find reason to opt out of running altogether. Former Sen. Kelly Loeffler (R-GA), a multi-millionaire many times over, saw her fortune picked apart during the course of a brutal 2020 campaign. The same could be said of her fellow former Republican Georgia Senator, David Perdue. Or even the last aspiring Georgia GOP Senate candidate: Herschel Walker. 

 

Don’t cry for me ESG

 

But the point is, these candidates’ finances could be revealed as extraordinarily messy—and fuel a number of unflattering stories.

 

In Montana, Sheehy has defended the “Environmental, Social and Governance” concept—a criteria that some investors use to decide where to put their money. But Republicans writ large have made a sport out of going after “ESG” as a symptom of an overly woke corporate America. Sheehy may find it difficult to explain away his position, as well as the $160 million in ESG bonds his company took last year.

 

Some self-funding candidates have already learned firsthand the price of running for office. In the case of Hovde, the real estate tycoon who might run against Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D-WI), he faced an onslaught of criticism six years ago when he last tried to take down Baldwin because he didn’t pay state income taxes in some years where he had big tax write-offs. 

 

“Some years you pay an ungodly amount and some years don't pay as much because you have a big depreciation," Hovde told The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel in 2017, after estimating a few years before that he was worth more than $100 million.

 

McCormick & Schtick

 

Last year in Pennsylvania, McCormick avoided a lot of criticism because his leading GOP primary opponent was Oz, a TV doctor so wealthy he couldn’t even remember how many houses he had. (The answer, according to his financial disclosure and other public documents, was 10.)

 

But even still, The Associated Press was keen to point out that, for all of McCormick’s “hometown boy-done-good” schtick, he was also the CEO of the world’s largest hedge fund. 

 

While there are obviously potential problems for these self-funding candidates, it’s obvious why Republicans—and Democrats—would still love to recruit challengers who can pour their own money into their races. In 2022, Democratic Senate candidates outraised Republicans by nearly $300 million. Finding politicians who can eat into that advantage without taking money away from other races could be crucial for Republicans trying to take back the Senate chamber. 

 

Still, as Bloomberg noted, of the eight congressional candidates who loaned their campaigns more than $10 million in 2022, only Rep. David Trone (D-MD) won.

 

Good Government

 

Paul S. Ryan, vice president of litigation at the good government group Common Cause, wasn’t very sympathetic to potential candidates who had reservations about making their finances public.

 

“As I sometimes say to my 8-year-old, ‘If you don’t want to be embarrassed, don’t do things that would embarrass yourself,’” Ryan said.

 

“To the extent that a candidate would be embarrassed by their own financial disclosures, that speaks more to their own money management than it is an indictment of these disclosure requirements,” he said.

 

Ryan was clear that these disclosures were more akin to the bare minimum for public office, though he did say they were also “critically important.”

 

“Serving in Congress is a position of public trust, and it requires a little bit of sacrifice for those who seek that trust,” he said.

 

‘Filthy Rich’

 

Nora Keefe, a spokesperson for the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, said in a statement that “Republicans want to stack the Senate with ‘filthy rich’ candidates who will look out for themselves and their friends in mega-corporations. As their financial entanglements face a new level of scrutiny, we expect they’ll have many questions to answer.”

 

The NRSC did not return The Daily Beast’s request for comment.

 

But the true irony of these financial disclosures is that, as much light as they can shed on a person’s finances, they’re also poorly designed for the mega-rich. 

 

The truest thing Donald Trump has said

 

In 2016, HuffPost rated the Trump campaign’s declaration that financial disclosure requirements are “not designed for a man of Mr. Trump's massive wealth” as the truest thing his campaign had said during the entire election. 

 

The reporting ranges for assets increase exponentially on the PFDs, so an asset worth between $1,000 and $15,000 would have a relatively specific value. But as assets increase in worth, the reporting ranges get much wider, going from $1 million to $5 million, $5 million to $25 million, $25 million to $50 million, and then just an infinite category of anything more than $50 million. 

 

So while these ultra-rich, self-funding political hopefuls may wince at the public getting a look at specifically what companies and stocks they own—or who they owe money to—the public still wouldn’t be able to say exactly how much any of these people are worth. 

 

That’s the beauty of a disclosure system for the riches of politicians that was designed by rich politicians.


Read the full story here.

 

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From Roger’s Notebook...

Secure the Bag. Earlier this year, The Daily Beast reported that Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (I-AZ) paid over $500,000 to Vrindavan Bellord, sister of 2020 presidential candidate Tulsi Gabbard, to provide security—and cover her meals, airfare, and hotels while doing so. 

 

As Sinema gears up for reelection, it appears Bellord remains as central to her operation as ever. According to new campaign finance filings, the Sinema campaign paid $60,221 to TOA Group—an LLC of which Bellord is the sole owner—for security for the first three months of 2023. That’s almost as much as Sinema spent on fundraising consulting for her campaign during that period.

 

In general, very few members of Congress have spent more on security than Sinema. This specific arrangement is unusual in that the senator only contracts with Bellord for security, and the senator is Bellord’s only client. Gabbard and Sinema first became close friends upon their election to the U.S. House in 2012.

 

Speaking of Sinema. The newly independent senator hasn’t officially launched a 2024 re-election bid, but she holds a big cash advantage—for now. Rep. Ruben Gallego (D-AZ), who’s poised to be the Democratic standard-bearer, might have hauled in an impressive $3.7 million since entering the race in January. And Sinema raised a comparatively paltry $2.1 million in the same period, largely from wealthy PACs and donors who gave the maximum $3,300.

 

But Sinema is sitting on a war chest of $10 million—more than three times what Gallego has. It’s unclear when Sinema might make her plans official, but the Phoenix congressman is banking on a small-dollar donor machine powering him past Sinema’s deep-pocketed, but shallow, network.

 

Boebert’s Boo-Boo. Adam Frisch, the Democrat who came within 600 votes of taking down controversial Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO), is running against Boebert again this cycle, and he’s already dramatically outraising her. In the first quarter of 2023, Frisch raised a staggering $1.7 million. Boebert was no slouch herself, pulling in $763,000 over that same time.

 

But a $1 million deficit this early in the cycle is massive. While their cash on hand levels are more even—Frisch has $1.3 million in the bank while Boebert reported having just over $1 million—this race is already shaping up to be one of the most expensive, and most watched, races next year.

 

Text ‘Stop’ to Nancy Pelosi. Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s campaign paid out a $7,500 settlement to an Illinois man who sued her campaign for sending him 21 “harassing” text messages between Nov. 2021 and July 2022. In Oct. 2022, the man, Jorge Rojas, filed a 13-page lawsuit against Pelosi’s campaign and the Democratic fundraising platform, ActBlue, in which Rojas claimed Pelosi didn’t have consent to send him these solicitations—and that he continued to get the texts even after he responded “STOP” to be removed from the list.

 

Rojas’ lawsuit is interesting because it cites an FCC Enforcement Advisory wherein “non-emergency prerecorded voice or autodialed calls are permissible only with the prior express written consent of the called party.”

 

While Rojas was receiving texts, the law has already been applied to texts. While Pelosi’s campaign may have just found it best to settle for a small amount of money rather than fight the suit, this could be a sign of future lawsuits for aggressive text fundraising campaigns.

 

More From The Beast’s Politics Desk

Matt Gaetz

Kevin McCarthy gets his win. Now comes the hard part. After the House passed its version of a debt limit increase on Wednesday, it’s an open question what happens now for a debt limit increase. Democrats are still insisting they won’t make concessions just to increase U.S. borrowing authority, while Republicans are insisting they’ll have to. Now that McCarthy and the House passed a bill doing just that, we could be headed for a real showdown. Read the whole story by Sam Brodey and Ursula Perano here.

 

Jean Carroll rape trial. My colleague Jose Pagliery has been posted up in a Manhattan courtroom all week watching the E. Jean Carroll rape trial. Yesterday, Carroll testified about the “extremely painful” rape she says she suffered at the hands of Donald Trump in the mid-1990s. Read his dispatch here.

 

Biden’s best 2024 card could be the one he’s not playing. The $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan, enacted in March 2021, is one of Biden’s biggest achievements—but you wouldn’t know it listening to Democrats. Sam Brodey reported on why that is, and why some in the party feel the sweeping legislation could be an ace card for Biden in his 2024 bid.

 

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