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MONEY AND POLITICS: The End of the Blue Dogs’ Fundraising Boom?

By Aaron Mehta and Josh Israel | August 20, 2009, 1:05 pm

Though the past six months have been financially beneficial to the Blue Dog Coalition, it appears that the Dogs’ fundraising intake has slowed, despite all the attention the coalition has received.

In our report last month, the Center detailed how donations to the Coalition’s PAC had soared as members of the moderate Blue Dog Democrats become a crucial swing vote between Democrats and Republicans. Given all publicity about the Blue Dogs’ new-found power, we thought it would be interesting to look at the recently-released July fundraising numbers for the Blue Dog PAC and see if anything had changed. We were surprised by what we found.

The Blue Dog PAC took in only $27,000 from other PACs in July, a significant decrease from the record $176,000-a-month-plus average it took in during the first six months of 2009. For comparison, the PAC took in $106,500 in June from other political action committees. As the Blue Dogs exploded to the forefront of the health care debate in July, not a single health care sector political committee donated to the Blue Dog PAC. And despite hefty contributions in previous months from energy companies concerned about the climate change bill, the energy donations also completely dried up in July. Through the first six months of the year, these sectors were the two largest contributors.

What could be causing this drop off in funding? It’s hard to say for sure, but here are a few possibilities: Perhaps with the climate bill out of the way and prospects for speedy action on a major health care overhaul dwindling, these companies feel their work is done. With all the attention the Blue Dogs have generated and the focus on who is funding them, these companies may have decided to lay low for a while. Many of these PACs may have already donated their allotted funds for the year. It’s even possible that the PAC managers were all on vacation for July. According to data from 2006 and 2008, the Blue Dog PAC does appear to have a traditional drop-off in contributions for the month of July, but not nearly at the dramatic level seen this year.

We attempted to ask representatives from Tenet Healthcare Corporation and Pacific Gas and Electric Company, both of whom donated in June of this year but have not yet reached the legal maximum, why they didn’t contribute again in July and whether a drop off in PAC to PAC giving is a common occurrence for this month; neither responded in time for publication. Calls to the spokesperson for the Blue Dog coalition were not returned by press time.

Regardless of the cause of this dip in funds, it will be interesting to track what happens in the coming months. If the PAC giving picks up, it will be business as usual. If this downward trend continues, however, the Blue Dogs might be wondering what they did to end up in the doghouse.

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  1. Posted by: codycap on August 22, 2009, 3:41 pm

    Write in Vote for Mr. A. Yellowdog

    Obama is facing obstacles that LBJ didn’t have when passing Civil rights. LBJ was fighting against his own party. The Democrats were in the majority, but the “Southern Bloc” was all against him. That is exactly like today with the Blue Dogs, The difference is that The Republicans were for Civil Rights and so Civil Rights won out through Bi-partisanship. This time both the Blue Dogs and the Republicans are fighting it;
    the Civil Rights bill would normally have gone to the Senate Judiciary Committee but Majority Leader Mansfield had the bill bypass the Judiciary Committee and be sent to the Senate floor for debate.—Just what Senate Majority Leader Reid has failed to do. He allowed it to go to the Senate Finance Committee, that’s why Baucus and Grassley are now in the process of ruining the bill.  So Reid effectively killed the bill. He knew if it went to committee what would happen.—- Rule no. 1 in politics, if you want to kill something but don’t want to be blamed for it you allow it to go to a bi-partisan committee. Plus there was no Byrd rule at that time. Much easier to pass then. It will be a miracle to get what we want.
    The blue dogs are the reason Bush got his Iraq war. I would rather have a republican in their seat than a republican in democrats clothing setting with the Democratic Caucasus and spy for the republicans on Democratic strategies. 
    I am in blue dog Boren’s district. Next election if he votes wrong I will make a write in vote for Mr. A. Yellowdog, I suggest the rest of you do the same.  I would rather vote for a yellow dog than a republican or blue dog.

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