Tuesday, January 27, 2015

Koch Brothers speak with many golden tongues

What is more powerful than $889,000,000?
Answer: 300,000,000 angry Americans.
As the Koch brothers buy one vote after another, spreading their voice
to the four corners of the nation, they are so caught up in their own
sound that they are unable to hear the rousing sounds of the sleeping
giant. America is awakening. The Koch's and their Pavlovian dogs and
their lavish life style are about to come to an end. The Koch's
suffer from the same disease as do all Servants of Greed. They have
come to believe their own insanity. They cannot believe there is an
end to how much the Masses will tolerate. The Koch's look down their
self anointed royal noses and snuff their disdain for the Rabble. But
the Koch's are the real fools. Their days are numbered and history
will not record any kind words toward them.

Carl Jarvis

On 1/27/15, R. E. Driscoll Sr <llocsirdsr@att.net> wrote:
> All:
>
> An interesting article.
>
> http://p.nytimes.com/email/re?location=4z5Q7LhI+KVBjmEgFdYACPLKh239P3pg5nB5w5go5/N3AO7DDHaixNHnOKWRILBUXEOMFkC5PPpMOtVXbHGbc6TejYMizg9DNgUzKxc7z8YDDMwj/XPQCBmhcjIYlpm6IzEyEVvJwFvMViDzmFNB2KpsaR+VPFqNKH7pilVGwlyhS0OE5BBVB7rQwrEHaXnl&campaign_id=129&instance_id=53099&segment_id=68424&user_id=1ef030aa7a483e750f4addce9f6f355b&regi_id=60088859
>
>
> Politics
> Koch Brothers' Budget of $889 Million for 2016 Is on Par With Both
> Parties' Spending
>
> By NICHOLAS CONFESSOREJAN. 26, 2015
> Photo
> Charles Koch in 2012. The Kochs and their advisers have built a robust
> array of political organizations. Credit Bo Rader/The Wichita Eagle, via
> Associated Press
>
> Senator Rand Paul, center, at a rally for Gov. Sam Brownback of
> Kansas, left, and Senator Pat Roberts in Wichita last year.
> 'Koch Primary' Tests Hopefuls In the G.O.P.JAN. 20, 2015
> Steven Law in the Crossroads GPS offices in Washington in 2012.
> Outside Groups With Deep Pockets Lift G.O.P.NOV. 5, 2014
> The Koch Aquatic Center at the North Branch YMCA in Wichita, Kan.
> In Wichita, Koch Influence Is Revered and ReviledJUNE 17, 2014
>
> Looking at David Koch's picture, now I know what is meant by a crocodile
> smile. What a revolting way to spend money, meaningless one liner...
> cbischof1
> 8 minutes ago
>
> Looks like Democracy in action. The Kochs run a profitable business that
> employs about 100,000 people at high wages. Is that bad? The Kochs...
>
> The political network overseen by the conservative billionaires
> Charles G. and David H. Koch plans to spend close to $900 million on the
> 2016 campaign, an unparalleled effort by coordinated outside groups to
> shape a presidential election that is already on track to be the most
> expensive in history.
>
> The spending goal, revealed Monday at the Kochs' annual winter donor
> retreat near Palm Springs, Calif., would allow their political
> organization to operate at the same financial scale as the Democratic
> and Republican Parties. It would require a significant financial
> commitment from the Kochs and roughly 300 other donors they have
> recruited over the years, and covers both the presidential and
> congressional races. In the last presidential election, the Republican
> National Committee and the party's two congressional campaign committees
> spent a total of $657 million.
>
> Hundreds of conservative donors recruited by the Kochs gathered over the
> weekend for three days of issue seminars, strategy sessions and mingling
> with rising elected officials. These donors represent the largest
> concentration of political money outside the party establishment, one
> that has achieved enormous power in Republican circles in recent years.
> Photo
> David Koch in June. The brothers' financial goal, announced on Monday at
> the annual Koch winter donor retreat in Palm Springs, Calif.,
> effectively transforms the Koch organization into a third major
> political party. Credit Travis Heying/The Wichita Eagle, via Associated
> Press
>
> Now the Kochs' network will embark on its largest drive ever to
> influence legislation and campaigns across the country, leveraging
> Republican control of Congress and the party's dominance of state
> capitols to push for deregulation, tax cuts and smaller government. In
> 2012, the Kochs' network spent just under $400 million, an astonishing
> sum at the time. The $889 million spending goal for 2016 would put it on
> track to spend nearly as much as the campaigns of each party's
> presidential nominee.
>
> The Kochs' efforts will put enormous fund-raising pressure on Democrats
> and liberal outside groups. Allies of Hillary Rodham Clinton, who
> appears to be preparing for a likely presidential campaign in 2016,
> expect that she will need to bring in more money than President Obama,
> the most successful fund-raiser in presidential history, and a "super
> PAC" supporting her is seeking to raise as much as $300 million in the
> coming months.
>
> "It's no wonder the candidates show up when the Koch brothers call,"
> said David Axelrod, a former senior adviser to Mr. Obama. "That's
> exponentially more money than any party organization will spend. In many
> ways, they have superseded the party."
>
> The group's budget, disclosed by a conference attendee, reflects the
> rising ambition and expanded reach of the Koch operation, which has
> sought to distinguish itself from other outside groups by emphasizing
> the role of donors over consultants and political operatives.
>
> While the Koch's expansive network houses groups with discretely
> political functions -- a data and analytics firm, a state-focused
> issue-advocacy group and affinity groups aimed at young voters and
> Hispanics -- it also includes groups like Freedom Partners, a trade
> organization overseen by Koch advisers that plans the retreat and helps
> corral contributions; Americans for Prosperity, a national grass-roots
> group; and Concerned Veterans for America, which organizes conservative
> veterans
>
> While almost no Republican Party leaders were invited to the Koch event,
> it has become a coveted invitation for the party's rising stars, for
> whom the gathered billionaires and multimillionaires are a potential
> source of financing for campaigns and super PACs. Officials said this
> year's conference was the largest ever.
>
> At least five potential presidential candidates were invited this year,
> and four attended, including Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin. On Sunday
> evening, three of them -- Senators Marco Rubio of Florida, Rand Paul of
> Kentucky and Ted Cruz of Texas -- took part in a candidate forum on
> economic issues.
>
> The Kochs are longtime opponents of campaign disclosure laws. Unlike the
> parties, their network is constructed chiefly of nonprofit groups that
> are not required to reveal donors. That makes it almost impossible to
> tell how much of the money is provided by the Kochs -- among the
> wealthiest men in the country -- and how much by other donors.
>
> The two brothers and their aides have begun to take steps to relax the
> strict secrecy that has long surrounded much of their political efforts.
> After spending the 2012 campaign as the Democrats' favored punching
> bags, Charles and David Koch have each granted a series of interviews to
> explain their views and philosophy. Their privately held firm, Koch
> Industries, has mounted a soft-focus advertising campaign called "We Are
> Koch," featuring the company's employees.
>
> Last summer, Freedom Partners established the network's first super PAC,
> allowing it to run more openly political advertising in the run-up to
> the 2014 midterm election. The move also required disclosing some of the
> network's other donors. Trusts controlled by the Kochs provided about $4
> million of the super PAC's $25 million budget.
>
> This year, Koch aides also provided -- for the first time -- limited
> access to the winter conference events and allowed reporters to view
> live video of the candidate forum on Sunday night.
>
> As the three senators addressed the audience of rich donors --
> effectively an audition for the 2016 primary -- they dismissed a question
> about whether the wealthy had too much influence in politics. At times
> they seemed to be addressing an audience of two: the Kochs themselves,
> now among the country's most influential conservative power brokers.
>
> Mr. Cruz gave an impassioned defense of his hosts as job creators and
> the victims of unfair attacks by Democrats, while Mr. Rubio suggested
> that only liberals supported campaign finance restrictions, so as to
> empower what he said were their allies in Hollywood and the news media.
>
> A version of this article appears in print on January 27, 2015, on page
> A1 of the New York edition with the headline: '16 Koch Budget Is $889
> Million.
>
>
> Koch Brothers' Budget of $889 Million for 2016 Is on Par With Both
> Parties'...
>
>
> R. E. (Dick) Driscoll, Sr.
>
>
> ---
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