8.03.2006

More On the Penn Green's Republican Money:

It turns out that giving to the Green Party in Penn is a good way to double your contribution to Santorum. Contributions to the Green Party included $1000 from a Haliburton lobbyist. Others included (click here for details):

* The leading financial backer of an anti-abortion ballot measure in California called Proposition 73.
* Another California who wants to run for Congress while pushing an amendment to ban gay marriage.
* A military contractor and big GOP donor whose firm has won at least $11.5 million in earmarked federal dollars with Santorum's help.
* A former Bill Frist aide who now lobbies for Kellogg Brown & Root, the Halliburton subsidiary making billions in Iraq, and oil giant Chevron.
* Another lobbyist, who represents Big Pharma, who was in with Santorum at the start of the notorious "K Street Project."
* Another longtime friend and donor to Santorum who lobbied and saw the senator introduced a proposed targeted tax break for the donor's industry, beauty schools.


More:

Republicans Sponsor Green Candidate in PA Senate Race
By Paul Kiel - August 1, 2006, 3:31 PM
It's worse than we knew. Is the Green Party candidacy in the race for Rick Santorum's seat a wholly Republican sponsored affair?

As reported today by the
AP and the Philadelphia Inquirer, the Green Party managed to get their candidate Carl Romanelli on the ballot with a costly petition drive, which was mostly funded by contributors who had also given to Rick Santorum's campaign. The party raised $66,000 for the effort, all of which they spent on a private company to collect signatures. TPMmuckraker was able to establish that at least $55,000 of that came from conservatives.

Virginia Davis, Santorum's spokeswoman,
told the Inquirer that their office had encouraged the contributions. Why? Because a challenge from the left is seen as a liability for the Dem candidate, Bob Casey.

The $66,000 came from twenty donors, in contributions ranging from $1,000 to $5,000. None of the donors have a history of giving to the Green Party.

The Inquirer reported that $40,000 came from donors who either had given to Santorum's campaign or lived at the same address as a Santorum supporter. But even more than that came from Republicans. That raises the question whether any of the $66,000 - which comprises the total sum collected by both the local Green Party and Romanelli (with the exception of his $30 contribution) this election cycle - came from actual supporters of the Green Party.

But there's evidence that even those who didn't also give to Santorum's campaign are Republicans.


I called up one couple, Harry and Carol Wolfington, who had given $5,000 each to the Green Party. Mrs. Wolfington hadn't heard of the Green Party and told me they were conservatives. She referred me to her husband, who she said had made the contributions, but he refused to talk to me.

Together with another $5,000 contribution, which came from a donor who'd given to Republicans in the past according to FEC reports, the Wolfington's $10,000 means that fully $55,000 of the Green Party's $66,000 came from Republicans. I was unable to contact the remaining three donors, none of whom have given to the Green Party in the past.

The Green Party of Luzerne County, Pennsylvania hadn't received a dime in contributions before June of this year. The $66,000 given in that month was an amazing take for a Green Party committee, almost equalling the total ($77,160) received during the 2006 election cycle by all other local and state Green Party committees in the country combined.

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