From The Washington Post
Bush 'Bundlers' Take Fundraising to New Level
By Thomas B. Edsall and Mike Allen, Washington Post Staff Writers
July 13, 2003
As chairman, president and chief executive of Safeway Inc., the world's 11th-largest
grocery chain, Steven Burd is the nexus of a wide network of subordinates and
suppliers, as well as friends in corporate suites. And that is why he will play
a critical role in President Bush (news - web sites)'s effort to raise the largest
amount of money ever spent on a presidential campaign -- not by giving a lot of
money himself, but by finding a lot of people to give relatively little.
In the jargon of political fundraising, Burd is a bundler.
At two Bush fundraising events in California last month, Burd filled 10 tables
with Safeway suppliers, including rice farmers, strawberry growers and a cheese
manufacturer, plus representatives of Breyers ice cream, Sunkist produce and Del
Monte canned goods who paid $2,000 to hear Bush talk. Each donor wrote a four-digit
"solicitor tracking code" assigned to Burd on his check so that the Safeway CEO
will receive credit from Bush campaign officials and they can keep a running tally
of his efforts. The possible rewards, depending on how much money he can bring
in, include cocktails with campaign architect Karl Rove, dinner with Commerce
Secretary Donald L. Evans and photo opportunities and sessions with the president.
Bush did not invent bundling, an old practice in fundraising designed to give
a collection of small donors more bang for their buck by combining their efforts.
But the Bush campaign has refined it and made it the central focus of its money
strategy because of the McCain-Feingold campaign finance law and its goal of reducing
the role of mega-donors in political campaigns.
Under the law, large "soft money" contributions from corporations, unions and
individuals are banned and the limit on legal "hard money" contributions from
individuals to candidates was raised from $1,000 to $2,000 -- rules that at least
initially were thought to have leveled the playing field for traditionally outspent
Democrats. But the quick success and ambitious goals of Bush's fundraisers, who
have said they want to raise $170 million but expect to easily surpass that, show
the law can work to the decisive advantage of the Republican Party. The GOP can
solicit a greater number of $2,000 donations as a result of wide support in a
corporate community eager to repay the Bush administration for its pro-business
policies. Democrats, in contrast, have depended on trial lawyers and wealthy liberals
who do not have large constituencies to draw on.
Bush campaign officials have tried to play down the role of $2,000 donors and
the network of affluent fundraisers backing the president. In interviews, the
officials stress that the Republican Party has added more than 800,000 small direct-mail
donors over the past 30 months. In fact, however, donors who give the maximum
or close to it and the people who solicit them have provided the bulk of the money
for Bush's campaigns.
Internal campaign documents show that the bundling organization is dominated by
corporate CEOs, lobbyists, energy company executives, venture capitalists and
investment bankers who can reach tens of thousands of subordinates, customers
and subcontractors. The biggest source of new bundlers has been the universe of
doctors, corporate defense lawyers and others who favor the Bush administration's
proposal to limit lawsuits and to limit the amount that can be recovered for medical
malpractice -- legislation that is part of the broad Republican effort known as
tort reform.
In New York, the campaign can draw on the chairmen and chief executives of Merrill
Lynch and Co., Bear Stearns Cos. and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. In Georgia, top
executives at Coca-Cola Co., the Southern Co. and AFLAC insurance are on board.
In Florida, sugar barons, real estate developers and the chairman of Wackenhut
Corrections Corp., a major federal and state prison contractor, have all joined
the Bush bandwagon. And in Washington, the elite of the Republican lobbying community,
116 strong, signed up to raise a minimum of $20,000 each to help win four more
years for Bush.
Becoming part of the Bush money machine starts with a pledge card and a commitment
to raise a specific amount, from $20,000 to $250,000 or more. A highly successful
innovation of Bush's first campaign, which raised a record $101 million, was the
designation of "Pioneer" for someone who raised at least $100,000. That designation
is also available this campaign, with the promise -- in writing -- of benefits
that include "a special Pioneer event with the President," special events at the
Republican National Convention in New York and "regular reports" from top campaign
officials. But becoming a Pioneer will be tougher.
Last time, Pioneers were given credit for checks collected by people they recruited.
Aspiring Pioneers this time around receive credit only for the checks they personally
collect. The credit system has touched off fierce jockeying for the contributions
of well-known Republicans. Longtime party strategist Rich Galen said that before
last month's Bush reception in Washington, he was inundated with requests from
Bush fundraisers to write their number on his check.
"I hadn't heard from some of these people in years," he said. Galen chose the
number of one longtime friend for his own check, and the number of a second friend
for the check written by his wife.
In addition, Pioneer will no longer be the top designation. Those who produce
at least $200,000 will be awarded the status of "Ranger," evocative of the Texas
Rangers, the baseball team Bush once owned.
The Rangers and Pioneers recruit other Bush supporters as vice chairs, sponsors
and host committee members for specific events. These people raise smaller amounts,
perhaps $20,000 or $50,000, depending on the event. At the base of the pyramid
are the people who write the checks, usually at the behest of an aspiring Ranger
or Pioneer.
In an indication of how Bush's network has grown, 17 people signed up to raise
$200,000 each as "general chairs" for his June 23 cocktail party at a Manhattan
hotel. That amount qualifies each of them as a Ranger. Nine of those prospective
Rangers represent new blood for the Bush campaign. The other eight were Pioneers
in 2000 and have doubled their commitment from $100,000 to $200,000.
In the 2000 campaign, nearly 60 percent of the money Bush received was in $1,000
donations, the maximum allowed then. He received 59,279 $1,000 donations, or $59.3
million of his $101 million total. The 59,279 donors more than tripled the number
of any competitor, according to the Campaign Finance Institute, which is affiliated
with George Washington University. Al Gore (news - web sites), who was second
in the competition for $1,000 donors, had only 19,298 when running as a sitting
vice president. The crucial importance of drawing on a network of colleagues or
subordinates was also apparent in that campaign.
Charles M. Cawley, CEO of MBNA, the world's largest independent credit card issuer,
for example, was a Bush Pioneer. MBNA employees gave Bush a total of $240,675,
according to an analysis by the nonprofit Center for Responsive Politics. Similarly,
members of Vinson & Elkins -- the law firm of Pioneer Joe B. Allen -- gave $202,850.
Les Brorsen, another Pioneer, is chief lobbyist for Ernst & Young, where employees
gave Bush $179,949.
Rove, who remains on the White House payroll for the campaign and has been an
energetic promoter of Bush's fundraising events, helped recruit bundlers by holding
"pre-sale events" in New York, California and Texas. Before Bush's reception in
Los Angeles, Rove chatted up bundlers during a dinner at the ranch of David H.
Murdock, the billionaire chairman of Dole Food Co. Attendees said Rove went from
table to table, asking for ideas and sharing insights about Bush behind the scenes,
then spoke to the group about the campaign's political plans.
The mechanics of the money collection are being run by one of Bush's most loyal
political aides, Jack Oliver, who is deputy finance chairman of Bush-Cheney '04
Inc. and who was the chief fundraiser of Bush's last campaign. In between, Oliver
stayed in touch with donors as deputy chairman of the Republican National Committee
(news - web sites).
Oliver and the Bush campaign have tapped into existing money organizations created
by past and present Republican governors, including Bush's brother Jeb Bush in
Florida, George E. Pataki in New York, Ohio's Bob Taft, and former California
governor Pete Wilson.
The single factor virtually all such donors have in common is that they, their
clients, their corporations, their suppliers and their subcontractors are major
beneficiaries of the Bush administration's tax-cutting and deregulatory policies.
Almost all of the top Bush fundraisers are in the top 1 percent of the nation's
incomes, and many are in the top one-tenth of the top 1 percent. Consequently,
they are among those who benefit the most from administration legislation reducing
the top income tax rate, the capital gains rate and the elimination of taxation
on dividend income.
For instance, four of the chairs for the $2,000-a-person cocktail party in New
York were E. Stanley O'Neal, chairman and CEO of Merrill Lynch; James E. Cayne,
chairman and CEO of Bear Stearns; Henry A. McKinnell Jr., chairman and CEO of
Pfizer Inc., the world's largest drug company; and Henry M. Paulson, chairman
and CEO of Goldman Sachs. McKinnell, O'Neal and Paulson committed to raising $200,000
each, and Cayne agreed to raise $100,000.
Looking at salaries and bonuses in 2002 ranging from McKinnell's $5.3 million
to Cayne's $10.2 million, Citizens for Tax Justice estimated their 2003 tax savings
resulting from Bush-sponsored tax cuts will range from $300,000 to $610,000, and
become significantly higher as the decade progresses, particularly if their pay
packages grow.
In some instances, the bundlers' employers have also benefited from White House
policies. Take Dwight H. Evans, who was on the host committee for a June 20 Bush
fundraiser at the Ritz-Carlton Lodge at Reynolds Plantation in Greensboro, Ga.
Evans is the executive vice president and president of the external affairs group
for the Southern Co., which describes itself as "a super-regional energy company."
Southern's holdings include five electric utilities: Alabama Power, Georgia Power,
Gulf Power, Mississippi Power and Savannah Electric. Evans's responsibilities
include directing environmental policy, regulatory affairs and legislative affairs.
Few companies have done as well during the current Bush administration as the
Southern Co. The Environmental Protection Agency (news - web sites) has curtailed
tough regulatory requirements governing improvements at old power plants, and
the electricity industry strongly supports the administration's Clear Skies Initiative
to change the pollution reduction goals in the Clean Air Act. The administration
backs a wide range of subsidies and insurance protections for nuclear energy producers.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A51558-2003Jul13.html