Sen. Elizabeth Dole (R-NC) is finding herself in the “fight for her life,” in defending her seat against Democratic challenger Kay Hagan says the U.S. News & World Report. Her problem, reports the American Spectator, is that she’s spent most of her time in D.C. rather than North Carolina, and that she’s done a poor job of constitutent services.
Dole, however, has done a decent job of partying. Our Party Time database shows nine fundraising parties for the senator this year, all but two of them in Washington, DC. (We previously blogged here about an August party for Dole sponsored by several timber PACs.) And of those two non-DC events, one was in Georgia and the other in New York City.
The deep connections that Dole enjoys thanks to her extensive GOP pedigree–she served in two cabinet posts and of course is married to former Senator Bob Dole (R-KS)–is evident when you dig into the meat of the invitations.
The Georgia party was hosted by several Republican Georgia elected officials: Governor Sonny Perdue, Secretary of State Karen Handel, and Senators Saxby Chambliss and Johnny Isakson. The venue: the home of Oscar and Virginia Persons. Oscar Persons is a partner at Alston & Bird, a legal and lobbying firm which also happens to employ Sen. Dole’s husband, former Sen. Bob Dole (R-KS), as well as former Sen. Tom Daschle (D-SD).
The New York party in April also featured a former senator as a draw, in this case former Sen. Alfonse D’Amato. (The former Republican senator from New York now lobbies for Park Strategies.) Bob Giuffra and his wife, Joyce, also hosted. Bob is a partner at Sullivan & Cromwell, the venue for the event, where he specializes in securities and white collar crime. Another host, George T. Conway III, is most well known for his reported involvement in the Paula Jones case back in the late 1990s. His firm, Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, is famous for representing the tobacco giant Philip Morris when the company was sued, along with other tobacco companies, by the U.S. government for deciving the American public about the health effects of tobacco. (Tobacco, of course, is a big industry in North Carolina.)
We don’t have any invitations in our database for Hagan, Dole’s challenger. This doesn’t mean that she doesn’t party too. It only means that we haven’t received any of the invitations. That’s why we always encourage our readers to send us any invitations for congressional fundraisers that come their way.
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Why would several timber PACs host a breakfast for Sen. Elizabeth Dole (R-NC) at the Charlie Palmer restaurant this morning? The price of entry was $1,000 for a PAC, $500 for an individual.
Here at Party Time, we are like the unpopular kid who didn’t get invited. We don’t know exactly what happens at these soirees, because we’re not actually there, but we can pick up some evidence from the surrounding chatter. It’s mostly circumstantial, it’s true, but oh-so-intriguing.
First, we know that North Carolina is a timber state. And a bit of searching shows that the American Forest and Paper Association, one of the sponsoring PACs, thinks quite highly of the senator, giving her a perfect 100% voting score for the 109th and 108th Congresses, if not the current session. We also can find out that the timber industry has been fairly generous to her in the past, giving her more than $67,000 for her campaigns.
Dig a little deeper and we find out the senator is one of 22 sponsors of S. 402, a bill to provide a tax break for timber sales. The other senators are a mix of Democrats and Republicans, with representation from timber states such as Washington and Oregon.
Then it turns out that Weyerhaeuser, the Washington-based company whose PAC was one of the sponsors of today’s breakfast, has been lobbying desperately for tax relief. It seems that the company’s coffers have been declining in a big way thanks to the real estate crisis:
Weyerhaeuser’s immediate troubles come from the same poisoned well that choked Safeco and still menaces Washington Mutual: the housing bust. Weyerhaeuser’s first-quarter revenues declined nearly 24 percent, and last month it announced a write-off of up to $325 million, largely because of real-estate troubles. Impatient investors caused Weyerhaeuser shares to touch a five-year low on Thursday to close at $49.60.
Weyerhaeuser successfully pushed to get a related version of the timber bill sponsored by Dole, the TREE Act, into the recently approved farm bill:
In the end, the TREE Act was included in the farm bill. Weyerhaeuser and some small timber companies will see their tax rate reduced from 35 percent to about 17 percent, congressional aides said.
And we know that Dole voted “yes” on the farm bill.
Dole is also up for reelection this year. She has raised a lot more cash than her opponent, Democrat Kay Hagan. A recent poll from the liberal DailyKos shows that she enjoys a comfortable lead, at 50 percent versus her opponent’s 42 percent. But with Democrats pushing this year to win a filibuster-proof lead in the Senate, no seat is considered completely safe. “I doubt anyone really thinks Dole can just slack off,” writes Kos.
Put all this together and breakfast for a senator who has been very good to the timber industry starts to make a lot of sense. New friends are all very well and good, but old friends are nice and reliable. Pass the coffee.
1 CommentBeneficiary: congressional candidate, lawmaker, or entity which collects funds raised at party
Host: person who is hosting party-often, but not always, a registered federal lobbyist
Venue Name: where the party is
Entertainment Type: type of gathering, such as "breakfast," "ski trip," "bowling"
Other Lawmakers Mentioned: lawmakers mentioned on invitation who are used as a draw for the event
Sunlight's Party Time is a project to track parties for members of Congress or congressional candidates that happen all year round in Washington, D.C. and beyond. (read more)
We also post information we receive about parties where members of Congress are expected to participate—such as convention or inaugural parties.
Since we don't hear about all the parties, you can also tell us if you know where the party is and we don't.