Ok, first apologies to the writers of Fiddler on the Roof for that headline.
Leslie Wayne and Michael Luo of The New York Times nail the convention party story today in their report on how campaign donors to the political parties are getting, well, a little special treatment when they attend the Democratic and Republican conventions.
Major donors to the Democratic Party, the Obama campaign and the Denver host committee are getting Invesco sky boxes. Donors giving $1,000 to the Obama Victory Fund in Colorado get “club level” seats and a postspeech reception. And bundlers who delivered on their $250,000 pledges will get premium seats and convention passes.
On the Republican side:
[M]ajor McCain and Republican National Committee, many of them lobbyists, are getting a special Platinum Package, which provides hotel rooms at the Grand Hotel or the Westin in Minneapolis, exclusive dinners and cocktail receptions, as well as a Tuesday night party featuring the comedian Dennis Miller. The group, referred to as McCain Friends and Family, has its own schedule of events, part of what campaigns call “donor maintenance.”
The important thing to remember about these donor perks, parties, and receptions is that because they are part of political fundraising, they are exempt from the new ethics law, the Honest Leadership and Open Government Act. That means no worry about toothpicks, none about whether an event is “widely attended” or not-no worry about anything like that. Even though there still are plenty of old-fashioned entertainment at the conventions sponsored by special interests, my guess is that a lot of the partying action has moved to these donor events.
0 CommentsOver the last few days there has been some great reporting on the upcoming party scene at the Denver and Republican conventions, not least because many of the articles mention our own humble newly launched website.
In the picture is worth 1,000 words category, the Las Vegas Sun’s Lisa Mascaro’s story displays a “slider” without a toothpick and one cut in half with a toothpick, to illustrate how the “toothpick rule” governing convention parties works. Those who wish to attend members of Congress or top staff under this exception to the gift rule can serve the one with the toothpick, but not the one without.
Jim Kuhnhenn of the Associated Press reports that medical trade groups are feting lawmakers in Denver and the Twin Cities:
The American Medical Association, the American Academy of Family Physicians and other medical groups will hold joint receptions for members of Congress at both conventions.
“The idea is to give our leadership a chance to be with these folks to talk about our issues and make sure that our issues are out there,” said Michael Fleming, a physician who is chairman of the board of directors of FamMedPac, the family physicians’ political action committee.
Brody Mullins and Elizabeth Williamson at The Wall Street Journal write on the proliferation of events at the conventions that technically qualify as charitable events, another ethics law exemption.
The rules don’t apply to charitable fundraisers. So lawmakers and aides are free to play in a poker tournament sponsored by the Poker Players Alliance. Funding for the event and charitable contributions come from the alliance and various other sponsors. Because proceeds will go to the Paralyzed Veterans of America, the poker lobby can pick up the tab for the event and attend along with about 200 poker celebrities, lawmakers, aides and delegates. Guests will be given $5,000 worth of chips for the four-hour tournament, with the winnings going to the veterans group. A spokeswoman for the alliance says the event complies with the law.
And they also illustrate the “widely attended event” exemption:
Another popular party exemption is the so-called “widely-attended” event clause. Under that rule, corporations can pick up the tab for parties if they meet two conditions. One is that at least 25 people invited are not members of Congress or staff. The second condition, which applies only to House members: The party must have some element that relates to official congressional business.
So when the Recording Industry Association of America decided to throw the Kanye West party, it teamed up with the One Campaign in order to promote solutions to global AIDS and poverty. Literature on the topic will be available at the event and several speakers will address poverty relief before the concert.
“The truth is the ethics changes haven’t affected our parties very much,” said Jonathan Lamy, a spokesman for the trade association.
Likewise, when the Distilled Spirits Council throws the “Spirits of Denver,” party goers will hear a brief presentation on how to prevent underage drinking.
With the parties about to start, I’ve got some butterflies in my stomach about crashing them. I am fortifying myself with certain feminine rituals-new lipstick and a fresh pedicure. I’m for ridding the world of poverty and AIDS, and now that I’m a mother, I’m certainly against underage drinking. But will the party hosts let me in to these parties so I can be educated on these matters? We’ll see.
0 CommentsCheck out this great whimsical guide for lawmakers on what they can and can’t do at the conventions this year as per the new ethics law, the Honest Government and Open Leadership Act, coming your way from the Center for Responsive Politics. They include:
1) Do not be an honored guest.
2) Leave your dancing shoes in Washington.
3) Put your poker face on.
4) Pack a snack.
To get the details read the guide!
0 CommentsMy favorite quote of the day, from former Rep. Bob Ney, in his first interview after his release from a Cincinnati half way house. Ney served prison time after being sentenced in January 2007 after pleading guilty to corruption charges related to his association with the infamous lobbyist Jack Abramoff, who is now doing time himself.
“I think lobbyists are still needed they are needed out there [but] the question is: Would a member do something for money? I think that the lobby will will probably help somewhat, but it was most likely a cosmetic situation too because lobbyists are still allowed to host things at conventions and lobbyists are still out there.”
(emphasis added)
1 CommentAnd there’s another great report out today from the Campaign Finance Institute (CFI) on the soft money loophole that allows donors to spend unlimited amounts of money into city “host committees” to help pay for the conventions. The U.S. Federal Election Commission (FEC) says this is ok because these companies and interests supposedly are giving in the name of civic boosterism, not for political reasons.
But CFI, in partnership with the Center for Responsive Politics, points out that the expected $112 million that these committees are expected to collect comes from donors who also have a huge stake in federal policy. Together the 173 donors since 2005 have contributed $180 million to federal candidates and political parties. They’ve also spent $1.3 billion on lobbying.
Has all that cash gone toward their fervent desire to promote my home city, Denver, and the Twin Cities? Call me doubtful.
0 CommentsSometimes a title just says it all: “Party Conventions Are Free-For-All for Influence Peddling,” says Public Citizen in an excellent new report issued today. If you are looking for a primer on the legal loopholes that allow lobbyists to keep paying and partying in Denver and the Twin Cities over the next few weeks, this is the place to go.
For example, it walks the reader through all the many exceptions of the new ethics law, the Honest Leadership and Open Government Act. It’s not ok for a lobbyist to pay for a party honoring a particular lawmaker-but it is ok for a lobbyist to pay for a reception where lawmakers are invited, as long as they follow the infamous “toothpick rule,” under which you can’t sit down to eat a steak dinner, but you can stand up and eat a kobe beef meatball.
Public Citizen says that some of the parties we’ve listed here on Party Time may cross the line into illegality. For example, an AT&T reception at the Republican convention honoring the Republican Main Street Partnership.
Public Citizen, like Party Time, will be watching the party scene in Denver and the Twin Cities. We’ll keep you posted.
1 CommentJust as we were preparing to launch this new website, we got another juicy email from one of our anonymous sources, containing an updated list of convention parties and events as compiled by the top Washington lobbying firm, Quinn Gillespie & Associates.
Click here for the updated version of the Democratic convention party events and here for the Republican. They show some new details about events already reported and also some new ones. For example:
We’ll be adding these events to our searchable database as soon as our army of interns/revelers can get them in there. In the meanwhile, you can page through these pdfs to find these new nuggets.
You’ll soon see that the list of Democratic parties is a bit, well, heftier, than those listed for the Republican events. We don’t know for sure if that’s because there are more parties in Denver than in the Twin Cities, or whether the lobbying firm has just done a better job at collecting invites for Denver parties. But we’ll keep watching.
1 CommentToday we are officially launching this website. Our count of convention parties in our database is now above 400-and counting. What’s very important to keep in mind: many of these party hosts are also sponsors of the conventions’ host committees, major donors to federal candidates and party committees and are also big spenders on federal lobbying.
So, for example:
Tune in here to track these parties and events at the conventions. And of course we’ll also tell you what we know about Congressional fundraising parties after the conventions are over. There’s a motherlode of information here already on fundraising parties for members of Congress and congressional candidates, Democrats and Republicans alike, dating back to 2006.
Also, please remember-we want to hear from you about where the parties are. The more you tell us, the better resource this website will be for all you journalists, activists, and bloggers out there. Party on.
0 CommentsWe just got a big juicy surprise that we can’t wait to share. We now have in our possession a pair of documents listing 370 events at the Democratic National Convention in Denver and the Republican National Convention in Minneapolis. The lists were compiled by a top Washington lobbying firm, Quinn Gillespie & Associates. We’ll be entering these parties into our Party Time database so they are searchable.
A sampling of the parties listed include:
Democratic National Convention
Republican National Convention
It’s not a complete list by any means-we already have some convention parties in our database that don’t appear here. And we’ll continue to collect more as we here of them.
As I wrote the other day, these parties are going on despite the passage of a new ethics law, lobbyists are finding a way to live within its loopholes. It’s our job at Party Time to show you how they are doing it.
0 CommentsRecently Denver Post columnist Bill Husted reported Denver convention organizer, lobbyist Steve Farber, saying there could be as many as 1,000 parties in the mile high city when the Democratic convention comes to town next month. And that’s just Denver, not counting the Republican convention in Minneapolis. I couldn’t possibly get to all of them, even if I were invited, which I’m not.
With the conventions coming soon, caterers are busy preparing for events sponsored by the likes of Qwest, Coca Cola, Xcel, Amgen, Teletch, JP Morgan, the American Wind Energy Association, the Wind Energy Institute, Target, CH2MHIll, and unions such the Service Employees International Union and United Food and Commercial Workers.
CQ Politics reports that the lobbying firms will all be out in force, too, including Farber’s employer, Brownstein Hyatt Farber & Schreck, which is hosting a big blow out at the Denver Art Museum on opening night. Patton Boggs will throw a party at Bar Standard, “a brand new Art Deco club,” in Denver, and at St. Paul’s Landmark Center, “a century-old Post Office and courthouse renovated into a cultural center,” in Minneapolis.
What gives? Doesn’t the new ethics law–the Honest Leadership and Open Government Act of 2007–specifically say that lobbyists can’t throw parties honoring specific lawmakers at the political conventions anymore?
Yes, the law says that. But these companies and organizations seem to be going with the flow, figuring out how to throw parties that meet the letter of the law while still being able to court access.
First, the House Committee on Standards of Official Conduct says that parties are allowed that do not occur on the actual days of the conventions, and second, parties honoring a state delegation or multiple lawmakers (PDF). Fundraising events are also outside the scope of the law (PDF). So are “widely-attended events”—receptions where food is limited to hors d’oeuvres, beverages and “similar food of nominal value.”
The Senate Committee on Ethics’ guidance is a bit more strict than the House’s, specifically prohibiting lobbyist-funded parties for multiple lawmakers (PDF). However, parties are still permissible for days before and after the conventions. They are also allowed for parties where a lawmaker is honored along with people who are not members of Congress (PDF).
Here at Party Time, we’re watching all the party planning for the two cities, Denver and Minneapolis, with a mix of awe and trepidation. Awe because of the massive amount of work involved–see this excerpt from a report from specialevents.com:
Many in the Denver event community are already hard at work. Epicurean Culinary Group, based in Centennial, Colo., has 57 events on the books specifically for convention week, notes chief operating officer Greg Karl. The company’s Epicurean Catering arm is handling 35 projects, the largest of which will be a 15,000-guest event for media from throughout the world. The Epicurean Entertainment arm is catering 10 events at Invesco Field at Mile High stadium, where the Denver Broncos football team plays, while Epicurean @ DCPA is catering nine events at the Denver Center for the Performing Arts. For Sen. Barack Obama’s Aug. 28 acceptance speech at Mile High, 45 years to the day since Martin Luther King Jr.’s landmark “I Have a Dream” speech, the company will cater 140 executive suites on site.
The trepidation is because of the sang-froid we must rally when preparing ourselves for trying to crash–and report on–these parties. What to wear, especially when you know you are not welcome?
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.