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May 16, 2012

 
Yard signs supporting U.S. Senate candidate Richard Mourdock in Columbus, Ind., on April 23. Mourdock went on to beat incumbent Sen. Dick Lugar in a primary race that received national attention, and a flood of money from outside Indiana.
Curtis Tate/MCT /Landov

Yard signs supporting U.S. Senate candidate Richard Mourdock in Columbus, Ind., on April 23. Mourdock went on to beat incumbent Sen. Dick Lugar in a primary race that received national attention, and a flood of money from outside Indiana.

It's happening in several congressional races, in states like Nebraska, Montana and Ohio — millions of dollars from out-of-state donors and outside groups are fueling candidates' war chests.

Last week in Indiana, outside money helped Richard Mourdock beat out six-term incumbent Sen. Dick Lugar in the GOP primary.

On Wednesday, WCPN's David C. Barnett reports for NPR's Morning Edition about the congressional race in Ohio's 9th District. The Republican challenger there is Joe Wurzelbacher, aka "Joe the Plumber," the guy who rose to fame in 2008 by tangling with then-candidate Barack Obama. The incumbent Democrat is Marcy Kaptur, and $3 out of every $4 in the race has come from donors who don't live in Ohio's 9th.

When did so many Americans decide races outside their backyards were important enough to back financially?

NPR's science correspondent, Shankar Vedantam stopped by Morning Edition with recent social science research that could provide some answers.

"Across the United States, money is pouring into congressional races that comes from outside the congressional district, and there's another thing that's happening at the same time, which is a lot of the money is increasingly coming from donors who identify themselves as strongly partisan," Vedantam explains.

He points to an article in the latest issue of American Politics Research by Ray La Raja and David Wiltse.

In 1972, 40 percent of donors to congressional and presidential races identified themselves as liberals or conservatives. Today, the number is about 60 percent, says La Raja, a political science professor at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Along with that partisan spike comes a similar trend in political contributions: Donors are using their money to weigh in on ideological national issues, such as abortion, gay marriage and foreign policy, instead of focusing solely on local issues.

"What La Raja's research seems to suggest is that Washington's polarization came first, and starting in about 2002, there has been this really growing polarization among the voters, which is translating into more partisan donors in politics," Vedantam says.

And, why is 2002 so important to La Raja's findings? He says that's when political campaigns really began to focus on online fundraising.

"Now, you're sitting in front of your computer, you get an email that says, 'Look what those people are doing to us in Washington.' You have your credit card ready, the people who are motivated by that are passionate about the issues, they're ideological. They send money," La Raja says.

Campaign fundraising has become a "self-reinforcing system," Vedantam says, where politicians appeal to those partisan contributors who are likely to give money to a particular cause or campaign, and the cycle encourages itself again and again over each political year.

Tags: 2012 elections, political fundraising , It's All Politics, Congressional elections , Senate primaries

Nonprofit groups that want to run campaign ads within two months of the general election have to reveal the names of their donors. That's the result of a federal appeals court action on campaign finance law.

Several weeks ago, a federal court in Washington told the Federal Election Commission it could not allow the buyers of tens of millions of dollars' worth of ads to remain anonymous.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit late Monday, on a 2-to-1 vote, refused to grant a stay of that decision pending appeal. It ordered the full appeal to be heard sometime this fall.

At issue is the ability of tax-exempt groups that run political ads within two months of the general election — or within one month of a primary — to keep secret the names of their donors. Such groups spent some $80 million in the 2010 congressional elections, primarily supporting conservative candidates or attacking their opponents. The donors behind less than 10 percent of that amount were ever disclosed.

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The down-on-his-luck American may have been forgotten in times past but not by today's presidential-campaign video makers.
Enlarge Romney campaign ad screenshot

The down-on-his-luck American may have been forgotten in times past but not by today's presidential-campaign video makers.

The down-on-his-luck American may have been forgotten in times past but not by today's presidential-campaign video makers.
Romney campaign ad screenshot

The down-on-his-luck American may have been forgotten in times past but not by today's presidential-campaign video makers.

Forget about President Franklin Roosevelt's "Forgotten Man," the everyday American who's down on his luck economically and ignored by the powers that be.

When it comes to modern presidential campaigns and the ads they spawn, such Americans are front and center. And they are wielded like cudgels by the political contestants.

That reality can be seen in highly-produced, pathos-filled videos released this week by both the campaigns of President Obama and Mitt Romney, the all-but-official Republican presidential nominee.

YouTube

As NPR's Greg Henderson reported in a post Monday the day it went up on YouTube, the Obama ad, which criticizes Romney's years at private-equity company Bain Capital, may seem familiar.

That's because it reprises charges made by Newt Romney during the GOP primaries and the late Sen. Edward Kennedy in his 1994 Senate campaign that Romney was complicit in the layoffs of hundreds of workers during his time as Bain's chief executive.

Team Romney on Tuesday made public a Tuesday featuring its own everyday Americans. specifically Iowans, meant to symbolize all those unemployed, underemployed or discouraged workers Romney lays at Obama's feet — 23 million, according to former Massachusetts senator.

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Tags: Mitt Romney, President Obama

Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas (right), talks with chief strategist Jesse Benton in Ames, Iowa, on Aug. 13.
Enlarge Charles Dharapak/AP

Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas (right), talks with chief strategist Jesse Benton in Ames, Iowa, on Aug. 13.

Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas (right), talks with chief strategist Jesse Benton in Ames, Iowa, on Aug. 13.
Charles Dharapak/AP

Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas (right), talks with chief strategist Jesse Benton in Ames, Iowa, on Aug. 13.

Presidential candidate Ron Paul is not expected to ultimately endorse presumptive GOP nominee Mitt Romney, Paul's chief strategist said Tuesday.

"Never say never, but I don't believe that's likely," said Jesse Benton, during a half-hour-plus give-and-take with reporters.

And there's also no chance, he said, that Paul, who is remaining in the race in an effort to collect delegates to the Republican National Convention, will endorse Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson. Or that he would endorse anyone outside the Republican Party, he said. Unless his supporters are treated badly.

During the call, in what appeared to be a direct message to Paul supporters, Benton repeatedly emphasized that the campaign expects its delegates to the national convention to act with "decorum and respect."

"Our supporters are going to get an excessive amount of blame for problems that arise in heated moments" during the August convention in Tampa, Fla., he said, calling for "respect and civility" among those participating.

"They're going to be under a microscope," Benton said.

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Americans Elect, the nationwide effort to launch a credible third-party presidential campaign, has money, media attention and — most importantly — access to the ballot in dozens of states.

What it doesn't have is a candidate for president.

So if it follows its own rules, the nonprofit, nonpartisan organization won't field a presidential candidate alongside President Obama and presumed Republican nominee Mitt Romney on Nov. 6, it announced Tuesday.

But the group also left the door open to bending those rules.

"As of today, no candidate has reached the national support threshold required to enter the 'Americans Elect Online Convention' this June," Americans Elect CEO Kahlil Byrd said in a statement.

"Because of this, under the rules that AE delegates ratified, the primary process would end today. There is, however, an almost universal desire among delegates, leadership and millions of Americans who have supported AE to see a credible candidate emerge from this process."

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President Obama delivers the commencement address at Barnard College in New York on Monday.
Enlarge Richard Drew/AP

President Obama delivers the commencement address at Barnard College in New York on Monday.

President Obama delivers the commencement address at Barnard College in New York on Monday.
Richard Drew/AP

President Obama delivers the commencement address at Barnard College in New York on Monday.

As close as the general election is expected to be, virtually everything the presidential candidates do from here until November is about maximizing the turnout of voters in their respective bases without repelling independents or moderates.

Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney speaks to graduates Saturday at Liberty University in Lynchburg, Va.
Enlarge Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images

Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney speaks to graduates Saturday at Liberty University in Lynchburg, Va.

Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney speaks to graduates Saturday at Liberty University in Lynchburg, Va.
Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images

Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney speaks to graduates Saturday at Liberty University in Lynchburg, Va.

So that's the lens through which to read President Obama's commencement address Monday to the graduates of Barnard College at Columbia University in New York and Mitt Romney's speech Saturday at Liberty University, the evangelical institution founded by the late Rev. Jerry Falwell.

While the two speeches had the same end, giving their voters reasons to get excited enough to get out and vote for them in several months, they took completely different routes to get there.

Obama was, after all, in exceedingly friendly territory as a Columbia alumnus returning as a conquering hero. That helped explain the enthusiastic reception he received, with students and their guests cheering and screaming repeatedly throughout his speech.

Romney, meanwhile, wasn't quite Daniel in the lion's den — but the fact that there were some evangelical Liberty seniors who questioned why a Mormon was chosen to be their commencement speaker gives a sense of what he had to deal with.

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Tags: Mitt Romney, President Obama

President Obama's re-election campaign is attacking Mitt Romney's business experience, perhaps his strongest selling point as a candidate, in a new TV ad in five swing states.

The Romney campaign responded, in essence: Bring it on.

BarackObamadotcom/YouTube

The two-minute ad — "Steel" — echoes questions raised early in the Republican primary about Romney's oversight of companies that Bain Capital ran when Romney was CEO of the private equity firm.

But the most direct attack at that time came from a superPAC supporting Newt Gingrich. And by law, the Gingrich campaign itself could not coordinate with the superPAC, giving him some distance from the video.

This new ad out Monday comes directly from Obama's re-election team. And it signals an aggressive effort to hit Romney at the core of the contention that his business prowess makes him better equipped to deal with a struggling economy — and, specifically, to help lower the national unemployment level — than Obama.

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Coal piled near a conveyor at a mine near Meta, Ky., in August 2011.
Enlarge Ed Reinke/AP

Coal piled near a conveyor at a mine near Meta, Ky., in August 2011.

Coal piled near a conveyor at a mine near Meta, Ky., in August 2011.
Ed Reinke/AP

Coal piled near a conveyor at a mine near Meta, Ky., in August 2011.

Both Democrats and Republicans sing the praises of all-of-the-above energy strategy aimed at reducing the nation's lengthy addiction to foreign oil though both sides suspect the other of lacking sincerity

Republicans, for instance, generally doubt that Democrats really want to exploit as much of the nation's oil and coal resources as they do. Democrats, on the other hand, distrust Republicans' commitment to renewables and energy efficiency.

President Obama's re-election campaign played right into that dynamic, therefore, with a website to explain the administration's energy policy priorities that initially listed oil, natural gas, nuclear, solar, wind, biofuels and energy efficiency. What was missing from that list? Coal.

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Tags: coal mining, President Obama

Minnesota Republican Rep. Michele Bachmann and her husband, Marcus, recite the Pledge of Allegiance before announcing her candidacy for president last June in Waterloo, Iowa.
Enlarge Steve Pope/Getty Images

Minnesota Republican Rep. Michele Bachmann and her husband, Marcus, recite the Pledge of Allegiance before announcing her candidacy for president last June in Waterloo, Iowa.

Minnesota Republican Rep. Michele Bachmann and her husband, Marcus, recite the Pledge of Allegiance before announcing her candidacy for president last June in Waterloo, Iowa.
Steve Pope/Getty Images

Minnesota Republican Rep. Michele Bachmann and her husband, Marcus, recite the Pledge of Allegiance before announcing her candidacy for president last June in Waterloo, Iowa.

Under assault from conservative blogs that are normally friendly to her — and facing some skepticism in Minnesota, where she's up for re-election — Rep. Michele Bachmann wants to give back her just-revealed Swiss citizenship.

But despite reports that she's renouncing the Swiss side of a newly acquired dual citizenship, both Bachmann and Swiss officials say it's a status she has technically enjoyed for more than three decades.

On NPR's Morning Edition, Minnesota Public Radio's Mark Zdechlik reported that a spokesperson for the Swiss Embassy says Bachmann technically became a Swiss citizen 34 years ago, when she married her husband, Marcus, whose parents were born in Switzerland.

And in a written statement on Thursday, the onetime Republican presidential candidate said as much:

"Today I sent a letter to the Swiss Consulate requesting withdrawal of my dual Swiss citizenship, which was conferred upon me by operation of Swiss law when I married my husband in 1978," wrote Bachmann.

SwissTV USA/YouTube

Bachmann's May 8 interview with a Swiss television reporter.

"I took this action because I want to make it perfectly clear: I was born in America and I am a proud American citizen. I am, and always have been, 100 percent committed to our United States Constitution and the United States of America. ..."

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Tags: Switzerland, Rep. Michele Bachmann, Tea Party

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