Claremont Insider: It's All About the Benjamins

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

It's All About the Benjamins

Pomona Mayor Norma Torres (right, in all her weedy splendor), has been awfully quiet since winning the June Democratic primary for the State Assembly's 61st District. Running in a safe Democratic district means that once Torres beat out the other Democrats in the race, she essentially won the November general election as well, so she probably doesn't need to spend much on her November campaign.

And it's a good thing Torres doesn't have to invest much money in beating out her Republican opponent, Wendy Maier. Torres raised $402,673.12 for her campaign between 1/1/2008 and 6/30/2008. But she also spent $393,602.10 winning her primary election. None of the other Democratic candidates who ran against Torres spent more than $20,000.

In contrast to Torres, Anthony Adams, the Republican incumbent in the 59th Assembly District (Claremont's district) raised and spent about $122,000 in the first six months of 2008. Adams, like Torres, is in seat that's safely gerrymandered in favor of Adams' party.

So why so much money for Torres, who hasn't done much other than to be anointed by the 61st District's soon-to-be-retired incumbent, Nell Soto? Well, Torres has worked her way up the local Democratic party chain and is a Democratic super-delegate pledged to Barack Obama. So, Torres' party ties must account for much of the money raised.

And where did that money come from? Well, as we noted previously, some came from the insurance industry, and some came from the waste management and recycling industries. The California Secretary of State's website also listed an interesting $1,000 contribution to the Torres campaign from the Corrections Corporation of America (CCA):

(Click to Enlarge)


CCA is a for-profit prison business based in Nashville, TN, and has come under a lot of criticism for the way it runs its prisons. CCA has been accused of cutting corners excessively to the possible detriment of its employees and prisoners alike. CCA disputes those accusations, but in 2004 a major riot at CCA's Crowley Correctional Facility in Colorado had to be quelled by outside law enforcement officers after CCA's guards were overwhelmed. The PBS show NOW ran a story about the business of private prisons and CCA, which you can see here.

The NOW piece noted that the for-profit prison industry lobbies state governments for harsher prison sentencing and parole guidelines in order to ensure a steady supply of bodies for its prisons. Not necessarily good public policy, that. And, irony of ironies, considering Torres' party affiliation and her (legal) immigrant background, the for-profit prison industry has apparently targeted illegal immigrants as its next great business opportunity.

But, really, $1,000 is probably chump change in the scheme of things in the California State Assembly. Where did the real money flowing into the Torres campaign come from? The largest group of donors were unions, which is hardly surprising since organized labor has long been a major force behind Democratic candidates. Here are the nearly $115,000 in union and union political action committee donations received by the Torres campaign from January through June this year:
  • SERVICE EMPLOYEES INT'L UNION LOCAL 1000 CANDIDATE PAC - $7,200
  • SERVICE EMPLOYEES INT'L UNION LOCAL 1000 CANDIDATE PAC - $7,200
  • SEIU UHW PAC - $7,200
  • SEIU UHW PAC - $7,200
  • SEIU LONG TERM CARE WORKERS LOCAL 6434 STATE PAC - $3,600
  • SEIU LOCAL 721, CTW, CLC STATE & LOCAL - $3,600
  • SEIU LOCAL 721, CTW, CLC STATE & LOCAL - $3,600
  • SEIU LOCAL 121 RN PAC - $3,600
  • SEIU LOCAL 121 RN PAC - $3,600
  • SAN BERNARDINO PUBLIC EMPLOYEES ASSN. PAC - $5,000
  • SAN BERNARDINO PUBLIC EMPLOYEES ASSN. PAC - $5,000
  • PROFESSIONAL ENGINEERS IN CA GOVERNMENT - $1,000
  • PROFESSIONAL ENGINEERS IN CA GOVERNMENT - $2,000
  • PROFESSIONAL ENGINEERS IN CA GOVERNMENT - $1,000
  • PROFESSIONAL ENGINEERS IN CA GOVERNMENT - $2,000
  • PACE OF CA SCHOOL EMPLOYEES ASSOCIATION - $2,000
  • PACE OF CA SCHOOL EMPLOYEES ASSOCIATION - $2,000
  • PACE OF CA SCHOOL EMPLOYEES ASSOCIATION - $2,000
  • LOS ANGELES POLICE PROTECTIVE LEAGUE PAC - $3,600
  • LOS ANGELES POLICE PROTECTIVE LEAGUE PAC - $3,600
  • LOCAL 770 UFCW PAC - $1,000
  • CA TEACHERS ASSOCIATION/ ASSOCIATION FOR BETTER CITIZENSHIP - $7,200
  • CA TEACHERS ASSOCIATION/ ASSOCIATION FOR BETTER CITIZENSHIP - $7,200
  • CA STATEWIDE LAW ENFORCEMENT ASSN. (CSLEA) PAC - $3,600
  • CA STATEWIDE LAW ENFORCEMENT ASSN. (CSLEA) PAC - $3,600
  • CA STATE COUNCIL OF SERVICE EMPLOYEES - $7,200
  • CA PROFESSIONAL FIREFIGHTERS PAC - $1,000
  • CA PROFESSIONAL FIREFIGHTERS PAC - $1,000
  • CA FEDERATION OF TEACHERS COPE - $3,600
  • CA FEDERATION OF TEACHERS COPE - $3,600
  • UNITED NURSES ASSOCIATIONS OF CA - $1,000.00
  • UNITED NURSES ASSOCIATIONS OF CA MONETARY - $1,000.00
  • UNITED NURSES ASSOCIATIONS OF CA - $1,000.00
  • UNITED FIREFIGHTERS OF LOS ANGELES CITY LOCAL 112 - $500.00
  • UNITED FIREFIGHTERS OF LOS ANGELES CITY LOCAL 112 - $500.00
  • UFCW REGION 8 STATES COUNCIL PAC - $2,000.00
  • UFCW REGION 8 STATES COUNCIL PAC -$2,000.00

Did you happen to catch that fifth one down, a $3,600 donation from the Service Employees International Union Local 6434? That SEIU local has been on the front page of the Los Angeles Times recently for some highly questionable activities involving money spent by the local and its president, Tyrone Freeman:

The head of California's largest union local has stepped aside in the wake of Times reports that the organization and a related charity paid hundreds of thousands of dollars to firms owned by his wife and mother-in-law.
Tyrone Freeman, president of a Service Employees International Union chapter in Los Angeles, said in a written statement late Wednesday that he was taking a leave of absence and that the local would be placed in a temporary trusteeship.

"In order to ensure that any investigation of the allegations is fair and free from any question of interference or influence, I am taking a leave of absence effective immediately for the duration of the investigation," the statement said. "I believe these steps will allow our union to continue to serve the best interests of our membership during this time."

The statement was released by the Washington, D.C., office of SEIU President Andy Stern, who nurtured Freeman's career as the 160,000-member local grew dramatically in recent years, largely through consolidations.

"These allegations are of serious concern to all of us and we support Mr. Freeman's decision to put the best interests of the members first," Stern spokeswoman Michelle Ringuette said in an e-mail.

In addition to the payments to his relatives' firms, Freeman's local, the United Long-Term Care Workers, spent nearly $300,000 last year on a Four Seasons Resort golf tournament, restaurants such as a Morton's steakhouse, a Beverly Hills cigar club and the William Morris Agency, the Hollywood talent firm, The Times reported earlier this month.

Altogether, the payments to Freeman and the home-based companies operated by his relatives, and to a former union employee totaled more than $1 million in 2006 and 2007, records and interviews show. That includes Freeman's salary and other union compensation. The workers whose dues fill the union's coffers make about $9 an hour caring for the infirm and disabled.

So, SEIU locals (not just Freeman's) representing janitors, healthcare workers, city-level employees, county and state employees, corrections employees, school employees, donated $43,800 to Norma Torres' campaign. Why? Could it have anything to do with maintaining the lifestyles of the rich and famous? A State Assembly vote, especially one from someone who is seen as controllable, might come in pretty handy. Someone's got to pay for those $10,000 bills at the Grand Havana Room in Beverly Hills. Those Cohibas don't come cheap, you know.

And, although we know this is an accepted practice, isn't there something wrong with public employee unions contributing to the campaigns of the very elected officials who appropriate money for those same employees? You can see how a state can get itself into a $15 billion hole pretty quickly that way.

Of course, the Republicans and their donors have the same thing going on. That's why the party of fiscal conservatism has overseen the largest federal budget deficits in our nation's history. That awful sound you hear is the machinery of governance grinding slowly to a halt through the accumulation of all that sand being thrown into the works by the patrons of both major parties.

We suspect that a lot of you might be reaching the same conclusion right about now: A pox on both their houses.