Friday, October 8, 2010

Who Owns Congress? A Campaign Cash Seating Chart | Mother Jones

Who Owns Congress?

Who Owns Congress? A Campaign Cash Seating Chart

— Illustration: Steve Brodner

What if members of Congress were seated not by party but according to their major business sponsors? We gave it a try.

— By Dave Gilson

Read also: The rest of this special reporta note on sourcing, and MoJo's daily political coverage.

What if members of Congress were seated not by party but according to the industries which gave them the most money over their entire careers?

The Senate: Lawyers, Drugs, and Money

The Senate

SECTOR | # OF MEMBERS

Finance, insurance, and real estate  57

Lawyers and lobbyists  25

Health  5

Agribusiness  3

Labor  2

Energy and natural resources  2

Miscellaneous business  2

Communications and electronics  1

No money raised  3

Total seats | 100

Sen. Charles Schumer

 Sen. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.)

Terms: 2 (9 in House)

Total raised: $62.2 million, 27% from finance, insurance, and real estate (FIRE)

Top donors: A major defender of Wall Streetinterests before the crash, Schumer has netted more big bank money than any member of Congress who hasn't run for president.

Sen. Scott Brown

 Sen. Scott Brown (R-Mass.)

Terms: 1

Total raised: $17 million, 7% from FIRE

Top donors: In the special election to fill Ted Kennedy's seat, Brown's biggest donors were Fidelity Investments, Bain Capital (Mitt Romney's old firm), and Credit Suisse. But—whoops!—he voted for the financial regulation bill.

Sen. Mitch McConnell

 Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.)

Terms: 5

Total raised: $37.2 million, 14% from FIRE

Top donors: The top Senate Republican's most generous contributors have been US Smokeless Tobacco—now part of Altria, née Philip Morris—and Brown-Forman, the maker of Jack Daniel's. Cheers!

Sen. Harry Reid

 Sen. Harry Reid (D-Nev.)

Terms: 4 (2 in House)Total raised: $35.4 million, 17% from lawyers and lobbyists

Top donors: 5 out of the majority leader's top 10 lifetime donors are casinos or gambling interests. The industry has bet more than $1.7 million on him, plus $1.3 mil on fellow Nevada Sen. John Ensign.

Sen. Barbara Boxer

 Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.)

Terms: 3 (5 in House)

Total raised: $75.3 million, 7% from lawyers and lobbyists

Top donors: Boxer is Hollywood's favorite member of Congress (aside from Sen. John Kerry). Her second-biggest donor is Time Warner; Disney is sixth.

Sen. Saxby Chambliss

 Sen. Saxby Chambliss (R-Ga.)

Terms: 2 (4 in House)

Total raised: $31.8 million, 12% from agribusiness

Top donors: The ranking member of the ag committee has never met a federal farm subsidy he didn't like. He just happens to be Congress' second-most bountiful recipient of agribusiness cash.

Sen. James Inhofe

 Sen. James Inhofe (R-Okla.)

Terms: 4 (4 in House)

Total raised: $16.2 million, 13% from energy and natural resources

Top donors: Inhofe, who's declared that "man-induced global warming is an article of religious faith," has received more money from Koch Industries than any other company. The oil firm has given nearly $25 million to climate-change denial groups.

 

The House: Big Labor vs. Big Money

The House

SECTOR | # OF MEMBERS

Labor  159

Finance, insurance, and real estate  159

Health  26

Agribusiness  23

Lawyers and lobbyists  20

Miscellaneous business  18

Energy and natural resources  10

Defense  7

Transportation  6

Communications and electronics  4

Construction  1

Unfilled seats  2

Total seats | 435

Rep. David Obey

 Rep. David Obey (D-Wisc.)

Terms: 21

Total raised: $10.8 million, 21% from labor

Top donors: The chair of the appropriations committee and a subcommittee with oversight of labor matters, is the House's second-biggest recipient of union cash. Obey's retiring in the face of a challenge from Real World star Sean Duffy.

Rep. Nancy Pelosi

 Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.)

Terms: 12

Total raised: $11.9 million, 19% from FIRE

Posted via email from New Economic Papers

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