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How Legislative Campaigns Are Financed

      Most legislators elected in 2004 spent money on their campaigns. Where did the money come from?
      All legislative candidates, winners and losers, are required to file a Candidate's Statement of Receipts and Expenditures with the Secretary of State's office within 10 days after the primary and general elections. In 2003, Wyoming finally passed a law to also require pre-election reporting of campaign contributions. Candidates now must submit a report at least seven days before any primary, general or special election with contribution information current to two weeks before the election. After the election, candidates file the final report.
      Candidates must list by name, date, and amount all contributions received from individuals, political action committees (PACs) and political parties. Candidates must also list all in-kind contributions (donations of goods or services), anonymous contributions, and contributions from the candidate and his or her immediate family. Candidates do not have to provide a name or date for cumulative contributions under $25; these can be reported as "unitemized."
      Many candidates assemble a committee to run their campaign. All contributions received by the committee and all committee expenditures must be reported with the candidate's statement.
      In The Wyoming LAP* Book, we have compiled campaign contribution information for each legislator. Contribution information also is provided for the legislator's general election opponent, or primary opponent, if the general election was not contested.

Overview of Campaign Financing

      Most of the money for most Wyoming legislative races comes from PACs. This contrasts with Wyoming statewide races, as well as state and national races in most other states, where, despite the publicity given to PACs, most campaign funds come from individuals.
      PACs exist because corporations, unions, and most other organizations are prohibited by election reform laws from contributing directly to candidates. Instead, they must form a PAC, register with the Secretary of State's office, and report their contributions and expenditures within 10 days after an election. Semi-annual reports are required during non-election years. PACs that participate in federal election races must file with the Federal Election Commission.
      In 2003, Wyoming passed a law to also require pre-election reporting of campaign contributions. PACs now must submit a report at least seven days before any primary, general or special election with contribution information current to two weeks before the election. After the election, PACs must file the final report.
      PACs raise their funds from individuals associated with the interest they represent. For large corporations, this is typically accomplished with a payroll deduction from managerial employees. Depending on their contracts, union members may choose an additional checkoff with their dues or make separate political contributions. Other organizations usually solicit PAC funds by direct mail or other fundraising techniques.
      Wyoming law does not impose any limits on PAC contributions to state legislative races. Although PACs are frequently targeted as a bad influence in electoral politics, they are at least partly accountable to the public through the required reporting of their contributions and expenditures.
      Campaign finance reforms that focus solely on PACs tend to create more problems than they solve. Limiting PAC contributions leads to more PACs (to get around the limit) and promotes "independent expenditures," where groups spend money on behalf of (or, more commonly, against) a candidate without consulting the candidate's campaign.
      Also, large individual contributions, or a large sum of small individual contributions coordinated by a particular interest, may influence an elected official just as effectively as a PAC.
      The National Institute on Money in State Politics in Helena, Montana, has been compiling campaign contribution data from eight western states since 1990. Their searchable website can be found at www.followthemoney.org.
      A listing of PAC contributions to Wyoming legislative races in from 1992 through 2004 is shown in the following list. PACs that contributed less than $1000 in each election cycle are not included, but are included in the legislative profiles.
      The Equality State Policy Center attempts to reconcile candidate reports with PAC reports to ensure accuracy, but cannot account for all discrepancies and missing data.

Political Action Committee Contributions

Political Action Committee 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004
Energy, Chemical and Railroad Industry PACs
Anadarko Petroleum 000 006700 7350
Arch Coal (Atlantic Richfield) 480031755200 222527004425 3600
Black Hills Corp 000 00900 2450
Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway 325024004150 345063506650 12200
BP (BP Amoco, Wyoming Amoco) 175001090012350 810065505600 5250
Burlington Resources 000 017500 0
Chevron 1000057007900 42504300200 7500
CMS Energy 000 021500 0
Coastal Chemical 475031003600 525020500 0
Devon Energy 000 002000 1000
Dupont/Conoco 24008001725 000 0
ExxonMobil 11900930014150 1100061007300 9900
FMC (trona) 270019000 14003000 0
Frontier Oil 000 020000 0
Kennecott Energy 003700 440065004600 2850
Marathon Oil 480014503100 440051002650 2500
MDU Resources (MT-DK Utilities) 120013001400 90012001600 2500
Pacificorp (Pacific Power & Light) 1007072008150 505069004505 3950
Petroleum Association of Wyoming 915069008650 7750960011100 11250
Phillips Petroleum 000 073240 0
Questar 725017501100 115041004500 6700
RAG Mining (AMAX, Cyprus AMAX) 160020252850 385015002750 0
Texaco 500025503000 03775see Chevron
Union Pacific Railroad 18500117504500 945071009750 14200
Williams Companies 000 02150200 200
WY Mining Association 000 002100 2650
WY Rural Electric Association 190010001950 177539504025 5275
Totals 116,77073,20087,475 74,40093,44983,355 101,325

Union PACs
Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers 60015001300 125018009800 11400
Int'l. Brotherhood of Electrical Workers 0 30002700 14501900800 4400
Teamsters 10,0505500 000 0
United Mine Workers 130010001300 110013501700 2450
United Steelworkers 000 00700 0
United Transportation Union 16,40071008230 66001070012200 7300
Utility Workers of America, Local 127 353028001000 160035001000 1500
Wyoming AFL-CIO 20,45054407320 88851765010155 12050
Wyoming Carpenters 000 003550 7750
Wyoming Conference of Electrical Workers 000 012000 0
Wyoming Public Employees/SEIU 18,10012,15011,200 6640114008350 11000
Totals 70,43033,54033,050 27,52549,50048,255 57,850

Professional PACs
Life Underwriters 450039502050 140016000 0
WY Certified Public Accountants 260029502050 110000 1125
Physicians United to Save Health Care 000 000 3900
WY Chapter, Physical Therapists 000 00150 0
Wyoming Dental 14002001300 11001300300 0
Wyoming Dental Hygienists 000 0075 0
Wyoming Eye 200000 10506750 0
Wyoming Education Association 55,69044,25030,100 352904695036847 25010
Wyoming Medical Society 465025003800 391053004200 10123
Wyoming Realtors 385020005100 45001715013500 34250
Wyoming Trial Lawyers 22,18521,00020,650 166001515017300 17350
Totals 96,87576,85065,050 64,95088,12572,372 87,858

Other Business PACs
Affordable Housing 000 00900 0
Altria (tobacco) 000 000 1500
AT&T Mountain States 001800 14001250200 0
Contractors 4600472510040 199501785021200 22150
Credit Union 000 40017502725 1925
Farm Bureau 000 000 1450
Federation of Independent Business 000 001450 250
Johnson & Johnson 000 001500 0
Manufactured Housing 000 00200 0
NAIFA 000 00450 0
Norwest Bank 15505002000 190000 0
Pfizer (pharmaceuticals) 000 018001800 0
Qwest (U.S. West) 10,00069006300 870068007900 8400
Stockgrowers 000 026502450 2700
Trucking Industry 635052256550 8325902510300 9400
US Team (tobacco) 000 000 0
Wells Fargo 000 020501450 3200
Totals 22,50017,35027,065 40,67543,17552,525 50,975

Ideological PACs
21st Century (Equality State Coalition) (all in-kind) 27752802236 587079190 0
National Rifle Association 090000 054002000 5250
Women of Wyoming 000 00600 0
Wyoming Conservation 19406261098 121020661148 0
Wyoming Right to Choose 000 001750 100
Totals 471599063334 7080153855498 5,350


Individual Contributions

      Individual contributors to Wyoming campaigns are limited to $1000 per candidate per election (the primary and general elections count as two elections), with an overall limit of $25,000 per election cycle. Candidates and their immediate families are not subject to this limit with regard to their own campaigns.
      The largest individual contributor from 1992 through 2002 was the True family of Casper, including the late H.A. True, Jean True and their three sons and their spouses (Diemer and Susie True, David and Melanie True, and H.A. III and Karen True). The True family made individual contributions as well as contributions from their federal PAC, the True Responsible Government Committee.
      The True family's principal business interests include oil, trucking and ranching. Diemer True is a former state senate president and former chair of the Wyoming Republican Party.
      The second largest individual contributor from 1992-2002 was R.E. Holding of Cody and Salt Lake City.
      Holding owns the Little America fuel/motel/restaurant complexes in Wyoming and has large landholdings in the western states.

Equality State Policy Center
340 West B Street Suite 203
Casper WY 82601
307-472-5939
dneal@equalitystate.org

www.equalitystate.org