Lobbyists Spent $57.5 Million on 2013-’14 Legislative Session
That's about $150,000 for each of the 380 bills that became law.
Wisconsin Hospital AssociationThe numbers are in, let the crunching begin.
State political candidates and lobby groups recently filed disclosure reports with the Wisconsin Government Accountability Board. Here are some highlights:
Wisconsin’s 700-plus registered lobby groups reported spending $11.5 million seeking to influence state law and policy in the last half of 2014. That brought total lobbying expenditures for the two-year legislative session to $57.5 million.
That’s a huge amount — about $150,000 for each of the 380 session bills that became laws. But it’s less than the $63.3 million invested by lobby groups in the 2011-12 session and the all-time high $65.4 million spent in 2009-10.
In 2013-14, the lobbying outlays of these four unions totaled $644,980. That’s a 91 percent decline from the session before.
Meanwhile, lobbying by the business group Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce rose for the third consecutive session, to $1.2 million. WMC reported spending 9,920 hours on more than 250 bills and subject areas.
Other heavyweights included the Wisconsin Hospital Association ($1.1 million), Wisconsin Counties Association ($821,000) and Wisconsin Farm Bureau Federation ($784,000).
The session’s highest spending lobby group, at $1.5 million, was Wisconsin Property Taxpayers Inc. Most of this went to pay field workers who go around the state talking up the membership-based advocacy group’s tax-reform agenda.
Among the session’s most heavily lobbied bills were those to loosen the rules for metallic mining (3,598 hours) and toughen the rules for suing over asbestos exposure (3,256 hours). Both bills drew major opposition as well as support. The supporters won.
And a bill to tweak the state’s rules for worker’s compensation drew 3,333 hours of reported lobbying. The committee charged with this normally routine task, under pressure from GOP lawmakers, included caps on charges by medical providers. The medical establishment saw red, while powerful interest groups including WMC favored the change. The bill did not pass.
On to campaign finance. Newly filed reports show Republican Gov. Scott Walker raised $30.4 million and spent $32.4 million in the last six months of 2013 and all of 2014. That’s nearly twice the roughly $17 million raised and spent during this 18-month period by his unsuccessful Democratic challenger, Mary Burke.
Meanwhile, Republican Brad Schimel raised and spent about $1.4 million on his way to becoming state attorney general. His rival, Democrat Susan Happ, raised and spent about $1 million. Outside groups including WMC poured at least $2.3 million into the race on television ads alone, according to estimates from the national Center for Public Integrity.
Here’s another fun finding: During the past two years, candidates for state Assembly and Senate collectively raised $13.8 million and spent $12.8 million. There were 361 candidate committees in all.
Finally, filings of donations through Feb. 2 show that liberal Supreme Court Justice Ann Walsh Bradley has outraised conservative challenger James Daley, $375,000 to $140,000. Bradley has gotten money from the campaign of former Democratic U.S. Sen. Herb Kohl and Seymour Abrahamson, husband of Chief Justice Shirley Abrahamson. Daley’s donors include the Republican Party of Wisconsin and former Gov. Tommy Thompson.
But by the time ballots are cast on April 7, the coffers of these two candidates could be a minor factor. Total spending in the last five Wisconsin Supreme Court elections, as estimated by the nonpartisan watchdog Wisconsin Democracy Campaign, has topped $22 million. Two-thirds of this was by outside special interests.
Bill Lueders is the Money and Politics Project director at the Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism (www.WisconsinWatch.org). The Center produces the project in partnership with MapLight.
The Center collaborates with Wisconsin Public Radio, Wisconsin Public Television, other news media and the UW-Madison School of Journalism and Mass Communication. All works created, published, posted or disseminated by the Center do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of UW-Madison or any of its affiliates.
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