Wall Street money rains on Chuck Schumer
Wall Street has showered nearly $11 million on the Senate since the beginning of the year, and more than 15 percent of it has gone to a single senator: Democrat Chuck Schumer of New York.
Schumers $1.65 million take from the financial services industry is nearly twice that of any other senator's and more than five times what the industry gave to any single Republican senator.
While the industry has scaled back its political spending in the wake of last years economic collapse, data from the Center for Responsive Politics show that its still investing heavily in the Senate, where its likely to have its best shot at stopping or at least shaping the crackdown on Wall Street that President Barack Obama has proposed.
And its clearly looking to Democrats to do it.
Of the $10.6 million the industry has given to sitting senators this year, more than $7.7 million has gone to Democrats. Schumer got his $1.65 million; his New York colleague Kirsten Gillibrand took in $886,000; Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada received $814,000; Senate Banking Committee Chairman Chris Dodd of Connecticut scored $603,000; Colorado freshman Michael Bennet got $401,000; and Agriculture Committee Chairman Blanche Lincoln of Arkansas who will have a big say on the derivatives portion of regulatory reform got $336,000.
Democrats are holding the reins in Washington now with a Democratic-run White House and Congress, said one financial services lobbyist. It only makes sense that donors want to put their money into the coffers of those who are driving the agenda.
Among Republicans, the biggest recipient of financial-industry money so far this year is Richard Shelby of Alabama. But although hes the ranking Republican on the Banking Committee ground zero for the regulatory reform bill in the Senate hes received just $313,000 from the industry this year.
Thats smaller than the haul for Bennet, the most junior Democrat on the Committee, or Lincoln, who isnt even on it. And Shelby is the only Republican senator on the industrys top-10 giving list.
The industrys giving pattern this year may upend the traditional notion of Republicans as the bagmen for Wall Street. But it also reflects political reality: Democrats hold a commanding if not quite filibuster-proof majority in the upper chamber, and some of them may be willing to side with the financial industry on key aspects of the regulatory reform effort even if thats not immediately obvious from the Democrats populist rhetoric.
Posted by: GolfBravoUSMC 2009-09-28 |