By Lee Fang
If the billionaire Koch
brothers turn to the White House for favors, they will see many familiar
faces.
Newly disclosed
ethics forms reveal that a significant number of senior Trump staffers were
previously employed by the sprawling network of hard-right and libertarian
advocacy groups financed and controlled by Charles and David Koch, the conservative duo
hyper-focused on entrenching Republican power, eliminating taxes, and slashing
environmental and labor regulations.
Some of the relationships were
well-known. Marc
Short, for instance, now Trump’s chief liaison to Congress, previously led
Freedom Partners Chamber of Commerce, the dark money nonprofit used by the
Koch brothers and their donor cohort to dispense money to allied groups.
Freedom Partners, which maintains an affiliate Super PAC, was at the center of
the Kochs’ $750
million election effort during the campaign last year.
But the ethics forms, made
available to the public on Friday evening, reveal a number of previously
undisclosed financial ties between the Koch network and Trump’s inner circle of
political aides.
Donald
McGahn, Trump’s campaign attorney turned White House counsel, provided
legal services to a range of outside Koch groups working to influence the
election. McGahn, through the law firm Jones Day, advised Freedom Partners, as
well as i360, the Koch’s big data firm set up to identify and target voters,
and Americans for Prosperity, the election advocacy and grassroots lobbying
organization run by the Koch brothers. Ann
Donaldson, McGahn’s chief of staff, came to the White House from McGahn’s
law firm. Her financial disclosure shows that she also provided legal services
to Freedom Partners and i360.
Kellyanne
Conway, Trump’s former campaign manager turned close White House advisor,
consulted over the last year for Americans for Prosperity’s national
foundation, as well as for the Michigan and Ohio chapters of the group. Conway
served as a board member for the Independent Women’s Forum, a Koch-backed group
whose goal is “increasing the
number of women who value free markets and personal liberty.”
The fact that Trump’s
political team worked for the Koch network during the campaign adds a new
wrinkle to the relationship between the president and the most
well-known pair of Republican billionaires.
The Koch network has long
pioneered a strategy of backing GOP campaigns by using seemingly
independent nonprofits and outside election groups. Election law prohibits
organizations that raise and spend unlimited funds, such as the Freedom
Partners’ Super PAC and Americans for Prosperity, from directly coordinating
with candidates.
But those rules are rarely
enforced. Moreover, campaigns and Super PACs have danced
around the coordination prohibition by employing individuals who split
their time between candidates and outside groups, making them a crucial conduit
for potential coordination.
Despite the common myth that
the Koch network, in the words of Politico, “sat
out” the presidential campaign, Koch groups were active in battleground
states that proved critical to Trump’s victory. Americans for Prosperity
employed 650
staff members during the campaign, with many stationed in Florida, North
Carolina, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Ohio, New Hampshire, and Missouri. The field
staff, using the new data tools from i360, focused on making sure Republican
voters made it to the polls.
In the aforementioned states,
Americans for Prosperity also aired negative ads attacking
Hillary Clinton in the last weeks of the campaign, linking her to Democratic
candidates and problems allegedly caused by the Affordable Care Act. The
ads, which blanketed swing state television stations, held Clinton responsible
for healthcare with “higher cost, lost coverage, lost doctors.”
The election effort swept the
GOP to a level of national power not seen since the 1920s. And the Koch
network has been quick to seize upon unified Republican control of Washington
to score a range of policy and political victories.
Freedom Partners Vice
President Andy Koenig told
the Los Angeles Times after the election that his group hoped Trump would “walk
in with an eraser” and wipe out as many Obama reforms as possible. The group
formulated a “Roadmap
to Repeal,” a memo calling for the administration to prioritize
revoking the Paris climate change treaty, repealing clean water
rules, and eliminating limits on pollution from coal-fire power plants.
In recent weeks, Trump and
congressional leaders have used a little-known procedure called the
Congressional Review Act to swiftly roll back the very regulations
identified by the Koch memo. And they have been aided by a team that came
to the White House policy staff directly from the Koch network.
Koenig, the former Freedom
Partners vice president, is now working
in the White House as a policy assistant. Koenig’s financial disclosure shows
that he made $320,000
at the group before moving through the revolving door.
In addition, Andrew
Bremberg, now the director of the White House Domestic Policy Council, and Bethany
Scully, an official working in Trump’s Office of Legislative Affairs,
both worked for Freedom Partners. Bremberg’s disclosure shows that he consulted
for the group through a consulting firm he owns called Right Policy LLC.
The Trump policy team includes
Brian Blase, a special assistant to the president working on healthcare issues,
who came to the White House from the Mercatus Center, the Koch network think tank at
George Mason University.
A number of Vice President
Mike Pence’s staff also came directly from Koch organizations. Andeliz
Castillo, named earlier this year as a Pence senior aide, came from
the Libre Initiative, the Latino outreach arm of the Koch network. Stephen
Ford, Pence’s director of speechwriting, previously worked as a
speechwriter for Koch’s Freedom Parters.
To be sure, there is not
perfect harmony between the Koch brothers and Trump. The Koch network harshly
criticized the American Health Care Act, attacking it for not doing enough
to repeal Obamacare. And the groups have lobbied against the so-called border
adjustment tax, a proposal favored by some in the Trump White House.
But if the latest member-wide
email from Americans for Prosperity is any indication, the Koch brothers have
much to celebrate with Trump in the White House.
The email, titled, “Thank you,
President Trump,” hails
the president for issuing an executive order to repeal of Obama’s “Clean Power
Plan,” the biggest pillar in the previous administration’s climate change
strategy. The message goes on to boast that Americans for Prosperity is
providing the lobbying muscle, along with paid advertisements and mobilizing
calls to Congress, to help confirm Judge Neil Gorsuch to the Supreme Court.
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