Guest Post December
16, 2019
New Jersey Congressman Jeff
Van Drew is expected to switch parties from Democrat to Republican after taking
large amounts of campaign cash from his Democratic colleagues.
(By Karl
Evers-Hillstrom, Center for Responsive Politics) Anti-impeachment Rep. Jeff Van Drew (D-N.J.) is expected to switch parties from Democrat to Republican
after meeting late last week with President Donald Trump, enraging those in his party, including many
who financially backed his campaign.
Democratic lawmakers, through
their leadership PACs and campaign committees, have given
$234,600 to Van Drew since his initial House run in 2018, ranking among
his top industries.
Prominent donors include
Rep. Steny Hoyer (D-Md.), the No. 2 House Democrat, who has
given $28,000 between his campaign and affiliated committee, AmeriPAC. Influential pro-impeachment members such as House
Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) and Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) also helped fund Van Drew’s
campaign.
Van Drew never got any money
from House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), whose speaker bid he opposed on the campaign trail. Van Drew voted “no” on Pelosi rather than supporting another
member.
Van Drew was one of two House Democrats to vote against the
impeachment inquiry. He publicly criticized impeachment, a stance that cost
him support with Democrats in his home state and district.
New Jersey Democrats had
previously thrown their weight behind Van Drew. He took in $8,000 from Purpose PAC, affiliated with Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.), and endorsed Booker’s presidential run. Booker on Monday
blasted Van Drew, urging
his supporters to donate to Van Drew’s eventual Democratic challenger.
Those who did contribute to
Van Drew when he was a Democrat may ask for refunds, although he is not
required to honor those requests.
When Sen. Arlen Specter (D-Pa.) switched parties from Republican
to Democrat in 2009, he agreed to refund donors who felt betrayed by his
leaving the party. He refunded about $850,000 to 900 donors as of February
2010, and later lost a primary battle to Rep. Joe Sestak.
The conservative Club for Growth contacted Specter’s donors and urged
them to ask for refunds. The Federal Election Commission ruled that the group could legally make a one-time
communication with those donors about asking for a refund. Van Drew has not
said whether he will entertain refunds.
Amid news of Van Drew’s
expected switch, a number of his senior aides resigned, writing in a scathing letter that Republicans “continue to aid and
abet Trump as he shreds the Constitution and tears the country apart.”
Van Drew’s southern New Jersey
district voted for Trump in 2016. And Van Drew was already unpopular with Democrats in his district, with
one local party affiliate calling for him to vote for impeachment or face loss
of party support. Democrats jumped on internal polling that found that 58 percent of
Democratic primary voters in Van Drew’s district wanted to nominate a different
candidate in 2020.
“What he’s reacting to is
public polling that shows he can’t get renominated,” House Judiciary Committee
Chairman Jerry Nadler (D-N.Y.) told ABC on Sunday.
Several Democrats had been
mulling a primary challenge but have not jumped in yet. It’s not clear whether Republicans would back Van Drew in
2020. Trump tweeted in support of his decision to switch parties,
but Republicans who were aiming to unseat Drew aren’t stepping
aside.
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