By Lee Fang posted May 13th 2012 at 9:00AM
As Stephen Colbert rightfully pointed out earlier this week, a 501(c) organizations — which he termed “Spooky PACs”
— operate like Super PACs, except that they are completely secret
organizations that do no reveal any of their donors. Like Super PACs,
501(c) groups can raise unlimited corporate and union donations, and can
spend that cash on independent expenditures, better known to voters as
attack ads, automated telephone calls, and political mail.
The biggest Spooky PAC since the Citizens United decision
has been the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. The Chamber trades on its brand.
People think the U.S. Chamber, based in D.C. across the street from the
White House, is somehow related to their local chamber of commerce.
Rather, the U.S. Chamber is a partisan lobbying force that raises large
sums of money from multinational corporations to elect pro-big business
candidates.
The Republic Report was the first to reveal
all known contributors to the Chamber. But because the Chamber faces no
disclosure requirements, we only have a small piece of the puzzle.
United Republic’s Jasper McChesney put together this infographic that
shows how direct corporate cash, from firms like Prudential Financial
and Coca-Cola Inc, flows into the Chamber secretly, and is then used for
nasty attack ads: READ MORE
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