Selectively selecting one link that represents one category of donors from a site that doesn't really represent all the data available on the site is pretty
convenient.
The list of the heavy hitters who have contributed the greatest amounts individually seems to be compelling. A person should really look at more of the data available on the site, otherwise you may be misled.
Sure the individual people or organizations/corporations that have donated the greatest amounts collectively have donated about
$1,371,258,790 to Democratic campaigns and $897,192,148 to Republican campaigns.
calculated using data the page linked in this thread's original post...
http://www.opensecrets.org/orgs/list.php?order=A
This translates to a ratio of about
59.07% to 38.63%. This favors Democrats, however, just taking a quick look at the chart can give the impression that Republicans have not recieved a noticable portion of the money laid out by the "Heavy Hitters" when they actually have.
If you look at other information in on other pages within this site that give a more complete picture of the total amount of monies donated by the majority of interest groups instead of just the individuals or organizations who donated the largest amounts for an organization....
It's easy to see that money from most of the categorized interest groups are more evenly split than what the narrow slice of data from the heavy hitters suggests.
The
heavy hitters have contributed about $2.335 billion dollars to Republicans, Democrats and independents or perhaps 3rd parties
from 1989 to 2012.
In contrast the largest interest group consisting of Finance, Insurance and Real Estate groups donated about $2.757 billion from 1990 to 2012 (pretty much the same time period).
As you can see that is more than what the so called heavy hitters have contributed in approximately the same time period.
If the total money contributed by all of the interest groups listed on this site from that approximate time period are taken as a whole it comes to approximately $14.24 billion overall. That amount about nearly 5 times the amount attributed by the heavy hitters. In short the heavy hitters account for about 20% of the donations. While they have contributed more to democratic candidates. This advantage is largely mitigated when all of the donations are taken into account.
44% the money from the
Financial/Insurance/Real Estate interest group went to Democratic candidates and 56% went to Republican candidates... or about $$1,251,855,736 and $1,561,895,768 respectively
sourced here
http://www.opensecrets.org/industries/totals.php?cycle=2012&ind=F
Links for other interest groups measured by the same criteria (years 1990 to 2012) as follows:
Other: Mostly retirees, but includes groups that don't fall into other categories:
http://www.opensecrets.org/industries/totals.php?cycle=2012&ind=W
Misc. Businesses:
http://www.opensecrets.org/industries/totals.php?cycle=2012&ind=N
Lawyers and Lobbyists:
http://www.opensecrets.org/industries/totals.php?cycle=2012&ind=K
Health - including physicians and other health related professions:
http://www.opensecrets.org/industries/totals.php?cycle=2012&ind=H
Communications and Technology:
http://www.opensecrets.org/industries/totals.php?cycle=2012&ind=B
Ideology and single issue interest groups
http://www.opensecrets.org/industries/totals.php?cycle=2012&ind=Q
Energy and Natural Resources:
http://www.opensecrets.org/industries/totals.php?cycle=2012&ind=E
Construction:
http://www.opensecrets.org/industries/totals.php?cycle=2012&ind=C
Labor:
http://www.opensecrets.org/industries/totals.php?cycle=2012&ind=P
Agribusiness:
http://www.opensecrets.org/industries/totals.php?cycle=2012&ind=A
Transportation:
http://www.opensecrets.org/industries/totals.php?cycle=2012&ind=M
Defense:
http://www.opensecrets.org/industries/totals.php?cycle=2012&ind=D
Add all of those up and contributions to democratic campaigns do edge out the contributions to republican campaigns.
However the percentages are very close.
So much closer that basing an argument only on the list of heavy hitters is pretty much posting misleading information.
In total the contributions from all of the interest groups turn out as...
about 50.72% to democrats vs. 49.28% to republicans.
8 out of the 13 groups gave more to republican candidates than democratic candidates. The Communications and Technology, the Ideology and single issue and the Labor categories are the ones that skew heavily toward the democratic candidates.
This shows that a majority of interest groups donate noticeably more to republican candidates. And that the ones who donate much more to democratic candidates donate enough to bring the percentages for total donations very close.
The total amounts from all the interest groups in the time period adds up to about $14.24 billion dollars. Way more than what the heavy hitters (who are in this total number) have contributed by themselves.
It's a pretty even number and democratic politicians do have an edge but it's not the blowout that just looking at the heavy hitters list would lead you to believe it is. I have to seriously doubt the quality of the post that only looks at a narrow slice of data from this site when it's easy to see that you have to wade through pages of links to build picture that puts things into a bigger picture.
Keep in mind, however, that there that during much (if not all) of the time periods covered by the links there were a few "blue dog" democrats who would vote more conservatively on financial issues.
It is harder to find the equivalent of that on the republican side. In fact a republican who crosses the line to vote for the democratic position on a financial bill these days is practically sticking a sign on their back that says "Primary Me." In my opinion it really became a definite rule in the past 5-8 years.
For that reason republican who will vote for a more liberal fiscal position when it comes to financial bill is a much more rare animal.
This shows that a majority of interest groups donate noticeably more to republican candidates. And that the ones who donate much more to democratic candidates donate enough to bring the percentages for total donations very close.
TLDR: The link in the original post doesn't give you a complete picture of the issue of campaign finance at all. It's such a narrow slice of the data available on the site that it will lead you to an erroneous conclusion if you don't look at other pages within the site
Fuck it, simply posting the link to that one page out of context is posting misinformation because of the omission of other relevant data found on the same site. If a person is aware of the other data before posting just that one link that post would be an outright lie.
Yeah you can complain about labor but that category is one of the few with an outright bias toward democratic candidates. Most of the other categories are equal opportunists or favor republican candidates.
Given the fact that Labor donates about 92% to democratic candidates if you leave out that group you can expect that the total donations would go to the republican candidates by a slightly larger margin than the totals now favor democratic candidates.