Bernie Sanders Campaign Spending Shows The Enduring Power Of The Political Consulting Industry
Bernie Sanders is no friend to big business, but at least one industry has profited thanks to his candidacy. A Washington Post analysis of federal campaign finance disclosures published
Thursday found that the Democratic presidential hopeful is the biggest
spender of any candidate this year, with the bulk of his campaign's
expenditures going to political consultants.
The size of these expenditures highlights just how important the
political consulting business has become to the modern campaign cycle.
While Sanders has managed to generate a staggering amount of campaign
money without depending on large donors or traditional fundraising
techniques, he has maintained a conventional reliance on consulting
firms.
John Hopkins University political scientist Adam Sheingate,
the author of "Building a Business of Politics: The Rise of Political
Consulting and the Transformation of American Democracy," has tracked
the growth of the political consulting industry in-depth. Sheingate told
International Business Times he wasn't surprised by the large role of
consultants in the Sanders campaign.
"Generally speaking, if you look at every campaign, they generally
have one or two main firms that are handling the bulk of their
expenses," said Sheingate. "They also tend to be associated with
advisers in the inner circle."
Old Towne Media is linked to Tad Devine, a senior strategist for the
Sanders campaign and a frequent surrogate. One of the partners in
Revolution Messaging, Tim Tagaris, is widely credited with building the Sanders campaign's innovative fundraising apparatus.
Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton, meanwhile, has
spent nearly $22 million on services from the firm GMMB, where her close
adviser Jim Margolis is a senior partner, according to data from the Center for Responsive Politics. The Benenson Strategy Group, led by chief Clinton strategist Joel Benenson, has received almost $2 million from the campaign.
Sheingate told IBT that while he doesn't have anything
against political consulting, he does think the structure of the
industry can bias campaigns toward certain strategies. Consulting firms
often earn a share of a campaign's spending on things like ad buys,
which gives consultants a financial incentive to urge greater media
spending — independent of its efficacy.
"The folk wisdom is you've got to buy ads to be successful.
That's how consultants think the political system works," said
Sheingate. "And there's research that suggests that ads are not as
effective as the amount of money they spend on them indicates."
That said, Sheingate credited the Sanders campaign's fundraising
juggernaut to the help of consultants. "It's driven by the grassroots,
but it also requires this highly professionalized infrastructure to work
effectively," he said.
Sunlight Foundation policy analyst Richard Skinner said the
consulting firms act as connective tissue between candidates and the
larger political party infrastructure.
"Not only are they adding skills that the campaigns need, but they're
a signal to potential contributors, to potential endorsers, to groups
of all kinds, that you're running a serious campaign," said Skinner.
"Also, consultants are able to access personal ties to other
consultants, to groups, to party committees."
Supporters
cheer as U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders (I-VT)
speaks at a campaign event at Purdue University in West Lafayette,
Indiana, April 27, 2016.
Photo: REUTERS/Aaron P. Bernstein
One leading candidate has managed to do without those
services, for the most part. Instead of pouring millions into ads,
Republican front-runner Donald Trump has centered his campaign strategy
around efforts to attract free media, with a great deal of success. His
biggest expenditure, according to the Center for Responsive Politics, has been $7.5 million Rick Reed Media, which is headed up by longtime Republican operative Rick Reed.
But Trump may be an exceptional case, not to be replicated any time
soon. The bombastic businessman came into the campaign with exceedingly
high name recognition, and has been able to garner far more free media than any other candidate, at a much lower cost.
Still, Sheingate predicted that Republican consulting firms would be
able to cash in on Trump eventually, assuming he wins the nomination.
Once the entire party is aligned behind him as their chosen candidate,
the party and its affiliated firms will be invested in his success.
"There will be ads in support of Trump because people will rally
behind him," said Sheingate. "Those ads will be handled by the
industry."
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