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Rules Let Corporate Cash Fund Party Conventions

The Democratic National Convention comes to a close after John Kerry accepted the party's nomination for president in Boston on July 29, 2004.
Paul J. Richards
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AFP/Getty Images
The Democratic National Convention comes to a close after John Kerry accepted the party's nomination for president in Boston on July 29, 2004.
Lindsay Mangum, NPR /
President Bush, second from right, and his wife, Laura, are joined by Vice President Dick Cheney, second left, and his wife, Lynne, at the end of the Republican National Convention in New York on Sept. 2, 2004.
Paul J. Richards / AFP/Getty Images
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AFP/Getty Images
President Bush, second from right, and his wife, Laura, are joined by Vice President Dick Cheney, second left, and his wife, Lynne, at the end of the Republican National Convention in New York on Sept. 2, 2004.

Think back to the 2004 presidential nominating conventions — the point when the candidates delivered their acceptance speeches — and then freeze that picture in your mind. Almost nothing there was paid for by the parties. Not the podium. Not the rent for the convention hall. Not the air conditioning or sound system. Not even the balloons and confetti.

Most of the money was raised outside the campaign finance system with unlimited contributions from corporations, rich individuals and unions. That's because the Internal Revenue Service and the Federal Election Commission, in effect, say paying for a political convention is not a political act.

For the Republicans, just about everything was paid for by a charity called the New York City Host Committee 2004. The Democrats in Boston had a similar charity and a chamber-of-commerce-type organization.

While the parties didn't pay for the convention, they did determine how the money was spent.

Skirting Bans on Corporate Cash

The Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002, better known as McCain-Feingold, bars parties from taking corporate money. But the host committees for their conventions still can.

These committees are independent groups with the stated goal of promoting the host city. In exchange for the parties choosing Minneapolis and Denver for their conventions, the host committees agreed to raise more than $50 million to pay for much of the conventions' price tags. Most of it will come in large donations from businesses, wealthy individuals and labor groups.

"It is a loophole," says Steve Weissman, associate director for policy at the Campaign Finance Institute. "It's a way that unlimited contributions get into the federal system — back into the political parties — after a law was passed that said, 'Well, we're trying to get rid of that.'"

While charities are barred from intervening in elections, the IRS doesn't consider paying for a convention to be a form of intervention.

"The IRS uses the same criteria to determine tax-exempt status, regardless of whether the organization is vying for the Olympics, a political convention or some other special event," says IRS spokeswoman Nancy Mathis.

Relieving the 'Government's Burden'

Such competitions often require cities to pay for part of the event. If the city agrees, that becomes something the IRS calls a "burden of government." A charity can be formed to relieve such a burden.

"This lessening-the-burden-on-local-government rationale is quite threadbare," says Francis Hill, a law professor at the University of Miami.

She believes paying for overtime for police or garbage collectors is a reasonable burden for a local government to take on, but funding an event that highlights one candidate running for president is not.

"The host committees are, I believe, conduits for the financing of a political class of professional politicians who want to have a big, showy convention," Hill says.

The way in which host committees raise money bolsters her argument. An early draft of the Minneapolis host committee's donor packet offered those giving more than $5 million a golf outing and dinner with Republican leadership.

The golf outing and dinner were removed from later editions of the packet. A spokeswoman for the committee said there were enough activities scheduled already.

The host committee in Denver reportedly offered similar access to donors, but a spokesman for the committee said it would not "engage" in this story.

"Congress could end this — simply by passing a law. But they've shown no will to do so," Weissman says.

The Federal Election Commission also has blessed this method for funding political conventions. Over the years, it has relaxed the rules on who can give to host committees. Originally, only businesses based in the host city could contribute. In 1994, eligibility was extended to firms with branch offices there; by 2003, anyone could contribute.

Another issue is that the major parties will get about $17 million this year in federal grants for their conventions. This public funding was a Watergate-era reform: Having large companies pay for conventions looked like a corrupting influence on the parties.

"They only get the public money on the grounds that they're foregoing the private money. But, as we've seen, they are getting the private money," Weissman says.

However, watchdog groups appear at a loss for how to respond. They could sue to force the federal agencies to change how laws are interpreted, but that's difficult and expensive. And they say other campaign finance issues are higher on their priority lists.

Copyright 2023 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Jeff Brady is a National Desk Correspondent based in Philadelphia, where he covers energy issues and climate change. Brady helped establish NPR's environment and energy collaborative which brings together NPR and Member station reporters from across the country to cover the big stories involving the natural world.