Shadowy Koch Network Raised Over $400 Million in 2012

The Koch brothers and their wealthy allies pledged to spend $400 million on the 2012 elections — and it looks like they did it.

Tax filings from an array of Koch-connected nonprofits show that the Kochs’ political coalition raised over $400 million during 2012, an analysis by the Washington Post and Center for Responsive Politics shows. The Koch network alone raised nearly as much as the Romney campaign, and tens of millions more than GOP presidential candidate John McCain raised for his entire 2008 campaign. 

By design, following the Koch money trail is extremely difficult. Despite the groups spending hundreds of millions influencing elections, most of their spending and the sources of their funds are not reported to the Federal Elections Commission, earning them the moniker “dark money” groups.

Money is passed from one organization to the next, both to give donors an extra layer of anonymity and to help groups retain their tax exempt status. Nonprofits are not supposed to have electoral intervention as a primary activity, and the Koch groups apparently claim that transferring funds to other politically-active nonprofits should be counted as advancing “social welfare” rather than electoral activity. (Proposed IRS rules would more accurately classify such transfers as non-exempt electoral activity). 

“It is a very sophisticated and complicated structure,” Lloyd Hitoshi Mayer, a University of Notre Dame Law School professor who studies the intersection of tax and election law, told the Washington Post. “It’s designed to make it opaque as to where the money is coming from and where the money is going. No layperson thought this up. It would only be worth it if you were spending the kind of dollars the Koch brothers are, because this was not cheap.”

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