Firm with Murtha Ties Got Earmarks From Nearly One-Fourth of House

By Jonathan Allen and Alex Knott CQ Staff Published: 02-20-09 width=65More than 100 House members secured earmarks in a major spending bill for clients of a single lobbying firm The PMA Group known for its close ties to John P. Murtha the congressman in charge of Pentagon appropriations. It shows you how good they were" said Keith Ashdown chief investigator at the watchdog group Taxpayers for Common Sense. The sheer coordination of that would take an army to finish." PMAs offices have been raided and the firm closed its political action committee last week amid reports that the FBI is investigating possibly illegal campaign contributions to Murtha and other lawmakers. No matter what the outcome of the federal investigation PMAs earmark success illustrates how a well-connected lobbying firm operates on Capitol Hill. And earmark accountability rules imposed by the Democrats in 2007 make it possible to see how extensively PMA worked the Hill for its clients. In the spending bill managed by Murtha the fiscal 2008 Defense appropriation 104 House members got earmarks for projects sought by PMA clients according to Congressional Quarterlys analysis of a database constructed by Ashdowns group. Those House members plus a handful of senators combined to route nearly $300 million in public money to clients of PMA through that one law (PL 110-116). And when the lawmakers were in need as they all are to finance their campaigns PMA came through for them. According to CQ MoneyLine the same House members who took responsibility for PMAs earmarks in that spending bill have since 2001 accepted a cumulative $1815138 in campaign contributions from PMAs political action committee and employees of the firm. Friends in High Places PMAs founder Paul Magliocchetti is a former House Appropriations Committee aide who has a long-running relationship with Murtha D-Pa. the chairman of the Defense Appropriations Subcommittee. Murtha who used to boast that his middle initial stands for power" carved out $38.1 million for PMA clients in the fiscal 2008 defense spending law according to Taxpayers for Common Sense. Indiana Rep. Peter J. Visclosky who serves on Murthas subcommittee and additionally is chairman of the subcommittee that allocates money for the Pentagons nuclear programs earmarked $23.8 million for PMA clients in the fiscal 2008 defense spending bill. His former chief of staff Richard Kaelin lobbies for PMA as does Melissa Koloszar a former top aide to defense appropriator James P. Moran D-Va. Moran sponsored $10.8 million for PMA clients and Rep. Norm Dicks D-Wash. another member of the subcommittee sponsored $12.1 million. Spokesmen for Murtha and Visclosky did not respond to requests for comment. Spending Freely Of the 104 lawmakers who lent their names to earmark requests for PMA clients in the fiscal 2008 Pentagon spending law 91 have since 2001 received campaign money linked to PMA either from its political action committee or its employees. Overall since 2001 PMAs PAC and its employees together have poured $3.3 million into the coffers of congressional campaign committees and so-called leadership political action committees that support the ambitions of lawmakers who want to raise their profile. In reviewing the millions of dollars of campaign contributions made by PMA or its employees CQ excluded from its totals money from individuals whose employment by PMA could not be confirmed. Those unverifiable donations added up to less than $50000. Visclosky raked in $219000 in campaign donations from PMA and its employees since 2001. Thats more money than he spent in three of his 13 elections. Murthas political committees have collected $143600 in contributions from PMAs employees and its political action committee during the same period. Moran ranks third having taken $125250 in PMA contributions since 2001. Dicks is fourth at $91600. Rep. John B. Larson the Democratic Caucus chairman can attribute $37850 worth of campaign money to PMA sources. PMA was less generous with the campaign committees of other legislative leaders. Majority Leader Steny H. Hoyer D-Md. got $11000 in PMA-connected contributions during that time; House Speaker Nancy Pelosi received $4500; and Majority Whip James E. Clyburn of South Carolina received $3000. Of the Democratic leaders only Pelosi cold be documented as having secured an earmark for a PMA client in the first Democratic-written Defense spending bill: $2 million for SA Photonics Satellite Coherent Optical Receiver. Of the top 20 House recipients of PMA money since 2001 only Larson did not guide any earmarks to PMA clients in the fiscal 2008 Pentagon spending bill. PMA and its employees have not given campaign money to the top three House Republican leaders John A. Boehner of Ohio Eric Cantor of Virginia and Mike Pence of Indiana. It is clear from PMAs earmark success though that it didnt need the intervention of top leaders. And though some of its political money went to Senate campaigns PMAs earmark success was clearly the result of efforts in the House and particularly its efforts with the clutch of Democratic defense appropriators closest to Murtha. By and large their strength is nobody was better or more capable of moving the House Defense Subcommittee when it came to these matters" Ashdown said. No Overhead? Curiously in the last four election cycles PMAs political action committee reported expenses of only $18 according to federal campaign finance reports compiled by CQ MoneyLine. It reported no payroll costs. The $18 was for re-ordering checks and another bank fee. Now that PMA has been the focus of news reports several lawmakers have said theyll give away some of their campaign money. My campaign has informed me that the PMA Group has made contributions to my re-election committee in past years. I have directed that all contributions ever received from the PMA Group be returned to them" said Rep. Zoe Lofgren D-Calif. chairwoman of the House ethics committee. I do so without making any comment to the veracity of the allegations against PMA Group." Aides to Visclosky and Sen. Bill Nelson D-Fla. also have told reporters that a portion of campaign money would be returned. Murthas Corner The inventory of PMAs contributions and earmark benefactors includes a number of House members who have clout by association because they are Murthas friends or his proteges in the Pennsylvania delegation a group that congregates along the southeast edge of the House chamber in whats been known for years as Murthas corner. Among the top 20 recipients of PMA campaign dollars since 2001 are Pennsylvania Democrats Mike Doyle ($69400) Tim Holden ($57275) Paul Kanjorski ($37150) and Chris Carney ($38500) even though Carney was first elected in 2006. In the PMA donation top 30 are Pennsylvania Reps. Patrick J. Murphy ($29250) Allyson Y. Schwartz ($25000) and Jason Altmire ($24500). Schwartz was first elected in 2004 and Altmire and Murphy first won their seats in 2006. Those Pennsylvanians combined for $17.3 million in PMA earmarks in the single fiscal 2008 bill shepherded by Murtha. Rep. Michael E. Capuano who is often only partially visible in the House chamber because he stands behind Murthas back row with his arms over the railing has taken $54000 in campaign contributions from PMA sources in the last eight years. In the fiscal 2008 bill he requested a successful $2 million earmark for Parametric Technology Corporation a PMA-represented information systems company with offices near Capuanos Boston-based district and in Murthas district in western Pennsylvania. Capuano also secured $800000 in that bill for another one of the lobbying firms clients. The list of lawmakers who have guided money to PMA clients also includes Republicans most prominently Reps. C.W. Bill" Young of Florida and Jerry Lewis of California. Young the top Republican on Murthas subcommittee won $20.4 million in earmarks for PMA clients according to Taxpayers for Common Sense. Lewis the top Republican on the full Appropriations Committee secured $8 million. PMAs customers of course turned the tax dollars they received into products and services for the government and profits for their companies. As a cost of getting that business they paid PMA nearly $16.4 million in 2007 according to congressional disclosure reports. No lobbying firm specializing in Defense clients took in more money that year. Until recently PMA had 34 lobbyists on payroll according to the Center for Responsive Politics. By comparison the firm Holland and Knight which made $15000 more than PMA on lobbying in 2007 has 73 lobbyists and Patton Boggs which took in more than $43 million in 2007 has 151 lobbyists according to CRP.   Its capitalism Capitol Hill style. There has been a system put in place in this town and they are playing by the system" a well-connected Republican lobbyist said of PMA. Theyre good at it and the bottom line on good here is generating revenues."
by is licensed under
ad-image
image
04.17.2025

TEXAS INSIDER ON YOUTUBE

ad-image
image
04.15.2025
image
04.10.2025
ad-image