Stewing about Trump, California tech group bets on
distant 'purple' candidates
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[June 08, 2018]
By Heather Somerville
MILL VALLEY, California (Reuters) - Sipping
California zinfandel, munching deviled eggs and fretting about President
Donald Trump, the guests attending a political fundraiser at a Silicon
Valley executive's home were the usual assortment of tech entrepreneurs
and investors.
But the congressional candidate they had come to meet that March evening
in the hills north of San Francisco was anything but typical.
Elissa Slotkin, a Democrat and former defense official, is running for
Congress in Michigan's 8th District, a pocket of Detroit suburbs,
college campuses and farmland more than 2,000 miles (3,200 km) away. She
is a gun owner, a supporter of constitutionally enshrined gun rights and
a critic of single payer health care - hardly the kind of far-left
candidate voters in the San Francisco Bay Area generally embrace.
But Slotkin, 41, and the party guests shared a goal: wresting control of
the House of Representatives from Republicans in November's
congressional elections.
With no Bay Area Democrats facing serious challenges from Republicans,
the party host, Brian Monahan, and a group of fellow technology and
marketing executives have decided to look farther afield for candidates
in swing districts that need financial support.
To focus their efforts, Monahan, technology investor Chris Albinson,
executive recruiter Jon Love and a handful of others have formed a
loose-knit organization they call Purple Project.
So far, the group has raised at least $210,000 for Democratic candidates
in Ohio, Michigan, Pennsylvania and elsewhere. The sum is a pittance
compared to the money being spent on key races by fundraising Political
Action Committees (PACs), which represent corporations and political
interest groups and contribute millions of dollars each election cycle.
But in moderate districts with close races like Slotkin's, such
grassroots efforts can make a difference.
For a graphic on who is donating to congressional election in Michigan's
8th District, click https://tmsnrt.rs/2sjPBV1
'SIMPLY UNACCEPTABLE'
Purple Project is one of a number of informal groups in solidly blue
states such as California, Vermont and Massachusetts that have mobilized
this year to back candidates in distant swing districts. So far, it has
endorsed six candidates and plans to endorse 14 more by the end of July.
Love, a longtime executive recruiter for technology companies,
spearheads candidate vetting. Many in the group have made the maximum
allowable individual donation of $2,700 to each candidate.
For its participants, Purple Project is a way to channel months of
political frustrations since Trump took office.
"Things are simply unacceptable and sitting on the sidelines just
stewing on it isn't helping anyone," Monahan said. "You feel like out
here in California your vote is worthless."
That's because House representatives from the San Francisco Bay Area are
unwaveringly Democratic.
The group's efforts could backfire, however, by opening candidates up to
accusations of being beholden to outside interests and disconnected from
their constituents, said Kyle Kondik, who studies House races for the
University of Virginia's Center for Politics.
“You might be able to attack Slotkin as not having deep enough roots in
the district,” Kondik said.
To re-take the House, Democrats would need to take 23 seats held by
Republicans, as well as keep all the districts they now hold. That means
races like Slotkin's, in a competitive district with a mix of Republican
and Democratic counties stretching from north of Detroit to the state
capitol, Lansing, are pivotal.
She faces a bruising battle, however, trying to unseat two-term
Congressman Mike Bishop, who won with 56 percent of the vote in 2016.
[to top of second column] |
U.S. Rep. Mike Bishop, R-Rochester, who is running for re-election
representing Michigan's 8th District, greets a supporter during an
event at his campaign office in Rochester Hills, Michigan, U.S.,
April 12, 2018. Picture taken April 14, 2018. REUTERS/Rebecca Cook
Out-of-state money has been the lifeblood of Slotkin's campaign, putting her far
ahead of her competitor for the Democratic nomination and nearly neck-and-neck
with Bishop. Slotkin had raised $1.5 million as of March 31, with just $304,000
coming from Michigan donors. She raised more than $120,000 from individuals in
the San Francisco Bay Area. (Graphic: https://tmsnrt.rs/2sjPBV1)
"Our campaign finance laws are so broken that in order to compete you have to
raise a significant amount of money," she told Reuters during a tour of her
400-acre farm in Holly, Michigan, when asked about Purple Project's donations to
her campaign. "If that means raising from outside the state I'd rather have that
than the influence of a corporate PAC."
At a house party in April in the small Michigan city of Brighton, about a dozen
neighbors from a tidy middle-class neighborhood gathered to meet Slotkin and
cheer her on, but not all were hopeful.
"I don't give her much of a chance, but it's good to have her there and maybe
she'll take a bite out of Bishop's vote," said Blake Lancaster, 74.
PERSONAL POLITICS
Purple Project is a political organization with a deeply personal origin.
Albinson, co-founder of San Francisco technology investment firm Founders
Circle, said he was unnerved to learn his father-in-law in Michigan, Jerry
Smith, voted for Trump.
He set about finding moderate congressional candidates he and his friends in
Silicon Valley could support, but who would also appeal to Smith.
After Albinson met Slotkin, he subjected her to a litmus test: she had to visit
his father-in-law.
Smith, 72, describes himself as a "common-sense Republican" worried about his
healthcare costs. A retired small business owner who lives on a 40-acre farm
just outside the 8th District, Smith said he and his wife, Barb, fret about
spending down their savings "just for the regular monthly bills."
Slotkin won over Smith, who said he was impressed by her resume and decency, and
her views on improving President Barack Obama's healthcare overhaul, the
Affordable Care Act, to keep healthcare costs down. From there, Purple Project
has grown.
To win the group's backing, candidates must be able to appeal to Trump
supporters and must have past service in the military, government or non-profit
sector. They also have to reject corporate PAC money and support affordable
health care and infrastructure improvement.
The group offers more than money. Monahan, who was head of marketing at
Walmart.com and an advertising executive at image-sharing and shopping website
Pinterest, helps campaigns with digital marketing, for instance.
Last spring, Slotkin left Washington and a 15-year government career in defense
and intelligence work to move back to the family farm in Holly. But some of her
neighbors in this working-class town are not particularly interested in a
newcomer Democrat.
Holly town supervisor George Kullis said he plans to vote for Bishop because the
congressman helped him get federal funding for new signs for the national
cemetery in town.
"Bishop has been good; he's been 'Johnny on the spot,'" Kullis said. "Besides,
who is this Elissa Slotkin? I've never heard of her."
(Reporting by Heather Somerville; Editing by Sue Horton and Ross Colvin)
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