Who is Bankrolling NFIB's Fight Against the ACA?

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The lead plaintiff in the U.S. Supreme Court challenge to the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, the National Federation for Independent Business (NFIB), is a highly partisan front group masquerading as the "nation's leading small business association," critics say. The nation's highest court is expected to rule on the federal health care law Thursday.

Bankrolled By Big Donors, Not Small Business

A recent analysis by Public Campaign and Alliance for a Just Society shows that the NFIB and its Legal Center received an influx of big dollar donations in 2010 and 2011 as their challenge to the federal health care law moved forward -- suggesting the challenge is bankrolled by deep-pocketed special interests. The NFIB pocketed more than $10 million in six figure contributions in 2010 and 2011, with $8.5 million coming from just four contributors. As a non-profit, NFIB is not required to disclose its donors, but it is known that the organization received $3.7 million in 2010 from Karl Rove's 501(c)(4) political group Crossroads GPS. In contrast, in 2009, the year before the healthcare lawsuit, the largest donation NFIB received was $21,000.

"Small businesses don't give multi-million dollar contributions, like the ones NFIB has recently received without disclosing their sources," says Rep. Raul Grijalva (D-AZ), the co-chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus. Grijalva and Rep. Keith Ellison (D-Minn.) have asked the organization to disclose who is bankrolling their health care lawsuit. "If NFIB is determined not to say where its money comes from or who its members are, we must ask what the group is hiding," Grijalva said.

The NFIB joined with 26 states in a lawsuit against the 2010 Affordable Care Act (better known as "Obamacare"), but is funding the challenge entirely on its own. "I'm not sure most voters understand that a lawsuit by their states is being funded by an ideological organization with an issue ax to grind," said Ethan Rome, executive director of Health Care for America Now.

"This type of thing raises all kind of red flags," Florida state Rep. Mark Pafford (D) told the Palm Beach Post last year. "My concern is, if it's a lawsuit on behalf of the people of Florida, then I would believe it should be the people of Florida footing the bill. When you have an outside party paying, then every aspect of the [state Attorney General's] office might be up for sale."

NFIB Ties to Right-Wing, ALEC

While NFIB's funding has recently swelled with its crusade against Obamacare, its partisan affiliations run deep. Ninety percent of its campaign contributions over the past fifteen years have gone to support GOP candidates -- and it is safe to say that ninety percent of small business owners are not Republican. The NFIB's president, Dan Danner, is a longtime lobbyist who has never been a small businessman. The rest of the NFIB's leadership consists of right-wing veterans.

For example, NFIB Senior Vice President for Federal Policy, Susan Eckerly, was previously the director of regulatory policy for the David Koch-founded Citizens for a Sound Economy, which split into Freedomworks and Americans for Prosperity. She also previously served on the board of the right-wing Heritage Foundation, where she voiced support for the Cato Institute's push to repeal the Civil Rights Act, the Americans with Disabilities Act, and Community Reinvestment Act.

NFIB is also closely tied to the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC). Jean Card, NFIB's Vice President of Media and Communications, was an ALEC Task Force advisor from 1994 to 1996, before becoming a speechwriter in the Bush administration and eventually moving to the NFIB.

The NFIB is currently a private sector member of ALEC and has had representatives on the ALEC Civil Justice Task Force, the Health and Human Services Task Force, and the Tax and Fiscal Policy Task Force. In August 2011, an NFIB lobbyist received ALEC's "Private Sector Member of the Year" award. ALEC's Civil Justice Task Force legal adviser, Mark Behrens of Shook, Hardy & Bacon, is on the advisory board of NFIB's Legal Center. NFIB representatives have also been presenters at ALEC meetings and workshops, and Jonathan Williams, director of ALEC's Tax and Fiscal Policy Task Force, has spoken at NFIB events. ALEC, for its part, proudly displays an NFIB endorsement of its 2011 Koch-funded report on state competitiveness, Rich States, Poor States, with a quote from NFIB Vice President Steve Woods exclaiming "Kudos to ALEC, Laffer, and Moore."

ALEC also filed an amicus brief in the challenge to the health care law and has also been focused on repealing "Obamacare" with state resolutions and bills to undermine the federal law.

Who Represents Small Business?

Despite the NFIB's right-wing ties and possible financial support from big business interests, it purports to represent small businesses, and says it is challenging the Affordable Care Act because of the law's purported impact on the "small business community" (despite tax credits that help small business provide insurance for employees).

Another small business association, the Small Business Majority, conducted a poll showing that around half of small-business owners want to preserve the Affordable Care Act, while just 30 percent want to repeal it.

Who does the NFIB really represent?

Read more about the NFIB on our NFIB Sourcewatch page.

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White Male Rule is coming to an end.

These guys are fighting to remain in "control" of this country, the conversation, and once sleeping people now waking up. What's most frightening is not that the liberals are waking up to the horrors that had been going on in the dark, but their base is beginning to wake up, look around, and consider their own best interests for the first time since emancipation.

They are afraid and they are dangerous. Wade warily into the deep end, my friends.

These guys don't have the finesse of their ancestors. These guys are pedestrian and weiled a scalpal like a sledehammer; no grace.

What's In A Name?

“National FIB” says it all ...

Federalist Society and Amer. Spec. including Scalia funded NFIB

Before this illegal, corrupt legislation goes through, I (Ellen Corley, Citizen, 312/664-2631, eacorley@aol.com) would like to blow the whistle herein to say I know that the Anti-ObamaCare initiative was funded by the Millionaires like my stepfather (Charles H. Brunie) and Billionaires like Richard Mellon Scaiffe through the American Spectator Foundation 501-C3 which has been working with key right wing Federalist Society members (Scalia, Thomas, Rivkin) and lawyers (Ted Olson, Ken Starr) and politicians (Hatch and McConnell) and billionaires (Richard Mellon-Scaiffe) and the media mogels (Fox and Betsy McCaughey) to kill progressive reforms in the Supreme Court for years and covering it up.

Of concern is the fact that the Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas were actually part of this fundraising conspiracy and this should make their Supreme Court decisions mistrials (if they haven't outlawed that already through their attempts to throw out "Honest Services" laws.

In May 2010, I sent an anti-Obamacare Fundraising letter from the American Spectator Foundation 501 C-3 for my stepfather who has been funding this effort as a board member of the American Spectator Foundation.

The American Spectator Foundation 501C3 should be audited for proof - just as they should have been audited for the work they did with Ted Olson and Richard Mellon-Scaiffe to undermine the Clinton healthcare program in the 90's. (See Gene Lyons's book, David Brock's book and Steve Kangas' book for more details. Steve Kangas was probably killed by Richard Mellon Scaiffe to cover this up.)

I can provide more details if contacted - 312/664-2631.

But... why???

I find the whole case and surrounding discussion fascinating.

I've been trying to think of why right-wing forces would work so *hard* to destroy an initative founded in the damn Heritage Foundation, of all places. After all, Obama's sell-out to the insurers gives the insurers what they want - few controls, lots more money, and no Public Option.

It must be for the same reason that GOP radio and TV call the corporatist pig in the White House a "socialist".

This is all to drive the national dialog even further to the right - so far right that we will never recover any semblence of sanity.

And *that* outcome is worth even making the insurance shills unhappy.