New CAP Action report shows Koch brothers’ network attacking government in cities and towns in Ohio and across the country, forcing cuts and hurting local residents.
Washington, D.C. — For years, Charles and David Koch, working with their well-funded front groups, have spent millions to exert their influence in Washington, D.C. They’ve sought to severely limit the scope of government in ways that could render it ineffective, but which often also help them pad their bottom line as the heads of one of America’s largest privately held companies. While they’ve received attention for their national activities, a new CAP Action report, titled “Kochonomics: Rigging the System at the Local Level,” shows how Koch-affiliated organizations have spent a minimum of hundreds of thousands of dollars all across the country to block initiatives that would fund schools, construct mass transit infrastructure, and prevent companies like theirs from polluting our water.
In Ohio, Koch-backed Americans for Prosperity mounted a campaign to defeat a tax increase for the popular Columbus Zoo, depriving this Ohio institution of a stable revenue source and the ability to grow. It also nixed a proposed 1 percentage point income tax increase in Gahanna, Ohio, meant to prevent cuts to public safety, save jobs, and keep community centers open.
“We have already seen the impact of letting two billionaires buy our politics at the federal level,” said former Gov. Ted Strickland (D-OH), President of CAP Action. “Now the Koch brothers are reaching into school board races and local initiatives that fund our schools, infrastructure, and communities in a way that hurts local residents. The Koch brothers should tell us how much they’ve spent to interfere in local communities, and should leave important decisions up to the residents themselves.”
In addition to Ohio, the report highlights examples in Colorado, Illinois, Nebraska, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Wisconsin, where the Koch brothers have used front groups such as Americans for Prosperity, or AFP, to weaken government at all levels. And there does not appear to be limit to their reach, as AFP Ohio Director Eli Miller said: “There is no issue we won’t get involved in.”
In a small Nebraska town, a food and beverage tax that aimed to fund “emergency” capital improvements was blocked by Koch interests. School districts in Illinois will be left without improvements and some staff because of a Koch-backed campaign against a funding initiative. Examples like these exist across the country, where the Koch brothers have put their bottom line and disdain of any type of government ahead of the needs of local communities.
While the Koch brothers reportedly plan to spend nearly $300 million on the 2014 midterm elections, the investment they are making in local initiatives, which they have yet to disclose, is already hitting communities hard.
Click here to read the report.
For more information or to talk to an expert, please contact Benton Strong at 202.481.8142 or [email protected].
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