Government Shut-downs?! What?!: It's Party Time!
March 16th, 2011
Government Shut-downs?! What?!: It's Party Time!
Published on March 16th, 2011 @ 10:34:14 pm , using 457 words
Despite the looming possibility of a government shutdown, federal layoffs and furloughs, there¡¯s at least one thing members of Congress from both political parties can readily agree on these days: partying.
Morning, noon and night, more than 150 fundraising parties are scheduled all over Washington this week for Democratic and Republican politicians in bars, restaurants and private town houses and at sporting events ¡ª even to watch the woeful Washington Wizards play. Other lawmakers are gearing up for March Madness, the upcoming NCAA basketball tournament, with luxury suites for fundraising at the Verizon Center.
The flurry of fundraising comes as the end of the first quarter for reporting election contributions comes up. Also, Congress will be adjourning next week, so politicians might be scurrying to raise money in Washington while they still can.
¡°It¡¯s an every-three-months tradition where we tend to see an uptick,¡± said Nancy Watzman of the nonpartisan Sunlight Foundation, which tracks fundraising parties by members of Congress. ¡°With the March 31 deadline approaching, there are a lot of parties with people looking to pump up their numbers.¡±
Fifty-seven fundraising parties were scheduled for Wednesday alone, according to Sunlight, which points out that the group still doesn¡¯t know about all of the events going on across town. Last week was busy, too.
Democratic Rep. Bruce L. Braley of Iowa appeared at a fundraiser for the Populist PAC, which was held in a $1.8 million Capitol Hill home where donors got to mingle with politicians like Rep. John Garamendi, California Democrat. Mr. Braley¡¯s office declined to comment Wednesday.
There usually are up to a half dozen fundraisers happening at once across the city over breakfast, lunch, dinner or after-hours get-togethers. On Wednesday night, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee was scheduled to host a big fundraiser at Union Station, where political action committees paying $15,000 would receive four tickets. That turns out to be a bargain. A $5,000 contribution just gets one ticket.
Republicans were planning several fundraisers Wednesday at the Capitol Hill Club for, among others, Reps. Mike Rogers of Michigan, Tim Scott of South Carolina and John Shimkus of Illinois, according to the Sunlight data.
Many fundraisers are just a short walk away from Congress. A block away, the town house with a sign for the Associated General Contractors of America was where, among other Republican lawmakers in recent weeks, freshman Republican Rep. Lou Barletta had a lunchtime fundraiser.
Mr. Barletta won office after campaigning that his opponent, former Democratic Rep. Paul E. Kanjorski, was too entrenched in Washington. His campaign noted in one online fundraising solicitation that Mr. Kanjorski was ¡°raising thousands of dollars from special interests in Washington and Wall Street bankers.¡±







