Senators who voted Wednesday to authorize a military strike on Syria received, on average, 83% more campaign cash from the defense industry (particularly defense contractors) than those who voted "no." WIRED reports, citing our defense industry data: http://bit.ly/11EJAyC.
Is your lawmaker on this list of top defense cash recipients?
Senators voting Wednesday to authorize a Syria strike received, on average, 83 percent more campaign financing from defense contractors than lawmakers voting against war.
Overall, political
action committees and employees from defense and intelligence firms such as
Lockheed Martin, Boeing, United Technologies, Honeywell International, and
others ponied up $1,006,887 to the 17 members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee who
voted
yes or no on the authorization Wednesday, according to an analysis by Maplight, the Berkeley-based nonprofit that
performed the inquiry at WIRED’s request.
Committee members
who voted to authorize what the resolution called a “limited”
strike averaged $72,850 in defense campaign financing from the pot. Committee
members who voted against the resolution averaged $39,770, according to the
data.
The analysis of contributions
from employees and PACs of defense industry interests ranges from 2007 through
2012 — based on data tracked by OpenSecrets.org.
The authorization must be approved by the full Senate and House.
Among other things,
the deal sets a 60-day engagement limit, and bars U.S. ground troops from combat
missions. The plan essentially is the legal basis to authorize President Barack
Obama to punish
Syria for allegedly using chemical weapons, killing some 1,400 people as
part of its ongoing civil war.
The top three defense-campaign earners who voted “yes” were Sen. John McCain (R-Arizona) at $176,000; Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Illinois) at $127,350; and Sen. Timothy Kaine (D-Virginia) at $101,025.
The top three defense-campaign earners who voted “no” were Sen. John Barrasso (R-Wyoming) at $86,500; Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Florida) at $62,790; and Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Connecticut) at $59,250.
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