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1/7/2009
Wednesday morning
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| The Democratic haul was more than double the $1.12 million in soft money
donations from trial lawyers in 1995, the year prior to the last presidential
race. And, the largest portion of the 1999 money, $1.65 million, went to a
Democratic Party committee supporting Congressional candidates, reflecting the
view of many trial lawyers that a Democratically controlled House could halt
tort reform. |
| In addition to soft money donations, which could be given to political parties
in unlimited amounts, the Association of Trial Lawyers of America Political
Action Committee has already made $658,000 in donations directly to individual
Democratic candidates and to party committees. This political action committee,
with its own fund-raising now in full swing, has been one of the largest in
each campaign cycle -- in the 1996 election it raised $5.1 million. |
| For trial lawyers, the stakes are enormous beyond calculation this year
because the potential is there for tort reform to move from the extreme back
burner right up to the front depending on how a couple of elections go, said
Larry Makinson, executive director of the Center for Responsive Politics, a
Washington nonprofit group advocating campaign finance reform. |
| Of course, the animosity between trial lawyers and Mr. Bush went back further
than Mr. Bushs candidacy, extending to his father. Many remembered President
George Bushs derision of trial lawyers in their tasseled loafers during the
1992 campaign, and the words still smarted. |
| Moreover, with the lawyers fees in the tobacco settlement running into the
hundreds of millions, even billions, many of those trial lawyers have had a lot
more to donate this election cycle. More than a half-dozen law firms involved
in the tobacco settlement have each given the Democratic Party more than
$100,000 in the unlimited, unregulated donations known as soft money, some
writing checks as large as $400,000. |
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