Friday, March 11, 2011

Record setting $7 million in NJ union dues spent attacking Gov. Christie in 2010, money that came from taxpayers and helped only the unions

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Public sector teacher unions in NJ collect money from taxpayers via teachers and their union dues. Unions turn around and spend taxpayer money on political campaigns. The $7 million spent in NJ was 7x higher than the next biggest spender.

3/9/11, "NJEA spent nearly $7M on advertising last year, report says," NJ Star-Ledger, Matt Friedman

"The New Jersey Education Association pushed back so hard against Gov. Chris Christie last year
  • that it set a record.

The state’s largest teachers union spent $6.8 million on lobbying last year, most of it going to an ad campaign against Christie and his cuts to education in the state budget, according to a reports released today by the Election Law Enforcement Commission.

"We spent that money. We felt we had to," said NJEA spokesman Steve Wollmer. "The governor was putting out a lot of what we feel was misinformation on education and our members demanded we set the record straight."

The NJEA shelled out so much on lobbying that its total was seven times more than the second highest spender, Verizon, at $935,000. It also beat the previous spending record, set by Verizon in 2006, by more than $2 million.

Christie spokesman Kevin Roberts called the union a "special interest that is bent on protecting

  • a failed status quo in our schools."

"They talk like a special interest and they certainly spend like a special interest by funding millions upon millions of dollars in attack ads," he said. "That’s not going to stop Governor Christie from pursuing bold reform to put the needs of children before adults and special interests."

  • Altogether, groups spent a record $65.6 million on lobbying last year — up 13.9 percent from 2009 and bucking a trend of decreased spending on lobbying at the federal level....

Not all the spending on communications lobbying was against to Christie. Reform Jersey Now — an issue advocacy group tied to Christie’s closest advisers — spent

  • $403,000

on print, broadcast ads and automated phone calls. The group, which disbanded at the end of the year, raised $628,000 from private donors, including some with hundreds of millions of dollars worth of state contracts.

  • The pro-charter school group Excellent Education for Everyone spent
  • $459,000 on print and broadcast ads....

Lobbyists spent $7,715 to wine and dine lawmakers, down from a high of $163,375 in 1992, according to the report."...



via Weasel Zippers

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