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Comment by ch4s3

5 days ago

This is just dumb hair splitting, nearly half goes to each party.

I did the math so you don't have to.

Here's the facts. In the last 18 election cycles, here's what happened (source: Open Secrets)

the Defense industry spent $242.54m on GOP candidates. They average $13.47m spent per election cycle on GOP candidates.

the Defense industry spent 181.51m on DEM candidates. They average $10.08m spent per election cycle on DEM candidates.

Only 4 times has the industry spent more on DEM candidates than GOP candidates - 1992, 1994, 2008, and 2010. For spending those years, the average difference between GOP and DEM campaign contributions is roughly $233k, or a grand total of $4.21m (as in that is the difference in overall political spending between GOP/DEM across all those cycles).

For the other 14 cycles, when the GOP was given more than the DEM, the average difference is $3.624m between parties, for a grand total of $65.24m. You could eliminate the industry's GOP contributions for the last 4 cycles and they'd still have given more to the GOP than DEM since 1990.

Bottom line: when the industry spends more on DEM than GOP, it's by a few hundred thousand dollars. When the industry spends more on GOP than DEM, it's by a few million dollars.

Splitting hairs? That's several million dollars. You're free to write me a check for that amount if it's truly splitting hairs.

  • Given the money spent on US elections $3.624m is barely anything. Most of this is probably down to which districts their plants are located in. Congressional candidates spent $2.7 billion on 2022 midterm races alone, $3m is a drop in an ocean of spending.