Over Congress’ August recess, groups like Heritage Action were remarkably busy rallying far-right activists, telling conservatives that if they were prepared to fight hard enough, they might actually derail the Affordable Care Act.
There was, of course, a small problem: the claims weren’t true. But the right made them anyway, and we’re starting to get a better sense of their motivations.
The Senate Conservatives Fund, a political action committee connected to Heritage Foundation President Jim DeMint, raised its largest-ever monthly total for a non-election year this August while running a campaign pressuring Republican senators and representatives to defund Obamacare.
The PAC raised more than $1.5 million in August, according to its Federal Election Commission filing, with $1.3 million of that sum coming from small donors giving under $200 each. The small-donor haul is the largest-ever monthly small-donor total brought in by the Senate Conservatives Fund.
This fundraising bonanza came as the PAC joined efforts by the Heritage Foundation and its sister 501(c)(4) nonprofit Heritage Action, along with a series of tea party groups, to defund Obamacare.
The Huffington Post piece noted that the “Don’t Fund Obamacare” website also collected more than 1.5 million signatures, which will offer far-right groups a base of potential donors for months and years to come. It’s sort of like creating a naive, easily deluded ATM for elements of the conservative movement.
When Brian Walsh, a former spokesperson for the National Republican Senatorial Committee, said, “[T]his is about political cash, not political principle,” he really wasn’t kidding.









