The president is engaged in a high-profile outreach campaign to congressional Republicans, heading to Capitol Hill on Wednesday to meet with the House Republican conference, and again on Thursday to meet with Senate Republicans. He’ll also hold meetings on the Hill with congressional Democrats. Those meetings were announced by the White House last week, mentioned in the president’s weekend address, and printed in the White House schedule.
But in addition to this charm offensive targeting his political opponents, the president will also make an under-the-radar appearance at an event hosted by Organizing for Action, the advocacy network composed of his former campaign staff and grassroots supporters which has been set up as a tax-exempt “social welfare group.”
The president will speak on Wednesday night at a two-day OFA “Founders’ Summit” in Washington. It’s Obama’s first in-person meeting with the group. Donors will also hear from former White House adviser David Plouffe, former 2012 Obama campaign manager Jim Messina, and OFA Executive Director Jon Carson. Politico first reported the news on Monday morning.
Organizing for Action has received blistering criticism for offering potential access to big donors. Last week, after The New York Times reported that donors who contribute and raise $500,000 for OFA will get special access to the president, Messina defended the organization in an op ed, writing, “…every donor who gives $250 or more to this organization will be disclosed on the website with the exact amount they give on a quarterly basis. We have decided not to accept contributions from corporations, federal lobbyists or foreign donors.” He also argued that meetings with the president promised to big donors are not opportunities to lobby, instead they are “briefings on the positions the president has taken and the status of seeing them through.”









