Friday, October 16, 2015

Kirsten Gillibrand Working Above the Money

            Kirsten Gillibrand, first elected into office in 2009, is the democratic junior United States Senator of New York’s 20th District.  As Senator, Gillibrand serves on certain committees and subcommittees.  She sits on the following committees: The Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry, The Committee on Armed Services, The Committee on Environment and Public Works, and The Committee on Aging.  Within these committees she is also a member of a number of subcommittees.  Among these are: Subcommittee on Livestock, Marketing, and Agriculture Security, Subcommittee on Commodities, Risk Management, and Trade, Subcommittee on Personnel, and the Subcommittee on Airland.  As a member of The Committee on Agriculture, she strongly supported the passing of the 2012 Farm Bill.  Through this bill she successfully worked on: “strengthening specialty crops, expanding rural broadband and improving recovery efforts from natural disasters” (http://www.gillibrand.senate.gov/about/biography).
            In her time in office thus far, 80% of her funds come from individual contributions (70% small individual contributions & 10% large individual contributions) and 16% come from PACs.  Kirsten Gillibrand does not self-fund her campaigns at all (0%).  Her top donors have consisted of: Boies Schiller & Flexner, Davis Polk & Wardwell, Goldman Sachs, Corning Inc., and Morgan Stanley.  Kirsten Gillibrand is supported by 23 PACs and receives funding from each.  Finance, Insurance, and Real Estate PACs are her largest type of donors.  The second largest group of PACs is Lobbyists and Lawyers, which could be due to the fact that Gillibrand was a practicing lawyer in the state of New York before she got elected into office.      
            As junior Senator Kirsten Gillibrand has sponsored and worked on a number of bills.  The majority of the bills she sponsors come from her work in Some of these most recent bills include: Pedestrian Act of 2015, Child Sexual Abuse Awareness Prevention Act, Meat and Poultry Recall Notification Act of 2015, and Family and Medical Insurance Leave Act.  Each bill Senator Gillibrand sponsors is associated with the committees she is a member of.  Through all of her work in committees and on the bills she sponsors it shows us that she mainly works in the realm of the Democratic Party.
            I don’t think that money plays a huge role in Kirsten Gillibrand’s elections.  Her donors don’t contribute money in millions, which is what other Senators may be receiving.  Much of her money does come from small individual contributors not from big PACs. Compared to others, it is safe to say that money does not completely and totally influence Gillibrand’s time in office as a New York State Senator.


2 comments:

Unknown said...

When a senator does not use much big contributor financing, do you think that their seat would be as secure against a challenger with PAC funding? In the video that we watched in class it seemed like the politicians who were able to make their campaigns work without PAC money were ones who oversaw more rural districts. So is this district more rural in comparison to other parts of New York and if not, should there be a concern as to whether this method of campaign funding is good for the long run or if it is just beneficial in the short term?

Unknown said...

I find it so fascinating that so much of Senator Gillibrand's funding comes from small individual contributions! It is such a rarity these days, and like Phil, I wonder how that could impact her in the long-run. It is fairly incredible how little money she's received from PACs, and I wonder if voters will appreciate that and offer her extra support because of it, or if she will lose her seat to someone with more funding.