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George Soros |
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Soros thinks Obama should not
Compromise
WASHINGTON
(By Kenneth P. Vogel,
Politico)
November 23, 2010
—
George Soros wants wealthy liberals
to push Democrats on liberal
legislative initiatives.
Meeting with major Democratic donors
in Washington this week, George
Soros urged them to pressure the
Obama administration to focus on
liberal policy priorities including
climate change and immigration
reform, which are considered
non-starters with Republicans set to
assume control of the House.
Soros, a billionaire who has been
among the most generous donors to
liberal causes over the years, has
recently indicated he no longer
intends to fund the kind of
independent political advertising
campaigns he backed in 2004 and that
Republican allies used to bombard
Democrats in the midterm elections.
During a private session Wednesday
on the sidelines of a conference of
major Democratic donors organized by
the Democracy Alliance, Soros
reiterated the position wealthy
liberals should focus their giving
on groups that will push President
Barack Obama and congressional
Democrats on liberal legislative
initiatives, rather than groups
supporting individual candidates,
according to a source in the
meeting.
“George was talking about how, in
the context of the election,
progressives are disappointed, and
they should keep the administration
focused on certain issues we should
be promoting,” said the source, who
did not want to be identified
because Democracy Alliance bars
attendees from discussing its
conferences.
Soros, who is a member of the
alliance, arrived at the conference
Tuesday afternoon, attended a
Wednesday lunch and a couple member
meetings at the swank Washington
hotel hosting the conference, and
left town before the Wednesday night
dinner marking the end of the
three-day gathering.
Democracy Alliance, which was
created after George W. Bush’s 2004
reelection, requires its members to
pay annual dues starting at $15,000
to support member activities
including its twice-a-year
conferences, which feature a mix of
policy briefings and socializing.
Its staff vets and recommends
non-profit groups to which its
members can contribute.
Members are required to contribute a
minimum of $100,000 to recommended
groups, which have primarily focused
on policy, issue advocacy and voter
mobilization, and not campaign
advertising.
The feeling at the member meetings
was the alliance’s approach to
giving had been successful in
shaping the political debate and the
GOP’s landslide midterm election
victory resulted partly from a
messaging failure, the source said.
“There was a lot of discussion about
the election and about whether there
was a failure in being able to
deliver a strong message to voters,”
the source said. “There were
different views about how that might
be improved and whether the
Democracy Alliance can play a role
in that, and there was a recognition
the coming political environment is
going to be very difficult for
progressives once the Republican
Congress takes over.”
In addition to Soros, donors who
attended the conference included
former Stride Rite chairman Arnold
Hiatt, hedge fund financier Donald
Sussman, electronics pioneer Bill
Budinger, real estate developer
Wayne Jordan and Suzanne Hess, the
wife of real estate mogul Lawrence
Hess.
The Huffington Post on Wednesday
reported several sources quoted
Soros as saying in Wednesday’s
private session “if this president
can't do what we need, it is time to
start looking somewhere else.”
Soros was not suggesting
progressives mount a 2012 primary
challenge to President Barack Obama
from the left, but rather “liberals
need to be more forceful and should
create pressure from the left” to
keep their issues on the legislative
radar, Michael Vachon, a Soros
adviser, told POLITICO.
Vachon declined to discuss Soros’s
comments further, saying the session
“was a private, informal
conversation among the partners and
there was no expectation that it was
public.”