NEW YORK, NY (07/14/2020) (readMedia)-- A new investigative analysis from the Center for Media and Democracy uncovered that at least five right-wing, free market organizations and two hate groups that have argued against federal aid for ailing states and cities-including the First Liberty Institute, the Intercollegiate Studies Institute, the Leadership Institute, the Center for Security Policy, Liberty Counsel, Americans for Tax Reform, and Citizens Against Government Waste-received up to $5.4 million in forgivable Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loans.
While a majority of states across the country are facing enormous budget deficits due to the COVID-19 pandemic, these groups would rather see state and local governments make devastating cuts to public programs such as education, health care, and pensions instead of getting a boost from Washington. In all, at least 15 groups that are funded by the right-wing, anti-tax Koch Foundation received PPP loans totaling as much as $10.5 million.
"It's a scandal that small and immigrant-owned businesses continue to struggle while big money corporatists gobble up the government support they claim impinges on the market. We need to break up corrupt corporate monopolies now and aggressively call out the front groups that prop them up," said Zephyr Teachout.
Teachout is a professor at Fordham University School of Law and a leading expert on anti-trust and the history of political corruption. The author of Corruption in America: from Benjamin Franklin's Snuff Box to Citizens United in America, her second book, Break 'Em Up: Recovering Our Freedom from Big Ag, Big Tech, and Big Money, is coming next month.
"When it comes to public programs that improve people's health, education, and retirement, the right-wing austerity proponents want more and more cuts, even during a deadly pandemic," said Alex Kotch, investigative reporter at Center for Media and Democracy (CMD) and author of the report. "But when the going gets tough for their own organizations, they're all too eager to apply for and accept taxpayer-funded bailouts. Our report challenges the flimsy ideology of small-government extremists, whose current hypocrisy should lead them to reevaluate their stances on what's best for the general public."
Highlights from the article include: