Arkansas big names chip in for Clinton

Campaign buttons sit ready at an event organized by the national Ready for Hillary group in Des Moines, Iowa, on Jan. 25. Leaders of the super-PAC say they are focusing on grass-roots support despite large donations from rich backers of Hillary Rodham Clinton.

Campaign buttons sit ready at an event organized by the national Ready for Hillary group in Des Moines, Iowa, on Jan. 25. Leaders of the super-PAC say they are focusing on grass-roots support despite large donations from rich backers of Hillary Rodham Clinton.

Sunday, February 2, 2014

Billionaires Alice Walton, George Soros and Marc Benioff are helping to finance a super political action committee to encourage former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton to run for president, according to a report filed Friday with the Federal Election Commission.

Each gave $25,000 to Ready for Hillary PAC, organized a year ago to provide Clinton outside support if she chooses to seek the 2016 Democratic presidential nomination.

The super-PAC reported raising about $4 million last year from 30,000 donors, most of them giving small amounts. Walton, Soros and Benioff were among 33 people or companies who gave $25,000 in the second half of 2013, the report shows. New Yorkers who chipped in to help their former senator include Roger Altman, the chairman and founder of Evercore Partners Inc.

The super-PAC can’t coordinate with Clinton if she becomes a candidate. It can, however, sell her campaign its data or mobilize voters and advertise for her on its own. Almost 2 million supporters have signed up for the group so far. The group, based in Arlington, Va., is limiting contributions to $25,000 even though it is permitted to accept donations in unlimited amounts.

Its early fundraising success, still more than two years before Election Day, could give Clinton a competitive advantage. There’s no comparable candidate-specific super-PAC for any of the prospective Republican candidates, who include Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie.

Clinton, 66, dominates other Democrats in voter preference polls and has said she’ll make a decision about a White House campaign sometime this year.

“I’ll think about it in the future sometime,” Clinton said last week at the National Automobile Dealers Association convention in New Orleans.

Walton, the daughter of Wal-Mart Stores Inc. founder Sam Walton, is the world’s 13th-richest person, with a fortune of $33.9 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.

Alice Walton’s donation underscores the Clintons’ long-standing ties to business leaders in Arkansas, where Bill Clinton was governor for 12 years before becoming president in 1993. The Hillary Clinton group also received $25,000 from John Tyson, chairman of Springdale-based Tyson Foods Inc.

Benioff, the chief executive officer of San Francisco-based Salesforce.com, was a top fundraiser for President Barack Obama’s 2012 re-election campaign and hosted the president for a Democratic fundraiser at his home last November. His wife, Lynne Benioff, also contributed $25,000.

Soros, who’s given millions of dollars to Democratic causes, funded the super-PAC, as did his son Robert Soros, managing partner of Soros Fund Management LLC.

Former advisers to Bill Clinton also donated to Ready for Hillary, including Altman, a former deputy treasury secretary, who gave $5,000. William Galston, a Washington-based Brookings Institution senior fellow and a former White House domestic policy adviser, gave $1,000.

The super-PAC for Clinton, a U.S. senator for New York from 2001-09, received $25,000 each from developer William Rudin, chief executive officer of Rudin Management Co. in New York, and Jon Stryker, a New York architect who gave about $2 million to Priorities USA Action, a super-PAC that helped re-elect Obama and is now converting to a pro-Clinton effort.

Silda Wall, a principal at New World Capital Group LLC who is divorcing former New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer, gave $5,000.

The super-PAC also received $25,000 from the Houston law firm of Steve and Amber Mostyn, who gave about $5 million to Democratic groups and candidates in the 2012 election.

Ready for Hillary is led by Adam Parkhomenko, a 28-year-old college student who has advocated for a Clinton presidential campaign for more than a decade. The super-PAC’s advisers include Jeremy Bird, Obama’s former national field director, and Harold Ickes and James Carville, who have long-standing ties to the Clintons.

The super-PAC said in an email to supporters that it amassed another 7,119 donations last month.

By limiting its donations to $25,000 per individual, Ready for Hillary is focusing on grass-roots support, Parkhomenko said, while Priorities USA Action can seek bigger donations. Parkhomenko said Ready for Hillary doesn’t plan to run any television advertising campaigns, leaving that to other groups such as Priorities USA Action.

Priorities USA Action, which raised more than $79 million in the 2012 election, will have Obama campaign manager Jim Messina as a co-chairman for the 2016 election, its executive director, Buffy Wicks, said in a statement Jan. 23.

Information for this article was contributed by Matthew G. Miller of Bloomberg News.

Front Section, Pages 1 on 02/02/2014