Oct. 1, 2015

Page 8

Photo/Dennis Myers

A report by the liberal American Bridge Project throws a spotlight on the Koch brothers’ in Nevada.

ACA warning issued The Internal Revenue Service is warning people who receive health insurance through the Affordable Care Act to pay close attention to their mail because those who obtained an extension on filing their 2014 tax returns could lose a tax credit for that insurance if they have not yet filed the 2014 return. The deadline for filing those delayed 2014 returns is October 15. The return should include a form—Form 8962, which can be obtained at www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/i8962.pdf. If the ’14 return does not include that form, the tax credit could be in jeopardy of renewal. According to the Nevada health insurance exchange, “Individuals who have not filed a 2014 return and Form 8962 will receive a letter from the IRS providing notification of the failure to reconcile.” Pay attention.

James Santini 1937-2015 The last of Nevada’s sole U.S. House members has died. James Santini served four terms as Nevada’s only House member from 1975 to 1983. Born and raised in Reno, Santini’s family tree included University of Nevada president Walter Clark and author Walter Van Tilburg Clark. Santini was one of a generation of students at the Reno campus who dominated the state’s politics for decades, including Frank Fahrenkopf, Richard Bryan, Roger Bremner, Jim Joyce, and Sig Rogich. But Santini’s political career suffered a fatal blow at the hands of a rising son of southern Nevada, Harry Reid. After graduating from Hastings School of Law in 1962 and serving his then-mandatory hitch in the military, Santini moved to fast-growing Clark County where he became successively a deputy district attorney, public defender, justice of the peace, and state district judge. In 1974, he got into partisan politics by running as a Democrat for the U.S. House. A state constitutional ban on judges running for office during their judicial terms was overruled by the Nevada Supreme Court, who said the ban applied only to state offices and judgeships. Swept into office along with most Democrats in that Watergate year, Santini joined the first termers who staged the 1975 House revolt, removing long serving committee chairs and weakening the seniority system to prevent newcomers seeking good committee assignments from being in debt to veterans. “I’m beholden before I ever cast a vote,” Santini said, explaining his votes to break up the old system. During his House service, he carved out a role as the mining industry’s champion, styling himself as “Mr. Minerals” but undercutting his appeal in his increasingly urban state. He was reelected three times in what was then a statewide race. Impatient to move up to the Senate, in 1982 he entered a Democratic primary against the state’s incumbent senior Senator, Howard Cannon, angering many Democrats. He lost. Four years later he yielded to an entreaty from GOP Sen. Paul Laxalt to switch parties and ran for Senate again. This time he managed to anger both Democrats and Republicans, who resented GOP Rep. Barbara Vucanovich being passed over for a Democrat. Santini lost again, to Democrat Harry Reid. Santini never returned to Nevada to live, lobbying for the tourism industry and practicing law in Alexandria, Virginia. He left a major legacy to his native state—the Santini/Burton Act, under which money from sales of federal land in Southern Nevada is used for preservation and protection of the Lake Tahoe basin. The mechanism was later expanded into the Southern Nevada Public Lands Management Act. Santini was protective of the at long after he left the House, criticizing Bush administration attempts to use the money first for a new line of nuclear weapons (“Trains for Nevada but not the nation,” RN&R, Feb. 17, 2005) and then to apply against the federal deficit (“Beating the bushes for money,” Nov. 16, 2006) “It’s a rape of the fund, is what it is,” Santini said. “This is money derived from Nevada and it should be put to use in Nevada, not siphoned off into some general fund sinkhole or to some other agency.”

—Dennis Myers

8 | RN&R |

OCTOBER 1, 2015

Koch west Report examines billionaires in Silver State An 89-page American Bridge Project report on the billionaire Koch brothers’ activities in Nevada has been obtained by by the Reno News & Review. Dennis Myers The American Bridge Project was formed in 2012 by author David Brock, noted for starting his career as a conservative critic of liberals and evolving into a liberal critic of conservatives. He wrote The Real Anita Hill, a 1993 attack on the witness in the confirmation hearings of U.S. Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas, and followed it up three years later with The Seduction of Hillary Rodham, a volume sympathetic to the then-first lady.

“Leftists have resorted to ad hominem attacks of our organization.” Victor Joecks nevada Policy research institute In 2014, Newsweek described Brock’s American Bridge Project this way: “A super PAC and affiliated nonprofit, American Bridge has become one of the left’s most innovative and successful ventures.” It is an indication of how the political and journalism climates have changed—and merged—that a political journalist could form his own political organization, including a political action committee arm, without experiencing much criticism.

The Project has shown particular relish in going after Charles Koch and David Koch, billionaire businessmen with a record of polluting and an announced intention of spending $900 million in next year’s election to throw it to conservative candidates. David Koch appeared on the Nevada ballot in 1980 as the Libertarian Party vice presidential candidate (his ticket placed fourth, just 165 ballots ahead of “None of these candidates”). Americans for Prosperity, a political action committee founded by David Koch, has an arm in Nevada. In June, American Bridge Project issued a study, Banking on Obstruction: Koch Profits Behind Opposition to Ex-Im Bank, that argued the Kochs were promoting abolition of the Export-Import Bank because their corporations have received only $16.2 million in subsidies from it while Koch competitors have received a whopping $19.4 billion. The Bank was effectively shut down the next month after an eightdecade history. National Public Radio in Las Vegas subsequently reported anger by Nevada businesspeople over the shutdown of the bank. “America very much enjoys seeing small business succeed, and I think this program has shown that 90 percent of its benefit has gone to small businesses,” said North Las Vegas executive Rex Jones. Adam Jones, director of the Koch group Americans for Prosperity Nevada, wrote that the bank “loses taxpayer money, picks winners and

losers in the economy and endangers American jobs. Nevadans would be better off without it.” The American Bridge Project report on the Kochs in Nevada is not easy to read. It lacks a narrative to tie all its information together and make sense of it for the reader. It begins with a single page of text and then follows with what amounts to 87 pages of footnotes to substantiate its textual claims. It certainly makes a serious case of the influence of the two billionaires in the lives of Nevadans. The report notes that the Kochs have business interests in the state: “The Kochs expanded their corporate empire into Nevada with their 2005 purchase of Georgia-Pacific, which maintains a facility in North Las Vegas focused on the manufacture of drywall. The … facility has spent several recent quarters in violation of the Clean Air Act [and] was the focus of lawsuits in 2009 when tainted drywall that affected homeowners throughout Nevada and the rest of the country was traced back to GeorgiaPacific, which eventually settled a lawsuit.” The report also says that last year that Koch Business Solutions announced it would come to Reno after the Economic Development Authority of Western Nevada dangled tax incentives. We were unable to confirm that the Koch corporation had been granted welfare to come to Reno. The American Bridge Project report links a longtime Nevada organization, the Nevada Policy Research Institute (NPRI), with the Kochs. “But Koch Industries’ involvement in Nevada pales in comparison to the reach of the brothers’ political empire. NPRI, which has received extensive Koch-network funding as a member of the State Policy Network, has spent years pushing the Kochs’ agenda in the state, attacking the state government as bloated even as it ranked as the ‘leanest state government in the country,’ and lobbying to fight business taxes and cut education spending while the government starved for resources and students struggled. At one point, NPRI suggested offering businesses tax credits to set up on-site schools, such as ‘Harrah’s High School.’ NPRI’s contributions to Nevada’s policy debates have been described by Democrats, Republicans, and independent commentators alike as ‘idiotic,’ ‘thoughtless,’ ‘snarky sneering,’ and ‘ideological hackery’ from ‘narrow minds’.” Asked for comment, NPRI’s Victor Joecks said in an email message, “For the last 24 years, the Nevada Policy Research Institute has advanced individual liberty, free enterprise and


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