Kenneth Starr's Law Firm Gives More Money to Clinton (Update1)
By Lindsay Fortado
July 31 (Bloomberg) -- Lawyers at Kirkland & Ellis, the law
firm that's home to Whitewater prosecutor Kenneth Starr and Bush
administration official Jay Lefkowitz, have given more to Hillary
Clinton's presidential campaign than to all of the top Republican
candidates combined.
Kirkland, based in Chicago, is one of several corporate law
firms that traditionally backed Republicans where lawyers are
turning to Democratic candidates. Lawyers say the change is
largely due to disenchantment with the Republican Party's social
policies and the war in Iraq.
``The Iraq war has a very significant pull on people, but
it's not just limited to that,'' said Kirk Radke, a New York
partner at Kirkland who is fundraising for Clinton. ``There's the
need for a better posture within the international community.''
Large U.S. firms such as Jones Day and Sidley Austin, which
donated more to President George W. Bush in 2000 than to
Democratic candidate Al Gore, are giving thousands more to
Democratic hopefuls than Republicans. Top Wall Street investment
banks and hedge funds are also giving more to Democrats.
Clinton, a New York senator, and Barack Obama, an Illinois
senator, are benefiting the most from the largest law firms,
according to the Center for Responsive Politics in Washington, a
nonprofit organization that tracks political contributions. Five
of Clinton's 10 largest donor groups are from law firms.
`Conventional Wisdom'
``Firms want to be on the good side of who they think is
going to be the incumbent, whether or not that person is good for
business,'' said Bruce MacEwen, a nonpartisan New York legal
consultant. ``The conventional wisdom is that the Democrats are
going to win the White House.''
Even at Jones Day, the 2,167-lawyer firm that represents the
Republican National Committee, attorneys have given 3 1/2 times
as much to the three Democratic frontrunners, including $131,333
to Obama. The Cleveland-based firm's lawyers donated more than
twice as much to Bush than to Gore in 2000 and slightly more to
Bush in 2004.
Overall, lawyers in and out of large firms have given $18.27
million to Democrats Clinton, Obama and John Edwards, compared
with $5.75 million to Republicans Rudy Giuliani, John McCain and
Mitt Romney. Edwards, a former senator from North Carolina and a
trial lawyer, leads the pack, backed mainly by attorneys who sue
on behalf of shareholders and individuals.
The donations of big firm lawyers mirror those of the
largest Wall Street investment bankers who have also backed
Democrats this year. Employees at the top 10 Wall Street
investment banks gave more than $1.4 million to Democrats and a
little more than $900,000 to Republicans, according to Federal
Election Commission filings.
`Hometown Favoritism'
Republicans such as Lefkowitz say part of the imbalance is
due to the lack of a clear frontrunner among the GOP candidates.
``There's a lot of enthusiasm now on the Democratic side,''
said Lefkowitz, who is serving as Bush's special envoy for human
rights in North Korea. ``There's a healthy race between Clinton
and Obama and that's exciting a lot of people. In firms that have
big offices in cities like New York and Chicago, you're going to
see some hometown favoritism.''
Kirkland, whose clients include Boeing Co. and Apple Inc.,
has given $194,601 to the top three Democrats compared with
$84,750 to Giuliani, McCain and Romney. Lawyers at the firm gave
28 percent more to Bush than Gore in 2000 and 34 percent more to
Bush than to Democratic candidate John Kerry in 2004.
Bain Capital
Romney, a former Massachusetts governor and the cofounder of
longtime Kirkland client Bain Capital LLC, found that his
connections weren't enough to push him past Clinton and Obama.
The $74,950 he collected at Kirkland lagged behind the $111,950
for Clinton and the $82,651 for Obama.
Starr, the Kirkland lawyer who led investigations into
former President Bill Clinton over Whitewater and Monica
Lewinsky, declined to comment. He is serving as a senior lawyer,
or ``of counsel,'' at the firm during his tenure as dean of
Pepperdine University School of Law in Malibu, California.
Floyd Abrams, who represented Judith Miller and the New York
Times in the Washington grand jury investigation of the leak of a
CIA agent Valerie Plame's name, said lawyers are using their
wallets to express anger at the Bush administration.
``The illegal warrantless wiretapping of American citizens''
and the ``self-aggrandizing claims of executive power'' are
influencing donations, said Abrams, a partner at New York's
Cahill Gordon & Reindel. ``These are not the centrist views that
used to attract the middle-of-the-road, often conservative
lawyers.''
Business and international relations flourished under Bill
Clinton, Hillary's husband, and gave ``a sense of comfort'' with
the idea of a Democratic president, Abrams said.
DLA Piper's $241,220
At DLA Piper, an international law firm with 1,500 attorneys
in the U.S., lawyers gave $241,220 to Clinton -- the largest
contribution to her campaign. The fundraising efforts were led by
Lee Miller, the firm's co-chief executive officer in Chicago, and
Jim Blanchard, a partner and a former Democratic governor of
Michigan.
Blanchard, who has known the Clintons for more than 25
years, said the shift to Democrats ``has a lot to do with the war
in Iraq, Guantanamo, torture'' and controversies regarding
Attorney General Alberto Gonzales.
``Lawyers are much more sensitive to civil liberties and our
constitutional foundation and the rule of law,'' he said.
Republican National Committee spokeswoman Tracey Schmitt
didn't respond to requests for comment. White House spokesman
Scott Stanzel declined to comment.
Lefkowitz said it might be too soon to gauge the political
inclinations of the legal community in a race that has more than
15 months to go.
``We're in an early stage right now; people are looking to
pick early winners,'' said Lefkowitz, who hasn't donated money to
a candidate this year. ``Once both parties have picked a
frontrunner, donations to both candidates will balance out.''
Law Firm Donations
Firm Total Contributions
Skadden Arps $314,966
Clinton Obama Edwards Giuliani McCain Romney
$133,310 $91,256 $57,250 $10,700 18,150 $4,300
Sidley Austin $294,665
Clinton Obama Edwards Giuliani McCain Romney
$63,000 $180,365 $33,800 $9,400 $5,800 $2,300
DLA Piper $291,977
Clinton Obama Edwards Giuliani McCain Romney
$241,220 $35,257 $9,900 $0 $1,000 $4,600
Kirkland $279,351
Clinton Obama Edwards Giuliani McCain Romney
$111,950 $82,651 $0 $6,000 $3,800 $74,950
Blank Rome $267,650
Clinton Obama Edwards Giuliani McCain Romney
$95,500 $17,150 $0 $4,800 $137,700 $12,500
Greenberg Traurig $252,893
Clinton Obama Edwards Giuliani McCain Romney
$86,200 $19,356 $1,050 $42,750 $101,537 $2,000
Jones Day $182,313
Clinton Obama Edwards Giuliani McCain Romney
$4,000 $131,333 $6,829 $25,651 $12,750 $1,750
Latham & Watkins $178,578
Clinton Obama Edwards Giuliani McCain Romney
$68,150 $62,028 $8,450 $2,550 $16,750 $20,650
Akin Gump $166,944
Clinton Obama Edwards Giuliani McCain Romney
$68,830 $51,814 $9,150 $21,750 $11,100 $4,300
WilmerHale $161,790
Clinton Obama Edwards Giuliani McCain Romney
$43,930 $89,010 $11,450 $350 $12,450 $4,600
Source: All numbers from the Center for Responsive
Politics (opensecrets.org) as of July 15.
To contact the reporter on this story: Lindsay Fortado in New
York at
lfortado@bloomberg.net
.
Last Updated: July 31, 2007 09:11 EDT