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" ... Contrary to the longstanding notion of the NRA being a political heavyweight, gun violence prevention organizations outspent the NRA in the 2018 midterms, including Everytown for Gun Safety, which spent $30 million and overwhelmed the NRA. Everytown was also the largest outside spender in Virginia’s 2019 elections, spending $2.5 million and dramatically outpacing the NRA on the airwaves and on the ground. ... "
" ... From the time I began my early career in politics and then the television business, it was a pretty safe bet that Republicans would raise more money and spend more money than Democrats. 2020 landed 180 degrees from that expectation as Democrats outspent Republicans $4.7 billion to $2.7 billion (remaining was independent expenditures). AdImpact noted that Democrats had a “commanding spending lead” in the general election, typified by Biden outspending Trump by 71%, $652 million to $381 million. In Congress, Democratic Senate candidates outspent their GOP counterparts $549 million to $319 million (almost exactly the same percentage gap as the presidential race), and in the House of Representatives Democrats outspent Republicans by $663 million to $511 million (a 30% differential). The quickest of glances at the election results will tell you that vote totals didn’t match these spending differentials. ... "
" ... Other cities where locals are getting outspent include Atlanta (33% difference), Houston (31%), New York (27%), Denver (26%), San Antonio (24%), Philadelphia (23%) and Phoenix (23%). ... "
" ... Second, unions lost on public policy. Corporate lobbyists have outspent unions to curry favor in Washington, and legislation that has been passed to benefit workers has nullified, in some cases, the need for unions (e.g., minimum wage laws, discrimination protection). ... "
" ... The Washington legislature, dominated by progressive Democrats and supported by the governor and other political heavyweights, decided to enact legislation effectively negating Initiative 200, which was not an amendment to the Washington constitution. But they did not reckon on the fierce and ultimately successful opposition of a growing political force: the state’s large population of Asian ancestry. They mobilized to put on the ballot the pro-affirmative action proposition approved by the legislature. They were effectively outspent, as they had to devote considerable resources merely to get petitions signed to get the issue put before the voters. Nonetheless, they narrowly prevailed. ... "