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State Capture

State Capture

How Conservative Activists, Big Businesses, and Wealthy Donors Reshaped the American States— and the Nation

1

Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University’s objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide. Oxford is a registered trade mark of Oxford University Press in the UK and certain other countries.

Published in the United States of America by Oxford University Press 198 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10016, United States of America.

© Oxford University Press 2019

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing of Oxford University Press, or as expressly permitted by law, by license, or under terms agreed with the appropriate reproduction rights organization. Inquiries concerning reproduction outside the scope of the above should be sent to the Rights Department, Oxford University Press, at the address above.

You must not circulate this work in any other form and you must impose this same condition on any acquirer.

Library of Congress Cataloging- in- Publication Data

Names: Hertel-Fernandez, Alex, 1986-author. Title: State capture : how conservative activists, big businesses, and wealthy donors reshaped the American states and the nation / by Alex Hertel-Fernandez.

Description: New York, NY : Oxford University Press, 2019. Identifiers: LCCN 2018027144 (print) | LCCN 2018038838 (ebook) | ISBN 9780190870805 (updf) | ISBN 9780190870812 (epub) | ISBN 9780190870799 (hardback)

Subjects: LCSH: Conservatism—United States—States. | U.S. States—Politics and government—21st century. | State governments—United States. | Business and politics—United States—States. | Americans for Prosperity (Organization) | American Legislative Exchange Council. | State Policy Network (Organization) | BISAC: POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Process / Elections. | POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / General. | POLITICAL SCIENCE / General.

Classification: LCC JC573.2.U6 (ebook) | LCC JC573.2.U6 H398 2019 (print) | DDC 320.520973—dc23

LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2018027144

1 3 5 7 9 8 6 4 2

Printed by Sheridan Books, Inc., United States of America

For Nate, who reshaped my life

Preface ix

Acknowledgments xv

Abbreviations xix

Introduction 1

CONTENTS

PART I THE EVOLUTION OF ALEC: A CORPORATECONSERVATIVE ANCHOR ACROSS US STATES

1. “The Most Dangerously Effective Organization”: A Smart ALEC Is Born 23

2. Policy Plagiarism: A Window into ALEC’s Reach across US States 64

3. An Easy “A” with ALEC: ALEC’s Appeal for State Lawmakers 78

4. “A Great Investment”: ALEC’s Appeal for Big Business 112

PART II THE RIGHT- WING TROIKA AND ITS FOES

5. A Little Help from Their Friends: Introducing the Right-Wing Troika 143

6. Transforming the Nation One State at a Time: The Right-Wing Troika and State Policy 174

7. “Feisty Chihuahuas versus a Big Gorilla”: Why Left-Wing Efforts to Counter the Troika Have Floundered 211

Conclusion: State Capture and American Democracy 243

Appendices

Chapter 3 Appendix 269

Chapter 4 Appendix 274

Chapter 6 Appendix 278

Chapter 7 Appendix 291

Notes 295

Works Cited 319

Index 343

PREFACE

Gene Whisnant is a genial retiree from central Oregon who loves to talk baseball. After 27 years of service in the Air Force, Whisnant decided to get involved in politics. He has served in Oregon’s lower chamber since 2003.1 Shortly after arriving in the legislature, Whisnant was approached by a former state senator who encouraged him to join a national association of legislators called the American Legislative Exchange Council (or ALEC, for short). Describing his longstanding involvement in that group, Whisnant smiles. While all legislators are automatically members of the non-partisan, non-profit National Conference of State Legislatures, Whisnant eagerly notes, he made the decision to join ALEC on his own. Whisnant readily paid the $50 dues each year to stay involved in the group and now is the state’s ALEC leader.

What makes Whisnant so proud of his participation in ALEC? The first thing to understand, he says, is how many state legislators in Oregon actually serve only part-time, “working their tails off” to get anything done. He is retired, giving him more time to spend on the job as opposed to his younger colleagues. Yet Whisnant does not have much help from expert staffers who could do research for him. His staff consists of his wife, who works half-time, and an aide who works three days per week when the legislature is not in session.2 Whisnant’s situation is far from uncommon. In recent years, Oregon legislators were paid about $23,500 per year—hardly enough for a family to live on without a second job or another source of income. Oregon, in fact, pays its legislators only a bit less than the national average in states that offer salaries to their members.3 The state ranks at approximately the national average for the number of staffers working for each state representative and senator as well.4 Across the United States, many state legislatures are run without either professional lawmakers or staffs. Without formal help, how does a state legislator like Whisnant get the ideas, research, legislative language, talking points, polling, and expert witnesses that are needed to make policy? That’s where ALEC comes in. For his $50-per-year

membership dues, Whisnant gains access to nearly 1,000 prewritten bills on a variety of social, economic, and political issues, ranging from environmental standards to health insurance regulation to tort reform and voting requirements. These bills provide a clear and easy-to-use policy agenda for conservative, probusiness legislators to follow.

But it is not just policy proposals that ALEC offers. As an ALEC member, Whisnant also gains access to a deep bench of policy researchers and experts who would be happy to help him build the case for a particular model bill from the group’s archives. He has had the opportunity to meet those policy experts in person many times at ALEC’s annual conferences. Those convenings, typically held at appealing resorts and hotels across the country, are either free or heavily subsidized for legislators and their families. “We have such limited staff that [ALEC] helps us look at things and consider them,” Whisnant explains approvingly about the group.

Whisnant’s report in a 2011 newsletter nicely explains how the ALEC process works.5 After attending several annual meetings and reading through the group’s materials, Whisnant decided to take ALEC-inspired action on budget reform. He first hosted a local briefing in the statehouse, which was led by visiting ALEC staffers from Washington, D.C., and also included fifty Oregon legislators, aides, and local business leaders allied with ALEC. Following that convening, Whisnant took model legislation already developed by ALEC and introduced those bills under his own name. Among other things, they would have slashed staff positions and introduced more possibilities for privatizing state services. Whisnant, then, is able to supplement his lack of legislative staff with the private resources provided by ALEC to develop, promote, and ultimately change state policy.

Whisnant isn’t alone in his enthusiasm for the group. ALEC’s membership in recent years numbered at a little under 2,000 public officials, or just under a third of all state legislators.6 This, of course, should come as no surprise given that legislators in so many states lack adequate resources to develop policy on their own. As a result, through processes similar to the one Whisnant used in Oregon, ALEC can claim credit for hundreds of bill introductions each year. Nearly one in five of those introduced bills, on average, turns into law.7

ALEC’s model bills center, with laser beam–like focus, on corporate-friendly and conservative priorities. As we will soon see, the most common proposals disadvantage liberal constituencies; lift environmental, health, safety, and economic regulations on business; cut taxes on wealthy individuals and companies; and privatize state programs and agencies.

But where do those policy ideas come from? And where does ALEC obtain the funds necessary to provide such valuable services to legislators like

Whisnant? For answers to those questions, we must turn to the other half of the group’s membership: corporations and conservative activists.

Enron’s Pitch in the Big Easy

Before its leaders were found guilty of massive accounting fraud, Enron was a leader in the resale of electricity. Enron aimed, in essence, to develop a market for buying and selling contracts based on changes in the prices of electrical power. Its growth in this market, however, depended on its ability to buy and sell electricity across state lines and to dismantle local utility monopolies.8 Those were decisions that largely rested in the hands of state legislators like Gene Whisnant.

Faced with fifty different state legislatures, each with different cultures, lawmakers, and constellations of interest groups, what was a single company like Enron to do? Although Enron invested in building a stable of its own lobbyists across the states, forging relationships with friendly consumer groups and coalitions, and relying on barnstorming by Chairman Kenneth Lay and other close allies, a key element of Enron’s statehouse circuit strategy involved the same group that Whisnant praised so highly.9

Enron became active in ALEC in the mid-1990s, participating in the group’s energy and environmental policy task force alongside Koch Industries, another company seeking electrical deregulation. Under Enron’s leadership, that ALEC task force drafted and approved model legislation that would deregulate state energy markets.10 It also produced several guides and research papers offering policy arguments and evidence in favor of deregulation that legislators could use to persuade their colleagues and constituents. Those bills and materials were then disseminated to all several thousand of the group’s elected members in legislatures across all fifty states.

As a final pitch to ALEC’s membership, Enron underwrote a substantial portion of ALEC’s annual conference the following year in New Orleans. At the 1997 meeting in the city’s Hyatt Regency hotel, Kenneth Lay delivered a keynote welcoming address to the assembled state legislators.11 In that speech, Lay made the case for deregulation of state electrical utilities and the interstate sale of power. On the next day of the conference, there was also a special session for legislators interested in “Creating a Free Market and Consumer Choice in Electricity” on precisely those themes.12

Enron’s aggressive campaign waged through ALEC paid off. Eventually, twenty-four states adopted some form of deregulation between 1997 and 2000 at the behest of ALEC and other groups pushing for loosening electrical rules.13 “Enron was the only company out there lobbying and they were everywhere,” remarked one environmental policy observer about the state deregulation

battles.14 Still, Enron didn’t win everything it wanted from all states. In Whisnant’s home state of Oregon, for example, Enron only managed to pass partial deregulation of the state utility marketplace. According to the Sierra Club’s chapter in that state, Enron “came in like a house of [sic] fire and we cooled their jets. Once they realized they wouldn’t be allowed to do what they wanted, they lost interest. They came in with a blatant attempt to roll the legislature and impress everyone with how important they were compared to podunk Oregon. We didn’t like it.”15

But the Sierra Club’s partial victory in Oregon was not necessarily a big loss for Enron. The company was playing the whole field of states and had already won in many other legislatures. They could afford a few losses so long as there were bigger victories in other statehouses. In fact, ALEC has been emphasizing this point to businesses for some time. “In the states, if you’re trying to get [something] passed and you’ve lost in Kansas, Nebraska and Texas, it’s not a total failure. You may well win in Arizona, California and New York that year. You’ve got 50 shots,” stressed one of ALEC’s early executive directors in making a sales pitch to potential members.16

Enron’s strategy in the case of electricity deregulation represents a broader lesson that other large national companies have learned since the 1980s. State governments not only set policies that affect corporate bottom lines. Statehouses also represent multiple battlegrounds where businesses have important advantages. For one thing, state legislators are often highly attuned to corporate demands, especially when businesses raise the prospect of layoffs or relocating to another state.17 For another, most Americans do not pay much attention to what happens within the halls of state legislatures. Some 40 percent of Americans reported in 2016 that they could not recall the party in control of either their state’s upper or lower legislative chambers.18 That lack of scrutiny gives businesses more opportunities to shape policy without any opposition.19 And state legislators, like Whisnant, often are strapped for ideas and research assistance, leaving them open to accepting substantial legislative help from private groups. ALEC lets businesses take advantage of all three of these characteristics of the states.20

In this regard, Enron was not unique in its turn to ALEC. The group has boasted a membership of around 200 of the largest and most prominent companies throughout the country. Although membership in the group is not public, in the past, its corporate backers have included businesses such as Amazon, FedEx, Google, UPS, Facebook, Kraft Foods, McDonald’s, Visa, Walmart, and State Farm Insurance. ALEC’s corporate members provide the main financial support for the group’s annual budget of some $6 million to $10 million.21

Companies are not the only ALEC backers, however. Although a quick review of the model bills the group has produced reveals many proposals that clearly benefit ALEC’s corporate members, there are still a number of bills not

associated with business interests. It is difficult to identify a business constituency, for instance, for ALEC’s legislative ideas related to curbing abortion access, restricting gay rights, and welfare reform. Instead, we must look to the third set of actors involved in ALEC’s creation and expansion over time: conservative activists and donors.

Conservatives Go Local to Fight Government Spending

For years, conservative activists bemoaned the fiscal profligacy of state and federal governments. Bob Williams is one such budget hawk who has spent the better part of his career looking for ways to restrain the growth of public spending at all levels of government. After receiving his undergraduate degree in business administration from Penn State, Williams spent time as an auditor for the US Government Accountability Office before eventually running for the Washington state legislature, where he served five terms.22 While in the legislature, Williams was responsible for proposing a number of measures related to state spending. “Without a limited and accountable government, individuals cannot enjoy the freedom and responsibility they need in order to mold a satisfactory life for themselves,” Williams has argued.23 Williams eventually realized he could have an even greater impact on fiscal policy working outside of the legislature. After he stepped down from office, Williams helped found the Evergreen Freedom Foundation, a state-level free market–oriented think tank operating first out of Washington and more recently in Oregon and California (it has also dropped the Evergreen from its name).

Although the Freedom Foundation focuses primarily on state-level policy, its reach now extends well beyond the Pacific Northwest. Thanks to a close association with ALEC, Williams has had the opportunity to promote proposals to reduce the size of the public sector across the United States as the privatesector chair of ALEC’s tax and fiscal policy task force.24 In that position, Williams has distributed a number of model bills to ALEC’s legislative membership— including the same proposals that Gene Whisnant used in Oregon. Beyond disseminating specific model bills, Williams has also participated in workshops and trainings for state legislators as part of ALEC’s annual meetings, outlining his perspective on state and federal budgets, as well as how ALEC’s legislative members can more effectively collaborate with state-level free market institutes like the Freedom Foundation “to win more policy battles and lay a foundation for continuing success” in reducing the size of government.25

More recently, Williams has assisted one of ALEC’s most ambitious initiatives to date: pushing state legislatures to pass resolutions calling for the convening of an Article V Constitutional Convention, in which state delegates could pursue

amendments to the US Constitution directly, rather than by working through Congress.26 ALEC’s tax and fiscal policy task force envisions that state delegates to an Article V Convention could promote a “balanced budget amendment” to the Constitution, which would force the federal government, like nearly all states, to pass a balanced budget each year. Many mainstream economic experts believe that such a measure would devastate the federal government’s ability to boost the economy during recessions and spell economic disaster.27 Thus far, ALEC has obtained the required legislation in 28 states, including 10 passed between 2013 and 2016—only a few states shy of the threshold needed to invoke the Convention.28 One of ALEC’s early heads emphasized the value of this strategy, arguing that if conservatives wanted to move constitutional amendments—like a balanced budget effort—“they’ll have to get 38 states to pass those things. You have to have an active support network in the states when ratification time comes.” ALEC, in her view, offered exactly that kind of support to right-wing activists.29

Just like Enron, then, conservatives have found that cross-state advocacy through ALEC has been an ideal way to advance their policy priorities. Despite years of effort and organizing, fiscal hawks, for instance, experienced little success moving balanced budget legislation in Congress.30 But in the states, they found many more opportunities: failure in one state was not a huge loss, since activists like Williams could simply move on to another one. Casting the states as terrain on which political losers in one battle could simply transition to another was thus a key selling point of ALEC for both corporate and conservative America.

This move, first advanced by ALEC, and later, two other cross-state networks of conservatives, private-sector companies, and wealthy donors, amounted to a watershed change in US politics. Together, this advocacy has produced a stark rightward shift across the states, ultimately contributing to a dramatic redistribution of political power. Gene Whisnant has described that shift as ensuring an opportunity for the private sector to check the power of government, a “give and take with the private sector.”31 Borrowing a term from my fellow political scientists studying developing democracies, I dub it “state capture”—or when small groups of well-resourced individuals and companies shape the political rules of the game to their advantage.32 The following pages spell out exactly how that capture has unfolded across the United States, one state capitol at a time, and what it all means for American politics.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Achieving durable political change across the US states requires broad coalitions of diverse and committed supporters. The same, I have learned over the past six years, is true for dissertations and books. My graduate school advisers at Harvard—Theda Skocpol, Peter Hall, Cathie Jo Martin, and Kathy Thelen— have each provided their own invaluable mix of encouragement and advice. Kathy helped spark an interest in political economy and inequality during my undergraduate years at Northwestern, and has been a terrific mentor and collaborator ever since. Indeed, it was thanks to her that I saw Peter and Theda in action at a workshop on historical institutionalism in college—and decided to pursue a career in politics and public policy. After I arrived at Harvard, Peter’s generous feedback helped me enormously as I developed the ideas for the dissertation on which this book is based. And Cathie has been a terrific sounding board and cheerleader throughout the whole process.

None of this project, however, would have been possible without my chair, Theda, who has taught me so much about the careful study of political organizations over time. It has been an incredible privilege to learn from—and ultimately collaborate with—her on our research related to the shifting US political terrain. Her model of rigorous and civically engaged scholarship is a standard to which I will continually strive, and as will be apparent to readers, Chapters 5 and 6 draw from our joint work together.

Beyond my committee, I have received the very helpful advice of other scholars in writing this manuscript. Nick Carnes, Lee Drutman, Jake Grumbach, Jacob Hacker, Steve Teles, Rob Mickey, Paul Pierson, and Vanessa Williamson were especially generous with their time and comments. Numerous presentations, including at the State Politics and Policy Conference, Midwest Political Science Association meetings, American Political Science Association meetings, the University of Maine, Stanford University’s Junior Scholar Forum, the University of California, Berkeley American Politics Workshop, the Northwestern

University Comparative and Historical Workshop, the University of California, Santa Barbara American Politics Workshop, the Harvard University Seminar on the State and Capitalism Since 1800, the University of Iowa, the University of Oxford, the Tobin Project, and Yale University’s American Politics workshop all honed the arguments and evidence presented in the following pages.

I have also been lucky in the colleagues I met in graduate school; they have provided me with emotional and intellectual sustenance—and made the whole dissertation and then book-writing experience fun. Noam Gidron, Kostya Kashin, Volha Charnysh, James Conran, Leslie Finger, Jeff Javed, Leah Stokes, and Matto Mildenberger deserve special thanks for their generosity of feedback and friendship. Joint work with Kostya informs the text analysis of ALEC model bills throughout the book, and joint work with Leah and Matto, in our 2017 survey of state legislators and staff, informs Chapters 6, 7, and the Conclusion.

I was fortunate to benefit from two book workshops that provided a helpful mix of feedback on the manuscript. In Washington, D.C., Steve Teles generously organized a “murder board” that included Lee Drutman, Mark Schmitt, Shayna Strom, and Vanessa Williamson. At Columbia, the School of International and Public Affairs faculty grants program supported a workshop at which Sarah Anzia, Devin Caughey, Martin Gilens, Matt Grossmann, Nate Kelly, Katherine Krimmel, Justin Phillips, Paul Pierson, Bob Shapiro, Suresh Naidu, and Margaret Weir all offered fantastic advice and reactions.

As this book makes clear, well-timed and generous philanthropic support can make a big difference. The research on which this book is based benefited from timely support from the National Science Foundation’s Graduate Research Fellowship Program, the Harvard Multidisciplinary Program in Inequality and Social Policy, the Tobin Project, the Russell Sage Foundation, and the Institute for Social and Economic Research and Policy at Columbia University. Bob Bowditch also supported this book through the research project on the shifting US political terrain.

Many individuals and organizations donated their time for interviews that informed this book, including (but not limited to) staff at the American Legislative Exchange Council, the Center for Policy Alternatives, the Center for Media and Democracy, the Democracy Alliance, the Economic Policy Institute (and the Economic Analysis and Research Network), the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities (and the State Priorities Partnership network), Progressive Majority, the Progressive States Network, the State Innovation Exchange, and the State Policy Network. I appreciate their expertise.

At Oxford University Press, I am very grateful for the enthusiasm and patience of Dave McBride, as well as the anonymous reviewers for the manuscript. Their thorough comments and feedback were incredibly helpful in strengthening the book.

Above all, I am thankful for my family, who provided in equal parts support and inspiration. Throughout their careers in political organizing and higher education, my parents, Adriela and Tom, have modeled a commitment to mentorship, teaching, and service to which I aspire. My sister Sarah continues to teach me about the role that civic institutions, especially libraries, play in supporting inclusive communities. And my Minnesotan family—Melissa, John, and Anna—has shown me what a commitment to public service looks like firsthand. Finally, I dedicate this book to my husband, Nate. He has been my best friend, cheerleader, and guide for over a decade—and has made my life whole.

Hertel-Fernandez July 2018 New York, New York

ABBREVIATIONS

AALL American Association for Labor Legislation

ACA Affordable Care Act

ACCE American City County Exchange

ACORN Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now

AFL-CIO American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations

AFP Americans for Prosperity

AFSCME American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees

ALA American Legislators’ Association

ALEC American Legislative Exchange Council

ALICE American Legislative and Issue Campaign Exchange

CASLP Conference on Alternative State and Local Policies

CBPP Center on Budget and Policy Priorities

CEO Chief Executive Officer

CPA Center for Policy Alternatives

CSE Citizens for a Sound Economy

CSG Council of State Governments

CSI Center for State Innovation

EARN Economic Analysis and Research Network

EPA Environmental Protection Agency

EPI Economic Policy Institute

FGA Foundation for Government Accountability

IRS Internal Revenue Service

LGBT Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender

NAACP National Association for the Advancement of Colored People

NCSL National Conference of State Legislatures

NEA National Education Association

NFL National Football League

NRA National Rifle Association

PAC Political Action Committee

PLAN Progressive Legislative Action Network

PSN Progressive States Network

RPS Renewable Energy Portfolio Standard

SEIU Service Employees International Union

SFAI/SPP State Fiscal Analysis Initiative/State Priorities Partnership

SIX State Innovation Exchange

SPN State Policy Network

State Capture

Introduction

Appearing for a press conference the day after his party had suffered unexpectedly large losses in the 2010 midterm elections, a chastened President Barack Obama conceded that Democrats had taken a “shellacking” in Congress.1 Most of the attention following those elections centered on the extent to which Obama’s White House would be able to “sit down with members of both parties and figure out how we can move forward together,” as the president had pledged to do.2 “Deep rifts divide Obama and Republicans,” led The New York Times, while The Washington Post went with “After midterm wins, GOP vows to block Obama’s agenda.”3

To be sure, the 2010 midterm elections did transform the possibilities for Obama’s presidency, effectively ending any hope of additional legislative victories for the rest of his time in office. Yet in hindsight, the 2010 midterms ushered in an even more important consequence for Obama’s legacy. It was a consequence that unfolded miles away from Washington, D.C., running through state capitols from Montgomery to Madison. Before the elections, Democrats were in full control of 16 states and Republicans only 9.4 After election day, Republicans jumped to 21 and Democrats fell to 11. The GOP’s legislative gains are among the largest that any party has achieved since the New Deal, while the losses endured by Democrats number among the deepest.5

As state governments began convening in 2011 with new Republican leaders in charge, a wave of remarkably similar proposals flooded legislative hoppers. Once-blue states like Wisconsin and Maine were now considering measures to cut back the ability of unions to engage in politics and collectively bargain; dramatically scale back access to abortions; retrench social programs like unemployment insurance, Food Stamps, and Medicaid; expand the ability of individuals to buy, carry, and use guns; and lower taxes on the wealthy and on businesses.6 Perhaps most important for President Obama’s immediate policy agenda, these newly Republican-controlled states now had the possibility of stymieing the implementation of his signature legislative accomplishment: the passage of comprehensive health reform through the 2010 Affordable Care Act.

In an era of sharply polarized parties that disagree on nearly every issue, it may not come as much of a surprise that Republicans would pursue a different legislative agenda from Democrats. But what made the 2010 state legislative transition so striking was the speed with which states began introducing and enacting a near-identical set of very conservative policy priorities.

Consider three examples: so-called stand-your-ground, right-to-work, and voter ID laws. Stand-your-ground, or “Castle Doctrine,” laws expand the rights of individuals to use otherwise unlawful—and even lethal—force to protect themselves from perceived bodily harm. These provisions attracted significant attention in the wake of the 2012 death of Trayvon Martin. Martin was a Florida teenager fatally shot by an individual (George Zimmerman) whose ultimately successful defense rested, in part, on the law.7 State right-to-work laws target labor unions, and remove the obligation of workers at unionized firms to pay union dues, even as unions are still legally required to represent the non-duespaying workers just as they would dues-paying members. Right-to-work laws thus put pressure on unions’ financial resources and organizing clout.8 Voter ID laws, in turn, are measures that require Americans to present some form of identification when they head to the election polls. Although cast as neutral measures intended to prevent voter fraud, these provisions have the potential to make it substantially harder for minority, younger, and poorer individuals— who tend to support Democrats—to vote, since they are most likely to lack the required identification.9 In private settings, some conservative sponsors of these bills admit that their purpose is to indeed reduce turnout of their political opponents.10

In short, all three of these bills represent conservative—and often controversial—priorities that have the potential to fundamentally change the landscape of policy across the states. As Figure 0.1 shows, before 2010 not many states had adopted all three measures. But following the GOP takeover of so many states in the 2010 elections, a number of states began adopting all three provisions, nearly simultaneously. The number of states with identical standyour-ground, right-to-work, and required voter ID provisions jumped from just two in 2006 to eight by 2013. In all, by 2013, seven states enacted strict photo ID laws for voting, six states enacted right-to-work provisions, and four states enacted stand-your-ground laws. Where did this flood of new conservative legislation come from? In particular, how did so many states arrive at these same three proposals at nearly exactly the same time?

The answer lies with a concerted push from a trio of conservative groups operating within and outside of state legislatures. Take the explosion of voter ID laws following the 2010 elections. Of the 62 ID laws states considered during the 2011 and 2012 legislative sessions, more than half were proposed by lawmakers who shared a common affiliation: they were all participants in the American

Figure 0.1. States Enacting Stand-Your- Ground, Right-to-Work, and Voter ID Requirements, 2000– 2014. Author’s review of state legislation.

Legislative Exchange Council, or ALEC.11 In exchange for their payments of $50 per year in membership dues, those legislators had access to a draft proposal for strict voter ID requirements that ALEC’s task force on “public safety and elections” had approved two years earlier, in 2009, during a meeting in Atlanta, Georgia.12

Minnesota was one of the first states to introduce legislation related to voter ID requirements after the 2010 elections. The bill was sponsored by ALEC’s chairwoman in the state, Representative Mary Kiffmeyer. In interviews with the press, Kiffmeyer strenuously denied relying on ALEC for that bill, arguing that “for people who say this is just ALEC’s bill is demeaning to me as a woman and a legislator—suggesting that we couldn’t write our own bill for Minnesota.” 13 “I might have a novel brain in my head and have a unique thought,” Kiffmeyer stated defensively.14 But a careful review by the Associated Press concluded that there were a number of similarities between the bill Kiffmeyer authored and the ALEC model bill.15 ALEC, for its part, similarly denied in public that it had directly inspired any of the voter ID legislation introduced since 2009. An analyst for the group argued that ALEC has “never campaigned to promote these policies [including voter ID] in the states.”16 An internal publication from the group told a different story. In that piece, ALEC crowed that voter ID laws were “a strong step toward the prevention of fraud at the polls” and that the group was “uniquely positioned to raise awareness and provide effective solutions to

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