Take a close look at almost any far-right-wing organization in this country and youโll probably find that the Koch brothers have their fingers in it.
The Koch brothers, Charles and David, trace their family fortune and ideological pedigree back to their father, Fred C. Koch, a John Bircher from Texas who went around in the โ60s raving about the imminent Communist takeover of America. David Koch ran for president in 1980 as Libertarian on a platform that called for, among other things, abolishing Social Security and public schools.Since the 1980s the Koch Boys have shifted their tactics, preferring to spread their influence behind the scenes instead of running for office themselves. As principal owners of Koch Industries, the second largest privately held corporation in America with estimated revenues of $100 billion a year, and with a combined personal net worth estimated at $50 billion, they have plenty of influence to spread.
By some strange coincidence, the โfree marketโ (read: anti-tax, anti-government and anti-union) dogma that the Koch brothers peddle neatly dovetails with their own financial interests. Over the years theyโve given hundreds of millions to right-wing โthink tanksโ and other organizations, including the Cato Institute, the Heritage Foundation, the American Enterprise Institute, Americans for Prosperity, FreedomWorks and Citizens for a Sound Economy. Through the two latter groups they were the sugar daddies behind the supposedly โgrassrootsโ Tea Party movement. Koch Industries and its employees also have contributed millions to political candidates at both the national and state level.
But the Koch vampire squid had kept its slimy tentacles out of Oregon state politics โ until this year.
At least three candidates for the state legislature have benefited from Koch generosity so far. Republican Sen. Doug Whitsett got $1,500 from Koch Industries. Democratic Rep. Mike Schaufler took $3,000 โ which he quickly gave back after a huge outcry from his constituents. But the big winner (if that term applies) was Bendโs own Tim Knopp, whoโs trying to knock Sen. Chris Telfer out in the Republican primary and got $5,000 from Koch Industries to help him do it.
The amount isnโt huge; Knopp has raised $130,000 (more than three times as much as Telfer) since his campaign started. But it says something that the Koch juggernaut cares enough about a state legislative primary race in an obscure corner of Oregon to throw $5,000 into it โ and that it has the resources to do it. And what it says isnโt encouraging about the prospects for the survival of democratic government.
Money has always talked in politics, but in todayโs America it doesnโt just talk โ it screams. When the Koch brothers and people like them have such a powerful bullhorn that theyโre heard not only in Washington but in every legislative chamber across the country, it becomes all but impossible for any opposing voices to be effective.
We could urge Tim Knopp to return that Koch money, but we have a hunch weโd be wasting our breath. So weโll just give THE BOOT to him and any other Oregon politicians who accept it.
This article appears in May 3-9, 2012.








I must have missed the part of the article dealing with contributions made by far left organizations of which many/most can trace their existence to the benevolence of George Soros.
Which dems/libs took his money? Would you demand they return any Soros money? Would you likewise give them the boot? Did you think about looking into that? Of course not, doesn’t fit with your lib mentality and belies the intellectual dishonesty of your argument.
For Tim Knopp to get the boot from The Source is a compliment.
And who gives a rip about him getting dough from the Koch brothers?!
Oh–unless you’re so starry-eyed over liberal-minded candidates that continue to get campaign cash from Soros underlings, you can’t make out the differentiate between blue, kinda-blue, and red politicians—and the fact that they ALL get dough sometimes from those with deep pockets, and those who give smaller donations. It’s part of campaigning and fund-raising folks. Rock on Koch brothers!