He is actually pretty low on business contributions, from what I could find:
1
National Assn of Realtors
$10,000 $0 $10,000
2
Credit Union National Assn
$7,500 $0$$7,500
3 Morning Star Co
$7,000$7,000$04New Spark Holdings
$6,200$6,200$05
AFLAC Inc
$5,000$0$5,0006Beal Financial
$4,800$4,800$06Corriente Advisors
$4,800$4,800$06John Templeton Foundation
$4,800$4,800$09Bavarian Waste
$4,000$4,000$010
BP
$3,000$3,000$010Aquent Inc
$3,000$3,000$012Property Casualty Insurers Assn/America
$2,900$0$2,90013Spinnaker
$2,400$2,400$013Biotech
$2,400$2,400$013Davis-Lynch Inc
$2,400$2,400$013Getko Holding
$2,400$2,400$013Herndon Oil
$2,400$2,400$013Huffines Communities
$2,400$2,400$013Sun Studio Entertainment
$2,400$2,400$020Stevens Find Homes
$2,300$2,300$0
Ron Paul: Campaign Finance/Money - Top Donors - Representative 2010 | OpenSecrets
Strangely enough, I found seemingly counterproductive things about Ron Paul, on a body building forum, strangely enough. Kudos to "ZenBowman"
"
http://blog.tenthamendmentcenter.com...paign-finance/
Quote:
The so-called reform legislation being proposed is clearly unconstitutional. The First amendment unquestionably grants individuals and businesses the free and unfettered right to advertise, lobby, and contribute to politicians as they choose. More importantly, the Constitution does not grant Congress the power to regulate campaigns. In fact, article II expressly authorizes the regulation of elections, so the omission of campaigns is glaring. While some in the media have raised First amendment questions, few seem to understand that Congress clearly lacks the constitutional power to regulate campaigns at all.
Basically, he does not believe there should be any laws to prohibit corporations from influencing elections either through media or political donations.
Here are his votes on key issues:
# Voted NO on requiring lobbyist disclosure of bundled donations. (May 2007)
# Voted NO on restricting independent grassroots political committees. (Apr 2006)
# Voted NO on campaign finance reform banning soft-money contributions. (Feb 2002)
# Voted NO on banning soft money and issue ads. (Sep 1999)
http://www.ontheissues.org/tx/ron_pa...ernment_Reform"
In comparison, I found this data about Obama opensecrets.org, too:
Top 10 Corporate PAC Contributors:
Obama:
Goldman Sachs $739,521
UBS AG $419,550
Lehman Brothers $391,774
Citigroup Inc $492,548
Morgan Stanley $341,380
Latham & Watkins $328,879
Google Inc $487,355
JPMorgan Chase & Co $475,112
Sidley Austin LLP $370,916
Skadden, Arps et al $360,409
McCain:
Merrill Lynch $349,170
Citigroup Inc $287,801
Morgan Stanley $249,377
Wachovia Corp $147,456
Goldman Sachs $220,045
Lehman Brothers $115,707
Bear Stearns $108,000
JPMorgan Chase & Co $206,392
Bank of America $133,975
Credit Suisse Group $175,503
EDIT: I'm not going to fix that graph, just go to the link.