The Center for Responsive Politics estimates that the 2012 election saw more than $ 250 million in political
spending by nonprofit groups organized under 501 (c)(4) of the Internal Revenue Code, up from $ 86 million in 2008 and $ 3 million in 2004.
Not exact matches
The report was compiled
by Kevin Connor, co-director of the
nonprofit Public Accountability Initiative, in collaboration with Community Voices Heard and VOCAL — two
groups that have been protesting CSNY and Cuomo's proposed
spending cuts for several weeks now.
Perry points out that the bill is further confusing because the areas of law regarding political
spending by groups like Super PACs and
nonprofit advocacy
groups are completely separate and yet the bill puts them side
by side.
In 1999, these foundations commissioned a study and discovered that less than 0.5 percent of all resources
spent by environmental
nonprofit groups in the United States went to ocean advocacy — an appalling statistic.