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Progressive groups launch campaign to pressure Republicans to back


Protestors march across the Brooklyn Bridge holding a sign to “tax the rich” to demand funding for excluded workers in the New York State budget on March 5, 2021 in New York City. crisis.

David Dee Delgado | Getty Images

Several progressive groups are launching a $2 million campaign to pressure Republican lawmakers up for reelection in key states to back President Joe Biden’s agenda.

Led by Tax March, progressive nonprofit organizations will be holding protests and running ads versus GOP representatives in states such as Ohio and Wisconsin.

The groups intend to highlight how popular several of Biden’s key initiatives are among the public, according to Tax March Executive Director Maura Quint.

Biden’s “Build Back Better” agenda includes raising taxes on wealthy taxpayers and corporations, as well as lowering prescription drug and housing costs. Many of these proposals are part of the ongoing fight on Capitol Hill to reach a deal on the budget reconciliation bill, which could cost up to $3.5 trillion. The Senate has passed a $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill, which awaits the House’s approval.

A Navigator Research poll taken in August showed that the economic aspects of the administration’s agenda are supported by sizable groups of independents and Republican voters. The poll, which surveyed 1,002 registered voters nationwide, showed that 47% of Republicans and over 60% of independents who took part in the poll back many of Biden’s economic policies.

Republicans aren’t expected to support Biden’s budget plan, which is facing some resistance among centrists in the Democratic Party, as is. Yet Democrats could use GOP opposition to popular parts of the agenda as a political hammer during next year’s elections.

Tax March, which is a project of the Sixteen Thirty Fund dark money group, is leading the effort, along with their campaign partners such as Progress Georgia, 99% Pennsylvania, Innovation Ohio, Center for American Progress Action Fund, MoveOn and Battle Born Progress. The Sixteen Thirty Fund, a 501(c)(4) nonprofit, does not publicly disclose its donors and spent over $60 million backing Democratic causes during the 2020 election.

Tax March has previously called on FedEx and Nike to pay higher corporate taxes.

Jesse Ferguson, a former executive director at the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, told CNBC in an email that campaigns such as the one being organized by Tax March will keep voters aware of policies that Democrats believe are popular, whether Republicans agree or not.

“Republicans have spent the last few months trying to change the topic every chance they get, but these ad campaigns mean people will hear about it, whether Republicans like it or not,” Ferguson said on Monday.

The new campaign will be taking aim at Republicans in the key states of Iowa, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. The campaign looks specifically to pressure Reps. Mariannette Jane Miller-Meeks, R-Iowa, Brian Fitzpatrick, R-Pa., and Steve Chabot, R-Ohio,…



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