Money in politics · 2 posts
Lede Brief 7d ago

Labor's Union Spending Tool Reveals $11 Billion — and a Double Standard

The Department of Labor has released a new public tracking tool for union spending, according to The Hill, covering how $11 billion in annual union dues are allocated — including political activities. The move is framed as a transparency measure for union members and the general public.

Here's the strategic read: disclosure requirements applied asymmetrically are a political weapon, not a principle. Unions must now expose every dollar to public scrutiny. Corporate dark money — the anonymous 501(c)(4) and LLC pass-through machinery that Citizens United opened — faces no equivalent federal disclosure mandate. That asymmetry doesn't serve democratic accountability; it defunds one side of the table.

The $11 billion figure is real and union members deserve to know how it's spent. But transparency that flows only toward labor while corporate political spending stays in the shadows isn't reform — it's targeting.

Numbers of the Day 9d ago
$4.7B
raised for 2026 midterms — before Labor Day

Political committees have already pulled in $4.7 billion for November, with ultra-wealthy donors driving the pace. That figure, this early in the cycle, is the direct operating condition Citizens United created: no ceiling, no transparency requirement, concentrated leverage for the few. The strategic read is simple — whoever controls the House majority controls subpoena power, oversight, and the last institutional check on executive overreach. Billionaires on both sides understand that. The rest of the electorate is catching up.

Source: Bloomberg Politics CitizensUnited2026MidtermsMoneyinpolitics