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Forward Majority Action PAC

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Forward Majority Action
Forward Majority.png
Basic facts
Location:New York, N.Y.
Type:PAC
Affiliation:Democrat
Year founded:2017
Website:Official website

Forward Majority Action PAC is a federal political action committee that can donate directly to candidates running for office. It was founded in 2017 to support Democratic candidates for state legislative races. The organization is related to Forward Majority Action, a super PAC that can spend unlimited amounts in support or opposition to a candidate for office but cannot make direct contributions to candidates or their campaigns.

Mission

As of September 2017, the website for Forward Majority Action PAC listed the following mission statement:[1]

Turn resistance into power. Forward Majority is a new movement to take control and protect our democracy by winning back state legislatures.[2]

Background

Forward Majority was founded in 2017 by David Cohen, who formerly worked on President Barack Obama's (D) 2008 campaign, and Vicky Hausman, a longtime Democratic strategist. According to Politico, the organization was founded with the aim to flip as many as 12 state legislatures from Republican to Democratic between 2017 and 2021. Politico wrote, "Forward Majority’s model includes targeting more races than most local parties or state caucuses are likely to touch. The goal is to flip chambers from GOP hands to Democratic control by using the kinds of expensive campaign tactics seldom used in such local races, including polling and message testing."[3]

Work

2019 elections

On September 10, 2019, Forward Majority announced $500,000 in spending across 16 districts of the Virginia House of Delegates.[4]

2017 elections

According to The Washington Times, Forward Majority's first efforts were aimed at influincing the 2017 elections for Virginia's House of Delegates. Vicky Hausman, the organization's chief operating officer, said, "To start, we are going to put seats in play that expand the map of competitive districts in the Virginia House of Delegates. To win, we will run powerful, efficient campaigns to support Democratic legislative candidates and bring the necessary muscle to win state chambers back for Democrats. Virginia is considered one of the most gerrymandered states at the legislative level, and the map is rigged to Republicans’ advantage."[5]

These were the 12 states that Forward Majority said it would target in the 2017-2018 state legislative elections. Of the 12 states, only Virginia held elections in 2017. The other 11 states held elections in 2018.

These partisan breakdown figures roughly reflect the partisan breakdown of a chamber heading into either the 2017 or 2018 elections. It does not show the partisan breakdown of the chamber following the election. Please see the chamber page for a more precise count.

Last updated February 2018.


States targeted by Forward Majority: 2017-2018
State Senate breakdown Senate seats up in 2017-2018 House breakdown House seats up in 2017-2018 U.S. House seats
Colorado 18-17 17 37-28 65 7
Florida 24-15 20 76-40 120 27
Georgia 36-17 56 116-62 180 14
Michigan 27-11 38 63-47 110 14
Minnesota 34-33 No elections[6] 76-57 134 8
New Hampshire 14-10 24 219-174 400 2
New York 31-30[7] 63 106-41 150 27
North Carolina 35-15 50 75-45 120 13
Ohio 23-9 17 65-33 99 16
Pennsylvania 34-16 25 121-80 203 18
Virginia 21-19 No elections[8] 51-49 100[9] 11
Wisconsin 19-13 17 63-35 99 8
Total -- 327 -- 1680 165

Leadership

As of September 2017, the website for Forward Majority listed the following individuals as members of the organization's leadership:[10]

  • Rep. Joe Kennedy III (D-Mass.), Honorary co-chair
  • Rep. Seth Moulton (D-Mass.), Honorary co-chair
  • Gov. John Hickenlooper (D-Colo.), Honorary co-chair
  • David Cohen, Founder and executive director
  • Vicky Hausman, Founder and chief operating officer
  • Saul Shemesh, Polling and analytics director
  • Ethan Roeder, Campaigns director

Legal status

Forward Majority Action PAC is a political action committee (PAC). PACs are political committees established and administered by corporations, labor unions, membership organizations or trade associations. The general definition is a group that spends money on elections, but is not run by a party or individual candidate. However, PACs can donate money to parties or candidates they support. These committees raise funds either from individuals associated with the corporation (Separate Segregated Funds) or from any individuals who wish to contribute to the committee (Nonconnected PACs).[11] Nonconnected PACs are financially independent and pay for themselves via the contributions they raise. Separate segregated funds are funded by the organization they are associated with.[12]

Recent news

The link below is to the most recent stories in a Google news search for the terms 'Forward Majority Action PAC'. These results are automatically generated from Google. Ballotpedia does not curate or endorse these articles.

See also

External links

Footnotes

  1. Forward Majority, "Mission," accessed September 8, 2017
  2. Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.
  3. Politico, "Democrats launch super PAC to win back statehouses," September 6, 2017
  4. The Washington Post, "PAC to spend $500,000 to help Democrats running for Virginia House," September 10, 2019
  5. The Washington Times, "Democratic PAC looks to flip statehouses, starting with Virginia in 2017," September 6, 2017
  6. The Minnesota Senate held elections in 2020. Sixty-seven seats were up.
  7. As of February 2018, the partisan breakdown of the New York State Senate was 31-30 with two vacancies. One Democrat caucused with the Republicans and eight Democrats were members of the Independent Democratic Conference.
  8. The Virginia Senate held elections in 2019. Forty seats were up.
  9. The Virginia House held elections in 2017.
  10. Forward Majority, "About Us," accessed September 8, 2017
  11. FEC "Quick Answers," accessed August 9, 2013
  12. FEC "SSFs vs Nonconnected," accessed August 9, 2013