Five months after taking office, Rep. Stephen Fincher, a cotton farmer from a mostly rural swath of Tennessee, introduced a bill to mandate swift federal approval of genetically modified crops for commercial sale. Fincher has received more campaign money from agribusiness than any other industry.
Here's another: Rep. David McKinley (R-WV) is pushing a bill to help the mining industry avoid EPA regulation:
In the first six months of this year, the mining industry has contributed more than $176,000 to McKinley's re-election effort ? nearly double the amount he received from those interests in the two years leading up the 2010 election.
And let's not forget Rep. Sean "Strugglin' on $174k" Duffy (R-WI):
Duffy, who gets a significant portion of his campaign funds from financial services companies, is the lead sponsor of a measure that would dilute the powers of a new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
Thanks to those lawmakers and others like them:
House freshmen collected $37.2 million during the first six months of the year, a 34.3% jump over the campaign money raised by new House lawmakers at the same point in the 2010 election cycle, according to Federal Election Commission data.A third of the donations this year to House freshmen who have joined the Tea Party caucus came from political action committees, a USA TODAY analysis shows.
With priorities like this, is it any wonder that tea party ratings are now at an all-time low?
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