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Center for Responsive Politics

Center for Responsive Politics
Center for Responsive Politics logo.jpg
Founded 1983
Founder Former U.S. Sens. Frank Church & Hugh Scott
Type Research
Focus Money in politics
Location
  • Washington, D.C.
Area served
United States
Key people
Sheila Krumholz, Executive Director
Revenue
$1,726,112 (2013)
Slogan Money Talks. We Translate.
Website www.opensecrets.org

The Center for Responsive Politics (CRP) is a non-profit, nonpartisan research group based in Washington, D.C., that tracks the effects of money and lobbying on elections and public policy. It maintains a public online database of its information.

Its website, OpenSecrets.org, allows users to track federal campaign contributions and lobbying by lobbying firms, individual lobbyists, industry, federal agency, and bills. Other resources include the personal financial disclosures of all members of the U.S. Congress, the president, and top members of the administration. Users can also search by ZIP codes to learn how their neighbors are allocating their political contributions.

CRP was founded in 1983 by retired U.S. Senators Frank Church of Idaho, a Democrat, and Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania, a Republican. In the 1980s, Church and Scott launched a "money-in-politics" project, whose outcome consisted of large, printed books. Their first book, published in 1988, analyzed spending patterns in congressional elections from 1974 through 1986, including 1986 soft money contributions in five states. It was titled Spending in Congressional Elections: A Never-Ending Spiral.

In 1996, CRP launched its online counterpart, OpenSecrets.org. The website is a clearinghouse for data and analysis regarding money in politics.

CRP hosts a Revolving Door database which documents the individuals who have passed between the public sector and K Street.

CRP has been critical of Carolina Rising, a 501(c)(4) social welfare organization that reported spending $4.7 million in 2014 on advertisements supportive of Thom Tillis, a Republican U.S. Senate candidate from North Carolina.


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