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Wal-Mart
family lobbies for tax cuts
By
Jim Hopkins, USA TODAY
Wal-Mart (WMT)
drew broad scrutiny last year as its political
spending soared in nationwide battles over health
care, labor and other hot-button issues threatening
the giant retailer's growth.
Now, in a little-noticed
move, the company's founding family has plunged into
a fight to pass income tax changes and other
legislation that could preserve its grip on the
USA's biggest business and the family's $84 billion
fortune.
Led by Sam Walton's only
daughter, Alice, the family spent $3.2 million on
lobbying, conservative causes and candidates for
last year's federal elections. That's more than
double what it spent in the previous two elections
combined, public documents show.
The Waltons have joined a
coterie of wealthy families trying to save fortunes
through permanent repeal of the estate tax,
government watchdogs say. The election of President
Bush and more conservatives to Congress gave
momentum to the long-fought effort. The Waltons add
more.
"To see the wealthiest
family in America weighing in is scary," says
Chuck Collins, co-founder of Responsible Wealth, a
non-profit group that tracks the super-rich. (Related:
Some of wealthiest say
go ahead, tax us)
Aubrey Rothrock III, a
Washington lobbyist hired by the family, says the
Waltons are mostly interested in bills to increase
charitable giving through their family foundation.
"The estate tax repeal initiative has never
been the focus of our advocacy efforts," he
says.
The Waltons declined to
discuss their political activities. But a USA TODAY
review of public documents reveals a small-town
Arkansas family emerging as a political juggernaut
on tax issues, extending Wal-Mart's influence over
U.S. society even more.
The Walton support for Bush
and other fiscal conservatives assumed new urgency
last month when Wal-Mart sweetened its dividend —
boosting Walton dividend income above $1 billion a
year. Bush's dividend tax cut, enacted two years
ago and set to expire in 2009, will save the family
as much as $51 million this year.
The growing Walton political
prowess is a departure from patriarch "Mr.
Sam," who disliked politics. Moreover, their
largesse isn't limited to the national stage. In
2002-2004, the family gave $879,000 to state
campaigns from California to Florida, says the
Institute on Money in State Politics. The biggest
gift, $250,000, went to the Republican Party of
Florida, whose titular head is Bush's brother, Gov.
Jeb Bush.
Yet
it is in the bitter fight over federal estate taxes
that the family and Wal-Mart have the most at stake.
The tax, now collected on estates worth more than
$1.5 million, could force the Waltons to sell a
chunk of Wal-Mart to pay billions in taxes when
family members die. The top tax rate this year is
47%.
Sam Walton's widow, Helen,
inherited his shares after his 1992 death; she now
owns about 8% of the company. She is 85 and has not
fully recovered from an automobile accident five
years ago.
Overall, Helen, daughter,
Alice, and sons Jim, John and Rob, own nearly 40% of
Wal-Mart. The children got their shares when the
company started, allowing the family to defer
billions in estate taxes at Walton's death.
Chairman Rob and John hold
two of 13 board seats. Yet, the family's huge stock
position effectively means they control the company
started in 1962, says Ric Marshall, chief analyst at
the Corporate Library, a corporate governance
researcher.
A big stock sale could loosen
Walton control over Wal-Mart and its 1.3 million
U.S. workers. "They're going to do everything
they can to hold onto shares of Wal-Mart,"
Marshall says.
Estate tax tick-tock
The clock is ticking louder
in the estate tax battle, with attention focused on
Jan. 1, 2011, when the tax reverts to higher levels
in place before Bush won approval of a gradual
reduction, culminating in its repeal entirely for
2010.
The Waltons and a coalition
including the influential National Federation of
Independent Business support Bush's push for the
tax's permanent repeal, government watchdogs say.
"They want to make sure
the White House continues to make this one of the
bedrock issues," says Larry Noble, head of the
Center for Responsive Politics, a non-partisan group
tracking campaign spending.
The Waltons' political rise
began in 1999, when their Walton Enterprises
partnership hired one of Washington's top
lobbyist-law firms, Patton Boggs, to represent it
before Congress and government agencies. Through
last year, it has paid the firm $1 million, public
documents show. Walton Enterprises controls the
family's Wal-Mart stock plus interests in newspapers
and other businesses. Patton Boggs, which has ties
to the Bush administration, has led efforts seeking
permanent repeal of the estate tax. The firm also is
one of Wal-Mart's six lobbying firms.
Patton Boggs first advanced
the Waltons' support for capital gains, estate and
other tax reform, public documents show. Since 2002,
the firm has pushed bills favored by the Walton
Family Foundation and other private foundations. The
foundation has become a major vehicle financing
public education reform through controversial
charter schools and private-school vouchers.
The Waltons have said they
plan to give Helen Walton's Wal-Mart stock to the
foundation at some point, perhaps after her death.
That would likely eliminate any federal estate taxes
due on her approximately 8% stake.
But that wouldn't guarantee
the Waltons could avoid a forced sale of Wal-Mart
stock. That's because of a federal law covering
investors with big holdings in a single company. In
the Waltons' case, the law limits the amount of
stock its private foundation can own to a maximum 2%
of all shares in Wal-Mart. The law says excess
holdings must be sold within five years.
The Waltons have supported
bills in Congress that would raise the threshold to
5% and double the time allowed to dispose of excess
shares. Similar bills are expected to be
re-introduced in Congress this year after failing to
win final passage in the last session, congressional
aides say.
"We will review such
proposals carefully," says Rothrock, the Patton
Boggs lobbyist for the Waltons.
Alice Walton a political
force
The family made its single
biggest political bet last August and October when
Alice Walton poured a combined $2.6 million into
Progress for America. The group gave a big
promotional boost to Bush in the election's final
weeks.
It is one of the so-called
527 committees that rocked the presidential race.
One of the best-known was Swift Vets and POWs for
Truth, which dogged Democratic nominee John Kerry.
Walton's was Progress for
America's sixth-biggest gift, putting her ahead of
top Bush fundraiser Carl Lindner of Cincinnati, says
the Center for Responsive Politics. Her gift makes
her "a political force to be reckoned
with," says the center's Noble.
Walton, 55, is a former
stockbroker who mostly lives on her Rocking W horse
ranch west of Fort Worth. With a $17 billion
fortune, she is the world's wealthiest woman. That
puts her in a salon of well-heeled women
increasingly courted by Republicans and Democrats,
says Barbara Kasoff, co-founder of Women Impacting
Public Policy.
Progress for America has
become a big booster of Bush's drive for tax reform
and private Social Security accounts. The group did
not return calls seeking comment.
Noble says the Bush
administration monitors gifts to groups such as
Progress for America, so the Walton donation puts
the family on the White House speed dial. "When
you play at that level, you get your phone calls
returned," he says.
The family's political
giving also extends to the White House and to
Congress. The Waltons contributed about $1 million
to Bush and to congressional candidates from 1999 to
2004.
Their favored candidates
included Republicans John Thune of South Dakota and
David Vitter of Louisiana, both elected to the
Senate for the first time last year. Both oppose the
estate tax, so their election increases chances for
its permanent repeal under bills introduced this
year in the Senate and House, says the National
Federation of Independent Business.
"We think we're closer
than we've ever been," says lobbyist Dena
Battle at NFIB, the small-business trade group
that's tried for years to kill the tax.
Still, even with the election
of more fiscal conservatives, permanent repeal isn't
guaranteed. The House passed legislation in 2003.
But the Senate has been a tougher sell. Battle says
a bill passed 54-44, with two Republicans absent,
when it last came up, in 2002; 60 votes are needed.
Lawmakers have grown more
worried about mounting budget deficits that could be
worsened with more tax cuts, says Stuart Rothenberg,
editor of the non-partisan Rothenberg Political
Report.
"I think they'll still
push for that," Rothenberg said of cuts.
"But along the way, something is going to get
squeezed."
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