Planned Parenthood Votes

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Planned Parenthood Votes
Planned Parenthood Votes Logo.jpg
Basic facts
Location:New York, N.Y.
Type:Super PAC
Year founded:2010

Planned Parenthood Votes (PPV) is a super PAC branch of Planned Parenthood, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization that offers, according to its website, "reproductive health care, sex education, and information to millions of women, men, and young people worldwide." The group is headquartered in New York, New York.[1][2]

Background

PPV was established in 2010 as a super PAC branch of Planned Parenthood, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization that provides reproductive healthcare services and sex education.[2][3]

Related groups

Planned Parenthood can refer to one of a number of organizations with separate missions and activities. All of the Planned Parenthood organizations focus on community health and sexual education, but the separate organizations vary by the degree to which they can and do participate in politics.

Planned Parenthood related groups
Planned Parenthood Federation of America Planned Parenthood Action Fund Planned Parenthood Action Fund PAC Planned Parenthood Votes
501(c)(3) 501(c)(4) PAC super PAC
Planned Parenthood Federation of America (PPFA) cannot engage in activities that are part of the electoral process. The organization may educate voters on issues but must avoid political activities that favor or oppose a candidate or have the effect of favoring or opposing a candidate. PPFA provides healthcare services and community educational programs concerning sexual and reproductive health. Planned Parenthood Action Fund (PPAF) can legally participate in political activity in support of or opposition to candidates for office. These political activities cannot be the organization's primary activities and cannot be direct donations to a candidate for office or a candidate's committee. PPAF endorses candidates for office and runs advocacy campaigns supporting and opposing candidates based on their stances on reproductive healthcare policies. Planned Parenthood Action Fund PAC is a federal political action committee. The PAC can spend money in electoral politics by donating to parties or candidates they support, subject to contribution limits defined by state and federal election agencies. Planned Parenthood Votes (PPV) can raise and spend unlimited amounts of money. The group cannot contribute directly to a politician or political party, but it can spend independently to campaign for or against political figures. PPV endorses and spends money in races that concern reproductive healthcare policies.

Political activity

2020

Planned Parenthood Votes announced a plan to spend $45 million dollars during the 2020 election cycle, focusing on supporting candidates in Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Michigan, Minnesota, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin.[4]

Endorsements

2016

2012

Targeted candidates

Super PACs
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2016

Donald Trump

In March 2016, PPV partnered with Priorities USA Action to produce a five-figure online campaign targeting 2016 Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump.[5]

“Donald Trump’s clear disregard for women’s health and lives is staggering,” said Deirdre Schifeling, PPV executive director. “We know what it looks like to see women punished for having an abortion: It is already happening across this country, and the consequences are devastating. Yet this shocking stance is not new: it is a part of the Republican party platform, and it’s what anti-abortion politicians like Ted Cruz and John Kasich have been voting on and enacting for years. One in three women will have an abortion in her lifetime. Those women deserve to access medical care without fear of violence, harassment, or punishment. It’s clear that Donald Trump and his anti-abortion agenda is far too extreme for the women of this country.”[5]

Kelly Ayotte

In April 2016. PPV spent $400,000 on a television ad campaign to target U.S. Senator Kelly Ayotte (R-N.H.).[6]

“Kelly Ayotte may try to paint herself as pro-woman, but her record tells a very different story. Every chance she’s gotten she’s voted to ‘defund’ Planned Parenthood and cut women off from essential health care like birth control and breast and cervical cancer screenings," said PPV Executive Director Deirdre Schifeling in a statement. "She has been advocating for years to ban women’s access to safe, legal abortion, and it’s clear she now sees her chance in the Supreme Court process. Kelly Ayotte is refusing to do her job, and abdicating her constitutional duty, in order to push an extreme agenda that no one in New Hampshire wants. Enough is enough. Kelly Ayotte’s bad politics could have repercussions for a lifetime.”[7]

2013

During the 2014 election cycle, PPV opposed Ken Cuccinelli in his campaign for governor of Virginia.[8]

2012

Finances

The following table outlines Planned Parenthood Votes' annual federal receipts and disbursements according to the Federal Election Commission:[2]

Annual federal receipts and disbursements for Planned Parenthood Votes, 2010-2016
Year Total receipts Total disbursements
2016 $21,019,958 $21,389,743
2015 $1,246,939.26 $233,361.67
2014 $6,130,339.46 $6,367,494.46
2013 $1,695,825.22 $1,810,241.54
2012 $5,394,065.56 $6,031,070.22
2011 $1,051,948.68 $65,810.63
2010 $328,491.91 $196,184.87

Leadership

As of October 2016, according to a press release from the organization, Deirdre Schifeling was the executive director of Planned Parenthood Votes.[7]

Legal status

Planned Parenthood Votes is a super PAC. A super PAC is a political committee that can solicit and spend unlimited sums of money. A super PAC cannot contribute directly to a politician or political party, but it can spend independently to campaign for or against political figures. These committees are also called independent expenditure-only committees. A super PAC is not legally considered a political action committee (PAC) and as such is regulated under separate rules.[9][10]

Recent news

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

See also

External links

Footnotes