<="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhuPgNhpC7CQ3cGIYp3dKx9KmmVargHIFBlyHy32WFugLv1uHoP70iMYwhyphenhyphennubZFRGtKhFjnshIPnlxEgpT4NM-D6lff1ev_xOvMaFM6UVWLaWkQFoe_zoMZbBI1o3EsZxU2Ux1SAhqgUXy/s1600/koch.jpeg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;">
We learn from <="http://www.npr.org/blogs/itsallpolitics/2013/02/28/173170193/after-tough-2012-conservative-koch-brothers-regroup">National Public Radio that the
In this political off-season, two new Koch groups are ramping up.
The Association for American Innovation is set up as a business league. There are indications it will promote free-market bills in state legislatures, much as the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) does now.
American Commitment, another social welfare group, aims to carve out a messaging niche in between think tanks like the Cato Institute, where Koch allies sit on the board, and front-line groups like AFP.You would think they'd be satisfied with the damage wreaked by <="http://alecexposed.org/">ALEC, their dating service for corporations and state lawmakers. Then again, those greedy billionaires can never get enough.
(P.S. Here's a news flash for NPR: There's nothing "free-market" about bills that interfere with employees' relationships with their employers, as ALEC's No Rights At Work and paycheck deception bills do.)
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