The Wisconsin Realtors Association funneled more than $1 million to a conservative group engaged in political advocacy, against the wishes of some members whose dues funded this contribution.
Newly filed federal tax forms show that the Wisconsin Homeowners Alliance, a WRA offshoot billed as āa nonpartisan, nonprofit advocacy organization devoted to representing homeowners and property owners,ā gave $1,059,367 to Wisconsin Club for Growth in the fiscal year between Oct. 1, 2010, and Sept. 30, 2011. This accounted for most of the Allianceās expenditures that year.
Mike Theo, WRAās president and CEO, defended this spending as āconsistent with the purpose and mission of the organization.ā Messages left with Wisconsin Club for Growth, whose listed address is a mailbox at a UPS store in Sun Prairie, were not promptly returned.
Some WRA members bristled last year when it was revealed that the Alliance had given $260,000 to advocacy groups, including $100,000 to Wisconsin Club for Growth. The latest report represents a dramatic increase in this support.

Wisconsin Club for Growth is affiliated with the national Club for Growth, but purports to operate independently and has distanced itself from the national groupās effort to oppose the U.S. Senate candidacy of former Gov. Tommy Thompson. (The national group favored a rival GOP candidate, former U.S. Rep. Mark Neumann.)
The state group has run issue ads intended to benefit Republican candidates for state office, often by attacking their opponents. Issue ads are unregulated in Wisconsin, meaning there is no mandatory disclosure of funding sources or expenditures.
āItās a Republican front group that engages in electioneering,ā said Mike McCabe, executive director of the Wisconsin Democracy Campaign, a nonpartisan watchdog,
McCabeās group has estimated, based on records of media ad buys, that Wisconsin Club for Growth spent $9 million in 2011 during the nine state Senate recall elections, all in support of GOP candidates. The group spent just $100,000 during the effort to recall Republican Gov. Scott Walker. McCabe said itās not usual for different advocacy groups to take the lead in different elections.
McCabe said his group has never been able to identify where Wisconsin Club for Growth gets its money, but āwe presume itās big business interests.ā
āFocused only on issuesā
The WRA is a trade group representing more than 13,000 state real-estate professionals. The Homeowners Alliance is funded with mandatory dues by WRA members, which were increased last year from $40 to $70.
On its website, the Alliance says itās āfocused only on ISSUES ā NOT on candidates or political campaigns. The Alliance wonāt engage in partisan elections.ā
Theo, in an email, denied that giving money to Wisconsin Club for Growth violates this pledge, saying issue advocacy communications ādo not advocate for the election or defeat of a candidateā and are instead āfocused on public policy and are part of an effort to educate the general public in a timely manner on important issues.ā
Among the educational efforts waged by Wisconsin Club for Growth last summer were ads accusing Reps. Sandy Pasch and Fred Clark, both Democrats challenging GOP Senate incumbents, of favoring āillegal aliensā over Wisconsin vets.
Last year, besides the $1 million it gave Wisconsin Club for Growth, the Alliance reported spending $149,000 on lobbying and gave $25,000 to the Greater Wisconsin Committee, an advocacy group aligned with Democratic candidates.
These expenditures dwarf WRAās outlays through its political action committee, RPAC ā Wisconsin. Since Jan. 1, 2011, RPAC has given just $114,759 to political candidates and parties, both Democrat and Republican. A good share of this amount ā $49,650 ā went to Walker.
Member contributions to RPAC, at a recommended level of $35 a year, are voluntary; dues collected for the Alliance are not.
Thatās a sore spot for WRA members who disagree with the groupās political agenda but say they canāt resign because they rely on the professional services it provides, including access to its Multiple Listing Service, a critical industry tool.

āI feel totally violated in that I was forced to pay these dues,ā said Darcy Haber, a Madison Realtor. āThis is exactly what we feared ā that WRA was turning into a front group to support Walkerās policies.ā She believes these policies are āhurting the quality of life in Wisconsinā and hence are contrary to WRA membersā best interests.
Theo said there āmay be a few members who disagreeā with the Allianceās spending, adding that they are āentitled to their own opinion.ā But he noted that the groupās members and board āhave driven all of these decisions,ā including the use of WRA dues to fund the Alliance.
Half a million added to pot
The Allianceās most recent tax filings, dated Aug. 13, were provided to the Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism upon request, as federal law requires. The reports were originally due March 15, but the group obtained two extensions.
The Alliance filing lists $1.1 million in total revenue for the latest reporting period. This includes $560,000 in dues from WRA members, about the same as for the year before, $350,000 in revenue from āRelated organizationsā and another $150,000 from other sources.
Theo declined to provide additional disclosure, but noted that the groupās filing lists just one ārelated organizationā: the WRA.
Last yearās $30 increase in dues from WRA members to the Alliance should have generated an additional $400,000 in revenue. Theo declined to say how the group is spending its money in the current fiscal year, which ends Sept. 30. That will be disclosed in the next mandatory tax filing, sometime next year.




Good story Bill. Just the tip of the iceberg of inappropriate spending by my Industry’s “leadership” against the WRA and their newish shell organization, the WHA…next look into the lobbying track record of the WRA staff…meanwhile we pay them full salaries and beni’s.