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Over Half Of NOM's Anti-Gay Campaign In Maine Came From Megadonor Sean Fieler

The National Organization for Marriage today released (link is external) a list of donors(link is external) to its successful 2009 campaign to overturn Maine’s marriage equality law, revealing that one activist, New York hedge fund manager and social conservative megadonor, almost single-handedly funded the effort.

NOM revealed the source of the $2 million that it funneled to Stand for Marriage Maine to fight the marriage equality law after a court found(link is external) that NOM had attempted to “shield its donors and skirt Maine’s donor disclosure law.” According to the Portland Press Herald, NOM’s $2 million in contributions made up approximately two-thirds (link is external) of Stand for Marriage Maine’s budget for the campaign.

According to NOM’s filing, only one major donor (link is external) to its Maine campaign lived in the state, and $1.25 million of its funding — nearly half of the total ultimately spent by Stand for Marriage Maine — came from Fieler.

We have written in the past about the quiet influence that Fieler is exerting (link is external) over social conservative causes. His Chiaroscuro Foundation dispenses millions of dollars each year (link is external) to anti-gay and anti-abortion groups. Fieler is also the chairman of the board of the American Principles Project, a group founded by former NOM chairman Robert George and employing former NOM president Maggie Gallagher that seeks to move Republicans to the right on social issues(link is external). In addition to being the major financial backer of APP’s affiliated PAC(link is external), Fieler has personally contributed to 77 candidates in 19 states since 2008, according to an RH Reality Check analysis(link is external).

Through the Chiaroscuro Foundation, Fieler has also funded the research of Mark Regnerus (link is external) , author of a discredited study on gay and lesbian parents(link is external) that continues to be cited by anti-gay activists around the world(link is external).

Although NOM’s 2009 campaign was successful, just three years later the statevoted to institute marriage equality(link is external). As NOM’s mission has been faltering, so has its fundraising(link is external), making Fieler’s one-man social conservative funding shop ever more important for the group and its allies.