Tompkins Buell is often described as
Hillary Clinton's soul mate. She led Clinton's fundraising efforts for 2008 in the
San Francisco Bay area. In 2006,
The Washington Post published a story about the
Democracy Alliance, calling it an "exclusive donor club" for progressive donors and identifying Tompkins Buell and her husband Mark Buell as members. Tompkins Buell held a fundraiser for
David Brock's
Media Matters at her San Francisco home. A foundation that bears her name gave money to Media Matters through the
Tides Foundation. Buell along with
George Soros and other Democracy Alliance members
John R. Hunting; Paul Rudd (co-founder of Adaptive Analytics);
Pat Stryker;
Nicholas Hanauer; ex-Clinton administration official Rob Stein;
Drummond Pike; real estate developer Robert Bowditch;
Pioneer Hybrid International-heir and congressional candidate
Scott Wallace;
Gail Furman; real estate developer Albert Dwoskin; and
Taco Bell-heir Rob McKay, funded the
Secretary of State Project, an American non-profit, 527 political action committee focused on electing reform-minded progressive Secretaries of State in battleground states, who typically oversee the election process. The Alliance was critical in getting California Secretary of State
Debra Bowen and Minnesota Secretary of State
Mark Ritchie re-elected. In February 2012, Tompkins Buell stopped supporting President
Barack Obama, citing disappointment with his leadership on environmental issues including climate change. In 2016, Tompkins Buell donated $500,000 to lawyer
Lisa Bloom's firm in order to assist women who came forward with sexual harassment and assault allegations against
Donald Trump leading up to the 2016 presidential election. ==References==