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 Officials for the Koch Brothers ; political org stanley cup anization announced Monday that the group has budgeted a whopping $889 million for the 2016 presidential campaign. stanley cup  That is more than double the approximately $400 million it spent in 2012. The figure is an early indicator that 2016 will be the most expensive in American electoral history, considering that a total of just more than $2 billion was spent in 2012, the previous record for most expensive election.But who are Charles and David Koch and how did they make their billions  Here is a primer on the Koch brothers and their role in politics. Watch the PBS NewsHour tonight for a discussion with the Washington Post national reporter Matea Gold.Q: Who are the Koch brother stanley cup s A: Charles and David Koch, ages 78 and 74, are billionaire brothers who helped create a broad network of nonprofit groups that control hundreds of millions of dollars flowing into politics. Through their deep pockets, they are reshaping politics with an uncompromising agenda of reducing regulation, advancing libertarian ideas, promoting free-market Republican candidates and ousting Democrats. They have two other brothers, William and Frederick, who aren ;t involved in the effort.Q: Where did they get their money A: The Kochs inherited their father   company in Kansas, and turned Wichita-based Koch Industries into the second-largest privately held company in the nation. The conglomerate makes a wide range of products including Dixie cups, chemical Jucs Nader Might Join Race as Edwards, Giuliani Depart
 This story was originally published by Stateline, an initiative of The Pew Charitable Trusts, on April 13, 2022. In the waning days of 2021, a grass fire broke out in Boulder County, Colorado. Fueled by extreme drought and high winds, the fire swept through the communities of Superior and Louisville. Within hours, it had destroyed more than a thousand structures鈥攎aking the Marshall Fire the most destructive in the states history.The December fire was an extraordinary event, but perhaps a preview of the new normal under the conditions caused by climate change. Late last month, another fire forced the evacuation of 18,000 residents in and around Boulder. Fortunate winds saved the city from catastrophic damage, but the near- af1 miss鈥攁nd the timing well outside of the regions traditional fire season鈥攚as a warning sign of whats to come.READ MORE: U.S. sa stanley cup ys oil and gas sales damage climate, but wont quit them yet We ;ve already experienced impacts [from climate change], but nowhere near the amount that we ;re likely to experience in the coming decades,  said Aaron Brockett, Boulders mayor.  We have a lot of work to do to make our community more resilient. Boulder leaders are working to reduce fuel loads in the forests and open spaces owned by the city. Theyre seeking to make the neighborhoods bordering tho salomon se lands more fire resilient. Theyre hoping to upgrade fire stations and equipment. And theyre planning projects to reduce flood risk from the severe storms that climate cha