Monday, September 14, 2020

Is One Party's Politicians More Or Less Corrupt Than The Other's?

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Hard Ball by Nancy Ohanian

In terms of political parties, it was once clearer who the good guys were and who the bad guys were in the Dark Money world or legalistic, systemic bribery. Now... not so much. Poke a Democrat about taking legalistic bribes and he or she will start screeching about "unilateral disarmament." But as new report by Alex Seitz-Wald for NBC News makes it clear that if the Dems were once the party opposed to Dark Money, they are now the party getting the most out of it. Progressives tend to reject corporate PAC money, for example, but corrupt Democratic Party leaders like Pelosi and Hoyer scoop it up with alacrity and then buy loyalty within the House caucus by spreading it around. Seitz-Wald may be a fool but he's correct when he writes that "Democratic super PACs are spending more than Republican ones" and that Democratic Super PACs outspent conservative Super PACs in 2018. Russ Feingold's prediction has come true that Democrats would "lose our soul" if they allowed Big Money into the party. Just look at Chuck Schumer. There isn't a person on earth who would say he has anything even resembling a soul-- and he's one of (many) go-betweens connecting the Wall Street banksters with the Democratic Party.
Advocates are concerned with super PACs, which can accept donations of unlimited size but have to reveal the names of their donors and regularly disclose their activity. But they're more worried about dark money groups: nonprofit organizations that can't be as explicitly political as super PACs, but can keep their donors secret forever and don't have to reveal much about activities before elections.

While concerns about campaign finance reform that once animated Democratic voters have been eclipsed by the desire to oust President Donald Trump, advocates are left to wonder if the party can really be trusted to follow through on its promises to dismantle a system that may help them get elected.

"If Democrats were to win the Senate and the White House, there is reason to be concerned that they may not carry through with their commitments," Holman added. "I have no doubt that we are going to have to hold their word over their head."

The Democratic National Committee adopted a platform last month calling for a ban on dark money, and Joe Biden says one of his first priorities as president would be signing the sweeping reform bill House Democrats passed last year that would, among other things, match small donations 6-to-1 to encourage grassroots giving.

But his campaign also says they'll take all the help they can get for now and that bill, known as H.R.1, would have to compete for limited legislative bandwidth with efforts to address the coronavirus pandemic, the economy and much more.


Republicans, who generally oppose major campaign finance reform efforts, cry hypocrisy.

"It's just like everything else Biden stands for. He believes it until it's of political benefit to reverse himself," said Trump campaign communications director Tim Murtaugh.

Democrats, however, argue that the only way they can rein in big money in politics is to first use big money in politics to win.

"We aren't going to unilaterally disarm against Donald Trump and right-wing conservatives, but look forward to the day when unlimited money and super PACs are a thing of the past, even if it means putting our own PAC out of business," said Guy Cecil, the chairman of Priorities USA, the super PAC first founded to support Obama's re-election.

On principle, Democrats opposed Citizens United, the Supreme Court's landmark 2010 decision that opened the floodgates to virtually unlimited money in politics. But they also were against it because they were sure Republicans and their big-business allies would outspend them.

At first, Obama set the example for his party by trying to keep his hands clean of the super PAC game. "It was just this slog to try to get Democrats to think there was any benefit at all to giving to outside groups," said a Democrat involved in early efforts to raise money for a super PAC.

Quickly, though, party leaders concluded their position against unlimited donations and dark money wasn't tenable, and it turned out there was plenty of it flowing on the Democratic side, too. Obama eventually blessed Priorities USA, which helped kick off a proliferation of liberal big-money groups.

"If Democrats don't compete, it would be like preparing for a nuclear war by grabbing your fly swatter," said Jesse Ferguson, a Democratic operative who has worked for both campaigns and outside groups.



Democrats at first said they felt sick about doing it and vowed to hold themselves to a higher standard. They would support super PACs, which publicly disclose their donors, but railed against dark money groups, which don't. But that standard eventually eroded, the apologies grew more perfunctory and they ended up diving in head-first, looking for new loopholes to exploit. And Trump's election has supercharged the spending.

...Sheila Krumholz, executive director of the Center for Responsive Politics, which runs the campaign finance data warehouse OpenSecrets.org, said her group has tracked liberal groups "taking dark money in politics to a new level of opacity" and caught them trying new tricks, such as creating faux news sites to make their attack ads seem more credible.

While overall dark money spending is roughly even between the parties right now, Democrats have a clear edge in congressional races, Krumholz said. Around 65 percent of dark money TV ads in 2020 Senate races and 85 percent of dark money TV ads in House races are sponsored by liberal groups, according to Krumholz.

"Unfortunately, there has been comfort with this that has grown over time on both sides of the aisle," Krumholz said. "Nobody wants to be the sucker that is playing by the rules when someone is getting away with murder."

One large dark money group, the Sixteen Thirty Fund, has funneled millions of dollars to more than 100 liberal groups, accepting individual donations as large as $51.7 million and $26.7 million, all without having to reveal any information about who is behind those donations.

Amy Kurtz, the Sixteen Thirty Fund's executive director, said they're just playing by the rules.

"We support and have lobbied in favor of reform to the current campaign finance system (through H.R. 1), but we are equally committed to following the current laws to level the playing field for progressives in this election," Kurtz said in a statement.

Now, many super PACs, which disclose their donors, are routing money through allied nonprofits, which do not have to make their contributors' names public, further obscuring the ultimate source of the cash.

"For a voter who simply wants to know where the money is coming from and going to, you almost have to be a full-time researcher or investigative reporter to connect all the dots," Krumholz said.

Meanwhile, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) remains one of the fiercest opponents of campaign finance reform, not only blocking bills like H.R.1 and disclosure measures, but even intervening in legal battles to overturn state campaign finance rules.

He sees it as a free speech issue, hailing the Citizens United decision as "an important step in the direction of restoring First Amendment rights."

All this leaves campaign finance reform advocates dependent on Democrats winning in November-- even if it takes some dark money to get them there.

"We are on the cusp of having the best opportunity to repair the campaign finance system since the Watergate scandal of the 1970s," said Fred Wertheimer, a veteran good-government advocate and president of Democracy 21. "But that depends on how the elections come out."
What a crock of crap. "Depends on how the elections come out?" Why? Are the corrupt conservatives the DCCC and DSCC recruited going to suddenly become reformers? It takes real effort and real talent-- of a kind most politicians don't possess or even strive to develop-- to raise campaign cash without resorting to criminality. Two grassroots progressives who are not owned an operated by the DC Democrats are Kara Eastman in Nebraska and Julie Oliver in Texas. Neither accepts Dark Money and both are likely too be in Congress next year. It's worth contributing to womanlike Kara and Julie (which is what I included the thermometer below.

Goal ThermometerLast night Julie told me that she doesn't take a dime from any PAC, unlike Roger Williams. We need to get corporations and big money out of our politics and out of our democracy, and that's why it's so important that we're taking this stance."

Kara's campaign has been very much driven by a desire to get dark money out of American politics. Her opponent reeks of corruption. "Don Bacon must be spooked because the Republican dark money machine recently went into overdrive in Nebraska’s Second. We’ve seen dark and grainy TV ads accusing me of all sorts of hellfire and brimstone in the Omaha suburbs, paid for by secretive groups like “Defending Mainstreet” (ironic name from a DC-based right-wing Super PAC). When I talk to voters in the district they tell me the ads aren’t landing. My concern is that, like another right wing authoritarian once said, “if you repeat a lie often enough it becomes truth.” Unlike the dark money ads propping up Bacon, my voter communications are all based on fact and the Congressional record. It’s easily to do since Bacon votes with Trump 94% of the time."

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12 Comments:

At 6:54 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Horse shit! If you have to gauge comparative corruption, the democraps are worse.
If you correlate corruption and hypocrisy, the democraps win by light years (Nazis have been honest about being corrupt for decades).

If a democrap with a long history of corruption and lying about it (pelo$i, hoyer, obamanation, clintons, biden, scummer.......) says they want to become less corrupt right after their corruption helps them win... you fucking idiots believe it?

And thus the explanation of the shithole -- Nazi voters are pure evil but democrap voters are dumber than shit.

in a democracy, the electorate being pure evil and/or dumber than shit will NEVER produce a government worth a shit. and we've proved this for over 50 years.

And after a half-century of this, 2020 will probably be our last colossally awful election. your god knows we've earned our own face-plant into historic collapse.

 
At 7:34 AM, Anonymous Richard Langly said...

Congratulations 6:54, by my count I see 9 references to shit or crap in you comment this morning. Does that mean your laxative is working well or not at all? I'm sure you're very proud if it's the former but if it's the latter the frustration shown in your commenting is duly noted.

 
At 7:43 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

How about you go find some feces to play with, Langly? You NEVER come here with a constructive thought to offer WITH DETAILS to present. Only shit to throw about.

If I had the power to ban you, I would. So take your "free" speech and reinsert it from whence it came. Just remember to extract that lump that passes for a cranium first.

 
At 8:23 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Good one Richard! My wife calls him Mr. Shitty even when we agree with a point he makes.

 
At 11:33 AM, Anonymous Ida Jurie said...

8:23! Mr. Shitty! Perfect. I love it and it's pathetic how Mr. S. proves the points his detractors make with his responses that give further evidence of what the detractor was pointing to. The above at 7:43 is a great example. Richard Langly has a knack for getting under his skin by pointing out Mr. S.'s "problems." Langly does provide "constructive thought" that could help him but Mr. S. can't see it because of his self-absorption and self-righteousness, and then his bad language gets in the way too. All of this prevents him from being taken seriously.

 
At 1:05 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

1 post with political thought, 4 post with personal attacks. Can one imagine if this behavior ratio went nation wide?

 
At 1:14 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Except Anonymous’s posts aren’t a political thought all he does is hate divide & rant on the Democrats & attacks everyone who thinks he’s wrong.

 
At 3:59 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Just following the example you and the other Langly trolls establish. It's the only way we get what passes for a brain between your ears to attempt to function.

 
At 8:17 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

1:14, His ego is so out to lunch that he can't hear or see anything he doesn't say. 11:33 nailed it when she said, quote, self-absorption and self-righteousness. He's a sociopath and so much like Trump. I think this has been said before but the amount of time he spends on seeing if anyone responded to him is sad and shows a serious problem. Something bad happened to him in his younger years. That's how he comes off. The attention gratifies him.

 
At 8:33 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

You guys whine so loud that Trump's MAGAts can't hear him rant!. All that energy wasted pretending to be superior while following the party practice to put down progressives instead of Republicans.

Try sucking harder. Maybe you will finally get paid for your efforts.

 
At 9:25 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

1:05, it's now 1 to 8. The clear majority care nothing for substance, only form. Sounds like a society doomed to collapse.

 
At 8:16 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Reading through this, Howie, including your own 'anonymous' comments, I can only surmise you all want Trump to win, because othewise you all wouldn't be so stupid to so myopically attack only Dems. You're pathologically in love with Big Bad Daddy Trump, aren't you - a bunch of secretly fascist submissives. Howie: Oh, if only fascists could be more progressive!

 

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