Dick Morris, a man who's seen a few election campaigns, breaks down how Democrats have been violating the soft money campaign limits they pushed so hard for in McCain-Feingold.
Tasty Manatees commented a few weeks ago on the way one group, MoveOn.org, appears to be blatantly violating the ban on soft money use in campaigns. It appears that this strategy is not isolated.
Tasty Manatees
To: TastyManatees
So why aren't charges being filed if laws are being broken?
Prairie
2 posted on
11/25/2003 5:33:20 AM PST by
prairiebreeze
("The hope that danger has passed is comforting, is understandable, and it is FALSE! "~~GWBush)
To: TastyManatees
If anything, it splits the democrat money which essentially splits the party. It can only be bad news for the democrats.
3 posted on
11/25/2003 5:39:05 AM PST by
2banana
To: TastyManatees
But it turns out that Republicans are raising twice as much as Democrats are in hard money.... So the Democrats have resorted to a loophole in McCain-Feingold and worked to maximize soft money contributions to phony political committees, allegedly independent of the party apparatus and thus not covered by the soft money ban. The Democrats have always found hard money hard to come by.... This latest shift is not a case of matching a Republican move.... It is hypocrisy, plain and simple. Americans Coming Together, a supposedly independent campaign committee, is reportedly one-third of the way toward its fund-raising goal. Its nominal independence from the Democratic Party, required by McCain-Feingold, is paper-thin. It looks like McCain was hoodwinked again. Sitting out the Vietnam War in the Hanoi Hilton did not a master tactician make -- and that's the charitable interpretation.
Truth be known, the passing of complex campaign finance laws that are easily circumvented, then administered unevenly and indeed unfairly, invites disrespect for the system and the politicians that play with it for their own gain, usually as incumbents.
Much to be preferred is the First Amendment precept of our Founders Fathers: "Congress shall make no law . . . abridging the freedom of speech."
It comes as no surprise that McCain, Feingold and their Democrat allies were neither historians nor constitutional scholars, but let there be no doubt that they working for their own self-interest and against the public interest.
5 posted on
11/25/2003 6:02:53 AM PST by
OESY
To: TastyManatees
Hypocrisy in American politics at least provides material for humor. How else are we to view the attempts of Democratic Party leaders to circumvent the McCain-Feingold prohibition on the use of soft money in campaigns after their party insisted on its inclusion in the bill? This goes beyond hypocrisy--its illegal. But it won't be seen as either humorous, hypocritical, or illegal by the liberal media who will totally ignore this circumvention of campaign laws by the very Dems who insisted on it.
6 posted on
11/25/2003 6:06:30 AM PST by
Starboard
To: PhiKapMom
PIng!
7 posted on
11/25/2003 8:06:43 AM PST by
Ben Hecks
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