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To: cwb
It's on Google

I understand that, since you stated that in your original post. What I'm wondering is why that information does not show up on opensecrets.org. They are supposed to have data on ALL political contributions. If he gave $50K, and it doesn't show up in the opensecrets database, then did the Kerry campaign not report the contribution, as they are required to do by law? Or, is the information you found incorrect.

92 posted on 01/21/2005 6:13:10 PM PST by RedWhiteBlue
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To: RedWhiteBlue

Elite Fundraisers De
liver "Bundles"
of Donations to DemocraticCandidate
s Who Abandoned the Pu
I don't know...but here is the most of the article from Jan. 2004, if you want to investigate their site:

Elite Fundraisers Deliver "Bundles" of Donations to Democratic
Candidates Who Abandoned the Public Financing System.

WhiteHouseForSale.org Launches Searchable Database with Information
About 32 Dean Bundlers and 119 Kerry Backers; Bush Names 42 New Rangers
and Pioneers

WASHINGTON, D.C. - While not approaching the scope of President Bush's unparalleled fundraising operations, the presidential campaigns of Howard Dean and John Kerry haven't been shy about reaching out to their
own elite networks of big money bundlers to help finance their
campaigns, according to an analysis by Public Citizen.

WhiteHouseForSale.org, a Web site created by Public Citizen to track
contributors to Bush's 2004 re-election campaign, has begun monitoring the fundraising activities of Dean and Kerry because they are the only other candidates who have followed Bush in opting out of the
presidential public financing system.

In addition to keeping a running
tally of their respective fundraising totals, Public Citizen today
unveiled its searchable database of Dean and Kerry bundlers, their home
states, employers and occupations. Both it and the Bush database are
available at WhiteHouseforSale.org.

Official totals won't be filed with the Federal Election Commission
(FEC) until the end of January, but the Dean campaign has reported
raising $41 million in 2003. The Kerry campaign brought in nearly $29
million last year, including $6.4 million the senator loaned to his
campaign after taking out a mortgage on his home.

A candidate who accepts public financing can raise and spend no more than $45 million before next summer's Democratic Convention in Boston.
Although Dean has raised $12 million more than Kerry, the Massachusetts
senator has relied on four times the number of bundlers, those financial
backers who collect contributions up to the limit of $2,000 from others.

So far, the Dean campaign has released the names of 14 individuals who
have raised at least $100,000; another 18 individuals have bundled at
least $50,000 for the Vermont governor. The Kerry campaign has
identified 32 fundraisers who have brought in at least $100,000; another
87 rainmakers have collected at least $50,000.

"We wish that all the presidential candidates would stay within the
public financing system, but President Bush's outrageous money machine
places an extreme handicap on candidates who want to wage a fair fight," said Public Citizen President Joan Claybrook. "The McCain-Feingold law removed hundreds of millions in soft money from the political system,
but wealthy special interests are still able to purchase influence with
politicians by serving as money brokers who collect $2,000 checks from
their own business and personal networks and forward them to the
candidates."

Kerry's $50,000 Hollywood supporters include actor Dennis Hopper,
director William Friedkin, Viacom Entertainment Chairman Jonathan
Dolgen, Paramount Studios chief Sherry Lansing, CBS Entertainment head
Nancy Tellem and three top executives at Rupert Murdoch's News Corp.
Kerry's Massachusetts fundraisers include longtime backers Alan
Solomont, the former finance chairman of the Democratic National
Committee (DNC); Jonathan Lavine, managing director of Bain Capital; and
the senator's brother Cameron Kerry, an attorney at Mintz Levin - the
firm that ranks as Kerry's all-time biggest donor.

...Public Citizen is a national, nonprofit consumer advocacy organization based in Washington, D.C. For more information, please visit
http://www.whitehouseforsale.org.


112 posted on 01/21/2005 6:31:55 PM PST by cwb
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