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THE STENCH FROM PEW (videotape exposes phony buzz created for McCain-Feingold CFR)
NY POST ^ | March 21, 2005 | EDITORIAL

Posted on 03/21/2005 5:36:49 AM PST by Liz

Reports in The Post last week concerning the political activities of the supposedly above-the-fray Pew Charitable Trusts were, in a word, shocking.

A former program officer for Pew, Sean Treglia, was caught on videotape bragging about how the foundation worked behind the scenes to create the false impression that there was a "mass movement" afoot clamoring for campaign-finance reform.

The intent: to hoodwink Congress.

It worked.

Pew did this in the run-up to the passage of the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 — a.k.a. McCain-Feingold — by spreading around more than $40 million to grass-roots front groups like Common Cause, the Campaign Finance Institute and the inaptly named Center for Public Integrity.

Pew wasn't alone in its efforts.

Several other major liberal foundations — including the Carnegie Corporation of New York, the Ford Foundation and George Soros' Open Society Institute — colluded with Pew to give $123 million between 1994 and 2004 to promote the regulation of political speech.

But Pew's role in the effort seems to have been particularly insidious.

"Having been on the Hill, I knew that . . . if Congress thought this was a Pew effort, it'd be worthless. It'd be 20 million bucks thrown down the drain," Treglia says at one point in the tape.

"So, in order, in essence, to convey the impression that this was something coming naturally from outside the Beltway, I felt it was best that Pew stay in the background."

"By law, the grantees always have to disclose. But I always encouraged the grantees never to mention Pew," Treglia says. "Did we push the envelope? Yeah. Were we encouraged internally to push the envelope? Yeah . . . We stayed within the letter, if not the spirit, of the law."

(Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Extended News; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: cfr; fraud; pew
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Several other major liberal foundations — including the Carnegie Corporation of New York, the Ford Foundation and George Soros' Open Society Institute — colluded with Pew to give $123 million between 1994 and 2004 to promote the regulation of political speech.

Liberals? Colluding? I'm shocked, shocked (/end Claude Rains impersonation).

1 posted on 03/21/2005 5:36:50 AM PST by Liz
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To: Liz

An interesting article.


2 posted on 03/21/2005 5:39:31 AM PST by Peach (The Clintons pardoned more terrorists than they ever captured or killed.)
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To: Liz

Another great post Liz. Thanks for all of your work posting/exposing anti-freedom, anti-life criminals.


3 posted on 03/21/2005 5:45:50 AM PST by PGalt
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To: Liz

Thank God it didn't work for John Kerry.


4 posted on 03/21/2005 5:46:38 AM PST by Semper Paratus (:)
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To: Liz

Free Speech For Me But Not For Thee

By Ryan Sager Published 03/11/2005

In September of 2000, less than two years before the passage of McCain-Feingold, the liberal magazine The American Prospect put out a special issue devoted to campaign-finance reform. It was called, "Checkbook Democracy." And it was bought and paid for with a $132,000 check from the liberal Carnegie Corporation of New York, which has spent millions of dollars promoting laws to restrict political speech -- a fact the magazine never disclosed to its readers.


Welcome behind the curtains of the campaign-finance reform movement, where ideologues plot to restrict the speech of their fellow citizens while reserving a special free-speech zone for themselves.



Sounds paranoid? A little over the top?



Consider a report just out from the folks over at Political Money Line, "Campaign Finance Reform Lobby: 1994 to 2004." Ignored by the media to date, it details how the supposedly grass-roots campaign-finance reform movement has been funded over the last decade to the tune of $140 million. Of that $140 million, the vast majority ($123 million) came not from retirees scraping together their last nickels for the cause of democracy, nor from schoolchildren collecting deposits on cans plucked from dilapidated playgrounds.



No, the money came from just eight ultra-liberal foundations (including the Ford Foundation and George Soros' Open Society Institute), the same folks who fund: the Earth Action Network, the NOW Legal Defense and Education Fund, People for the American Way, Planned Parenthood, the Naderite Public Citizen Foundation and the Feminist Majority Foundation.



That's quite a lot of money sloshing around a movement dedicated to "getting the money out of politics." Of course, the only place these people really want to keep the money out of is their conservative opponents' campaign war chests and the war chests of the independent groups that support them. To the reformers, reform is not an end, it is a means to their pre-existing liberal goals.



As Congress takes up legislation to close the 527 "loophole" that allowed so much pesky speech into the 2004 campaign, and as the FEC is forced by court order to look at ways to cleanse the Internet of insufficiently regulated political speech, it's worth understanding just how the campaign-finance reform lobby operates.



First, let's return to that bought-and-paid-for issue of the Prospect. On Wednesday, the magazine's founder and co-editor, Robert Kuttner, explained that this was one of its first ever "foundation-sponsored" special issues. Since then, he said, the magazine has been careful to disclose any financial contributions to coverage of specific topics right up front. "You probably found the one," he said.



Fair enough. But it's not really the magazine's actions here that should draw the public's attention. It is the campaign of media manipulation that has been quietly undertaken by the reform lobby.



Payments to the media found by Political Money Line include: the $132,000 to the Prospect, $69,000 to Public Radio International, $935,000 to the Radio and Television News Directors Foundation and more than $1.2 million to National Public Radio for items such as, in the words of the official disclosure statements, "news coverage of financial influence in political decision making."



No wonder McCain-Feingold contained a "media exemption." The media -- on top of having their voices amplified when private citizens, labor unions and corporations are barred from speaking -- are relatively easy to write some checks to. (Millions of bloggers, on the other hand, might be a little harder to corral -- hence the calls for a crackdown.)



But it's not just direct payments to the media that are the problem. It's the climate of sanctimony that the McCainiacs have created. All of the major reform groups -- Common Cause, the Alliance for Better Campaigns, the Campaign Finance Institute, the Center for Public Integrity, the Center for Responsive Politics, Democracy 21 and the William J. Brennan Jr. Center for Justice -- are funded by the same eight liberal foundations, and have received millions upon millions of dollars each.



Yet, by maintaining the fiction of independence from one and other, they appear to much of the press to be a pack of scrappy underdogs sinking their teeth into the ankles of the big-money men.



Well, it's a sham. It's a charade. It's a lie. They are the big-money men. And, with the release of the Political Money Line report, it's time the media started treating them as such. The billionaires and liberal foundations constantly calling for more restrictions on the freedom of ordinary Americans to assemble and speak are not a movement -- they are a lobby.



And the first lobbyist who should be called out is none other than the Reformer-in-Chief, Sen. John McCain. The senator has been caught with his pants down this week, accepting what are essentially campaign contributions to a phony think tank called the Reform Institute.



The Institute, according to its Web site, is technically a not-for-profit 501(c)(3) organization, "representing a thoughtful, moderate voice for reform in the campaign finance and election administration debates."



In reality, however, the organization might better be dubbed McCain 2008 headquarters. The head of the Institute's advisory committee is none other than McCain, and his name appears in every other press release. What's more, the manager of McCain's 2000 presidential campaign, Rick Davis, is president of the institute and draws a $110,000 a year "consulting fee" -- at least until the official campaign gets underway.



Major donors who wish to flatter the senator's vanity and give a boost to his presidential ambitions can write checks to the Institute in amounts that would be illegal many times over (under McCain-Feingold) if the checks went to the actual McCain campaign.



One such donor is Cablevision, which gave the Institute $100,000 right after its CEO, Charles Dolan, testified before McCain's Senate Commerce Committee in 2003. Another $100,000 check from Cablevision came into the Institute in August of 2004, 12 days before McCain wrote to Dolan about a pending pricing issue, urging him to "feel free to contact me and discuss these issues further."



McCain, of course -- ever the scrappy underdog fighting for the little guy against the moneyed interests -- argues that the donations and the political help to Cablevision have nothing to do with one and other. In fact, he argues, no donation to the Reform Institute could possibly curry favor with him. (Cablevision must really just love clean government!) "There's not a conflict of interest when you're involved in an organization that is non-partisan, nonprofit, nonpolitical," he said.



Well, McCain can tell that to the NRA, the ACLU, the AFL-CIO and the rest of the non-partisan groups that sued to overturn his law.



In the meantime, he should be convicted in the court of public opinion based solely on the "appearance of corruption" -- after all, that's the standard by which he judges the public's right to speak.



Given these shenanigans, will Congress really listen now that he's calling again for further restrictions? Well, he certainly knows where they live: "Some billionaire decides he or she doesn't like you in office, and they decide to form a 527 and contribute $10 million or $20 million and dive-bomb into your state or district," McCain said last month. "That should alarm every federally elected member of Congress."



Elected officials deciding who can and cannot criticize them -- that should alarm every citizen of the United States. Now, if only someone would pay The American Prospect to spread the word.



Ryan Sager is a member of the editorial board of The New York Post. He also edits the blog Miscellaneous Objections and can be reached at editor@rhsager.com.


5 posted on 03/21/2005 5:47:18 AM PST by conservativecorner
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To: PGalt

You are entirely welcome. Always a pleasure to have your comments on a thread.


6 posted on 03/21/2005 5:48:00 AM PST by Liz ("There is no safety for honest men except by believing all possible evil of evil men." Edmund Burke)
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To: Liz

McCain's Reform Institute
Donations above $50,000

Carnegie Corporation of New York

Chartwell Charitable Foundation

CSC Holdings, Inc.

Echosphere

The Educational Foundation of America

Mr. Jerome Kohlberg, Jr. Revocable Trust

McMullen Family Foundation

OSI Constitution & Legal Policy Program

Proteus Fund

Mr. Charles H. Spaulding

Stuart Family Foundation

Tides Foundation


7 posted on 03/21/2005 5:49:28 AM PST by conservativecorner
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To: conservativecorner

BTTT.


8 posted on 03/21/2005 5:52:34 AM PST by Dutchgirl (Hillary! 08 – Let’s restore the furniture to the Whitehouse...for the children.)
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To: Liz

Campaign Finance Reformed worked! We had the most expensive, special-interest driven, negative campaign by far in our history and all it cost us was our First Amendment.


9 posted on 03/21/2005 5:53:07 AM PST by Always Right
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To: conservativecorner

Nice find.........I see Terayza's group---Tides---- is well represented.


10 posted on 03/21/2005 5:53:07 AM PST by Liz ("There is no safety for honest men except by believing all possible evil of evil men." Edmund Burke)
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To: Grampa Dave; Always Right; PGalt; conservativecorner; Libloather; MeekOneGOP

I hear GWB got a new dog......it rolls over on command, but not all the time.......so he named it "John McCain."


11 posted on 03/21/2005 5:55:16 AM PST by Liz ("There is no safety for honest men except by believing all possible evil of evil men." Edmund Burke)
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To: Liz

I will no longer refer to John McCain as a RINO.........what he is is a leftist tool.


12 posted on 03/21/2005 5:56:43 AM PST by MamaLucci (Libs, want answers on 911? Ask Clinton why he met with Monica more than with his CIA director.)
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To: Liz
Now, again, why did George Bush sign the CFR bill?

FEC Considers Restricting Online Political Activities ( Web Ads, Bloggers' Endorsements) - by Brian Faler, Washington Post, March 21, 2005 - posted to Free Republic, March 21, 2005, by Former Military Chick:

The agency is weighing whether -- and how -- to impose restrictions on a host of online activities, including campaign advertising and politically oriented blogs...

The FEC, which enforces federal election law, had issued scores of regulations delineating how the campaign finance reform legislation adopted in 2002 ought to be implemented...

[Representative] Christopher Shays (R-Conn.) ..., who sponsored the legislation, complained that many of those rules were too lax, and ... successfully sued to have them rescinded.


13 posted on 03/21/2005 5:57:27 AM PST by First_Salute (May God save our democratic-republican government, from a government by judiciary.)
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To: MamaLucci

Okay by me.


14 posted on 03/21/2005 5:59:48 AM PST by Liz ("There is no safety for honest men except by believing all possible evil of evil men." Edmund Burke)
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To: First_Salute

Where's the ACLU when you need 'em (/sarc)?


15 posted on 03/21/2005 6:00:57 AM PST by Liz ("There is no safety for honest men except by believing all possible evil of evil men." Edmund Burke)
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To: conservativecorner

Thanks for the additional information. BTTT!


16 posted on 03/21/2005 6:01:59 AM PST by PGalt
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To: Liz

The well poisoners. Rotten and mean.


17 posted on 03/21/2005 6:02:50 AM PST by bvw
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To: Liz
Where's the ACLU when you need 'em (/sarc)?

Actually, the ACLU did oppose Campaign Finance Reform, but they were not very vocal about it.

18 posted on 03/21/2005 6:05:06 AM PST by Always Right
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To: conservativecorner

Hmm, the Tides Foundation. Plaything of Therayza Heinz Kerry. McCain speaks during the campaign about Kerry being fully qualified to be President. Also speaks out about the shame of the Swift Boat vets. Seems the man who wants to get big money out of politics has his hand out to big (lefty) money. Shades of the Keating Four.


19 posted on 03/21/2005 6:11:42 AM PST by Inwoodian
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To: Liz

Shame too on Andrew Kohut of Pew and Jim Lehrer of PBS for their lack of disclosure.


20 posted on 03/21/2005 6:11:58 AM PST by OESY
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