Posted on 02/01/2008 7:17:10 PM PST by LowCountryJoe
John McCain has a campaign finance problem. When his campaign was down and out, he agreed to take public funding for the primaries. Public funding comes with spending limits overall and by state. Also, a candidate who accepts funding cannot raise money from private sources. Now that it is possible he will be the nominee, McCain will want to be free of those fundraising and spending limits, but he cannot withdraw from the public system. Or perhaps he could but only with the approval of the FEC, which is not operating because of a struggle over its nominees. The FEC does not now have a quorum to meet and regulate. (The lack of a quorum was caused by Barack Obamas hold on a nominee to the FEC, but never mind).
McCain will want out of the public system because he is probably close to hitting the limit, and he could not get more money for his campaign until he received public funding after the GOP convention during the summer. His dark period would thus be a period without campaign funding that would run from spring until after the GOP convention. During that dark period Obama or Hillary, both of whom have not accepted public funding for the primaries, would be able to continue spending money; some of that spending would be directed against McCain after Obama or Hillary have secured their partys nomination.
So McCain needs to get out of the public system and fast. One way would be to refuse public funding for the fall campaign; he could then start raising money privately now; however, he pledged to accept public funding for the general election if his opponent did so. Obama has taken a similar pledge. Also, McCain would get around some of this by using outside groups (527 groups and others ) to fund his effort, but he has been a fierce critic of such groups and tactics.
I have often noticed that people whom you would expect to support campaign finance regulation (e.g. liberal Democrats) often are strident critics of the system if they have had some personal contact with the web of regulation. McCain is in a mess fostered in part by his own self-righteousness. Somehow I do not expect his personal contact with the system will make him a critic of it in 2009.
See also Mark Schmitts concise and informative report.
I hope it comes back to bite him - it couldn’t happen to a more deserving person IMO.
I’m not voting for him.
It’s a case of poetic justice, no doubt, but electing Hillary Clinton isn’t worth the satisfaction of it.
Campaign Finance Reform may bite McLame in the butt, you say?
Good. The arrogant sumbitch needs bit.
A DhimmiRat in RINO clothing, IMO.
Sweet
If this is true we at least know he has a petard, as he would surely be hoist by it, and about time I might add.
Poetic justice.
Poetic justice.
Ha! Thanks, you made my day. Serves him right. Go, Mitt!!
It’s hard to care about McCain’s troubles, nor the other RINOs like Romney. It’s almost like watching Hitler & Stalin battle it out in eastern Germany.
Guess he’ll just have to tap his wife’s trust fund...or get his fellow moderates (who are not always as free with their money as they are their opinions) to ante-up.
Hah!!! The SOB is HOISTED ON HIS OWN PETARD.
“I hope it comes back to bite him “
THAT would be poetic justice. :)
John Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson.
Who is “slingblade”?
Watch McCain, Mister Campaign Finance Reform himself, be the first to try to get the campaign finance rules overturned when they no longer favor him. Or he might just ignore them altogether, the article says the FEC does not now have a quorum to meet and regulate, sounds like open season to me.
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