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The Soros Connection in the Minnesota Senate Race Vote Count
American Thinker ^
| November 17, 2008
| Ed Lasky
Posted on 11/17/2008 2:08:30 AM PST by neverdem
The Minnesota senate race is generating a level of heat rare in a Minnesota November. With a filibuster-proof Senate hanging in the balance, it is worthwhile looking to the fine hand of George Soros, operating through a network of fat cat leftwing money bags who have collectively funded a myriad of nonprofit political spawn. At least two entities funded by Soros and his plutocrat wannabe pals hav prepared the soil for the contentious and suspicious process of tabulating and recounting the vote totals of incumbent Senator Norm Coleman and challenger Al Franken.
We have
written several times the rising influence of the Democracy Alliance, a network of wealthy Democratic activists who have formed a network designed to influence the course of American elections and policies. Billionaire hedge fund manager George Soros is one of the founders of this group, but he has joined with other billionaires, such as insurance magnate Peter Lewis and Herb and Marion Sandler, founders of Golden West Financial (
sold to Wachovia) Soros, Lewis, and the Sandlers form the core of a network of wealthy activists and Democrat partisans making up Democracy Alliance.
The canny billionaires realized that they could magnify their power by working in unison and tapping other wealthy donors to further their agenda (the superb
Boston Globe article "Follow the money" is a good primer on how money and 527 groups have come together to have a huge impact on politics in America). The Democracy Alliance has helped fund a constellation of groups, including the controversial Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN) that has been mired in a series of voter fraud cases.
The Democracy Alliance is a major avenue to help the left wing would-be plutocrats achieve their goals. Its growing membership roster consists of billionaires and mere multi-millionaires who collectively
hope to
give upwards of 500 million dollars each year to further promote a left-wing agenda. A partial roster of the Democracy Alliance membership can be found
here. Directors also include union leaders with access to union funds to engage in politicking. The politically hyper-active Service Employees International Union (SEIU) is engaged in these efforts, too.
Taco Bell millionaire Rob McKay is a key figure in funding and running this effort. He is the chair of the Democracy Alliance. The vice-chair is Anna Burger of the SEIU. They are becoming important players in the world of politics.
The Minnesota Senate Election Vote Count
One part of the political strategy of the group has been a project called the Secretary of States Project. The goal has been to help elect Secretaries of State in targeted states across the nation. The SoSP was successful in, among other places, Ohio and Minnesota. Secretaries of state are crucial in elections, since these officials are charged with ensuring the integrity of the voting and counting process. They are the gatekeepers: helping to decide who is entitled to vote and who is not. In Ohio, the Democrat Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner was widely
criticized (at least among Republicans) for her efforts in the last few months, which were perceived to favor Barack Obama.
History seems to be repeating itself in Minnesota where that state's Secretary of State, Mark Ritchie, was also elected
with the help of the Secretary of States project. He has operated in a very partisan way during the contest between Franken and Coleman, for example making statements that the Coleman campaign is "trying to win at any price" and then
denying he said it.
More significant than outrageous statements being made are the actions being taken.
As the Wall Street Journal noted the "corrections" being made favor Al Franken in such a way that raises suspicions about the integrity of the process being overseen by Ritchie. The Powerline blog has had a running commentary on one suspicious action after another which give the correction process a very blue tinge. Among the "irregularities" are:
Minneapolis Star-Tribune columnist Katherine Kersten has also
written about her suspicions that the integrity of the voting process may have been compromised:
Let's assume the 32 disputed ballots in Minneapolis were legitimate. Let's assume the newly discovered 100 votes in Pine County -- all for Al Franken -- were just overlooked by a sleepy official, and the 100 votes found in Mountain Iron -- again, all for Franken -- were valid.
Let's suppose the trickle of votes moving inexorably in Franken's direction is just a function of a normal process, as Secretary of State Mark Ritchie's office assures us.
One fact remains troubling. The referee in Minnesota's hotly contested Senate race must act in a nonpartisan fashion, yet Ritchie came to office through a nationwide partisan strategy. He was elected in 2006 as part of a national campaign to ensure that Democrats could wield influence in precisely the sort of hair's breadth race we now have here.
Ritchie gained office with the help of the Secretary of State Project (SOS), an independent 527 group co-founded by former
MoveOn.org leader James Rucker. SOS is based in San Francisco, and is funded in part by ultra-liberal kingmakers such as George Soros.
Secretary of state positions are a "new front" in the "battle for political control," the paper explained, because they are "the obscure but vital state offices that determine who votes and how those votes are counted."
"National Democratic groups ... are pouring resources" into secretary of state races in key swing states, in order to enhance their control in future tight elections, said the paper. Minnesota was one of the top six states targeted.
Now it appears that another group supported by the Democracy Alliance is stirring trouble for Norm Coleman. The "Alliance for a Better Minnesota" is a so-called 527 group, non-profit group, putatively restricted to only advocating on issues, but whose actions in fact are often geared toward or against candidates. (This is one area where we need more regulation and monitoring.)
The Alliance is calling for investigations by the FBI and the Senate Ethics Committee into allegations that a major fundraiser and longtime friend diverted thousands of dollars to Coleman's reelection efforts. Coleman denies any wrongdoing and
welcomes a quick investigation to put the controversy to rest. This follows in the wake of other efforts by the same group to besmirch Norm Coleman during the campaign (it paid for ads attacking Coleman for granting tax breaks to oil companies, and connected those actions to donations made to him by "oil and gas" interests).
Who is funding The Alliance for a Better Minnesota? Rob McKay, Anna Burger and George Soros are all involved in funneling money and presumably advice to a group called Fund
For America, a so-called 527 political action committee. This group serves as a conduit to funnel money and support to, among a few other groups, the Alliance for a Better Minnesota. A
map of the relationships has been prepared by the Center for Investigative Reporting, which is, in part,
supported by George Soros's Open Society Institute.
The Democracy Alliance is also tied into the tangle: just another holding for the billionaire hedge fund manager George Soros, though this one is not involved in the stock market but in the political marketplace.
The efforts of such "527 groups" (such as Democracy Alliance, Fund for America, and the Alliance for a Better Minnesota) to influence American politics is growing. They can help elect political leaders. These may be senators, representatives and now even secretaries of state. The political food chain is all fair game for these obscure groups that all too often escape even mild scrutiny.
These groups are a way to skirt Federal limits on campaign contributions. While they are required by law to focus on issues and not candidates, this is often a distinction without a difference. In practice, their efforts all too often used to help some political candidates and harm others.
They are tools that can be used to help fix an election for favored candidates.
They are Shadow Parties, operating in the shadows and through Byzantine networks (see the above "power map") that obscure the channeling of power and money to help select and elect candidates that will hew to the policies advocated by the networks of wealthy Democratic donors.
They also a blight on our political landscape.
If Democrats were truly interested in honest government and transparency in politics, they would heighten the regulatory oversight of such groups: force more disclosure of donors, interlocking directorships (a favorite cause of Democrats when they examine corporate America), and the actions the groups take that frequently violate the law by working to elect favored-and usually-Democratic candidates.
Ed Lasky is news editor of American Thinker.
TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Front Page News; Politics/Elections; US: Minnesota
KEYWORDS: democracyalliance; election2008; elections2008; georgesoros; markritchie; minnesota; obamatransitionfile; ritchie; shadowparty; soros; sorosboyfranken; voterfraud
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Campaign Finance Reform spawned all this fraud, IMHO. Thanks McCain.
1
posted on
11/17/2008 2:08:31 AM PST
by
neverdem
To: neverdem
...unless Conservatives get serious about voter ID’s and strict election laws, what happen this election you can count on happening all the time.
2
posted on
11/17/2008 2:12:36 AM PST
by
Doogle
(USAF.68-73..8th TFW Ubon Thailand..never store a threat you should have eliminated))
To: neverdem
I do not understand the connection, how did it happen? Do you mean that restrictions encouraged money to be diverted outside the party structures and ultimately led to this?
3
posted on
11/17/2008 2:15:46 AM PST
by
nathanbedford
("Attack, repeat attack!" Bull Halsey)
To: nathanbedford
I do not understand the connection, how did it happen? Do you mean that restrictions encouraged money to be diverted outside the party structures and ultimately led to this?IMHO, exactly!
4
posted on
11/17/2008 2:31:21 AM PST
by
neverdem
(Xin loi min oi)
To: jan in Colorado
5
posted on
11/17/2008 4:47:16 AM PST
by
Gondring
(Paul Revere would have been flamed as a naysayer troll and told to go back to Boston.)
To: neverdem
Don’t worry. I have 90,000 ballots in my trunk, but I just haven’t gotten the chance to drive them over to elections yet. Since they’re 100% for Coleman, the controversy should end.
6
posted on
11/17/2008 4:50:08 AM PST
by
Gondring
(Paul Revere would have been flamed as a naysayer troll and told to go back to Boston.)
To: neverdem
Secretary of state positions are a "new front" in the "battle for political control," State SoS positions must become hard, well-funded R election targets.
7
posted on
11/17/2008 4:56:36 AM PST
by
polymuser
(Bye, bye Miss American Pie.)
To: neverdem
Shouldn’t it be “Secretaries of State Project”?
To: Doogle
George Soros should be investigated for TREASON. He bought this entire election and will now control everything this empty suit proposes. Soros is the guy who did this.
9
posted on
11/17/2008 6:01:19 AM PST
by
rtbwood
To: PureSolace; netmilsmom; StarCMC; narses; fanfan; murphE; Mjaye; GodGunsGuts; Momaw Nadon; ...
Thanks for the ping!
DIGG
I have no doubt that Soros is the money behind Obama, but also the money behind the defeat of many Republicans in Congress and the Senate.
Colorado has been one of their targets, and in the 2008 election they completed their agenda of turning the State Democrat.
.
Please FReepmail me if you would like to be added to the digg list!
10
posted on
11/17/2008 7:03:10 AM PST
by
jan in Colorado
(For Barack Hussein Obama TRUTH FILE see my homepage!)
To: jan in Colorado
11
posted on
11/17/2008 7:05:57 AM PST
by
jan in Colorado
(For Barack Hussein Obama TRUTH FILE see my homepage!)
To: rtbwood
“George Soros should be investigated for TREASON.”
He should, but he won’t because the America haters won this round in the most recent election. Before Soros could be defeated, the America haters must be dealt with first.
12
posted on
11/17/2008 7:07:08 AM PST
by
LottieDah
(If only those who speak so eloquently on the rights of animals would do so on behalf of the unborn.)
To: jan in Colorado
Your link takes us to A.T., not Digg.
To: neverdem
Soros, Lewis, and the Sandlers form the core of a network of wealthy activists and Democrat partisans making up Democracy Alliance. Soros wants power and money, the others I will give the benefit of the doubt, that they just want to be thought of as do gooders. One thing can be said in their favor, they are using their own money.
I don't think they are right and wonder why if they want to do go good, they don't give their money to the Salvation Army, ASPC, and others.
Why they think the government is the way to help people is beyond me.
14
posted on
11/17/2008 7:50:57 AM PST
by
razorback-bert
(Save the planet...it is the only known one with beer!)
To: neverdem
15
posted on
11/17/2008 8:01:55 AM PST
by
eleni121
(EN TOUTO NIKA!! +)
To: neverdem
All tentacles lead to Soros, it seems.
16
posted on
11/17/2008 8:56:55 AM PST
by
NormsRevenge
(Semper Fi ... Godspeed)
To: neverdem
Sure looks like a target rich environment for RICO, doesn’t it!
17
posted on
11/17/2008 9:13:42 AM PST
by
CRBDeuce
(here, while the internet is still free of the Fairness Doctrine)
To: neverdem
18
posted on
11/17/2008 9:45:52 AM PST
by
Cheerio
(Barack Hussein 0bama=The Complete Destruction of American Capitalism)
To: jan in Colorado
Dr. Evil and his minions have turned the US into a banana republic.
Oh, excuse me, a banana "democracy".
To: neverdem
20
posted on
11/17/2008 1:47:42 PM PST
by
Ooh-Ah
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