For the McCAin camp to even bring up ‘native Americans’ is just ironic. McCain operates on huge tribal donations, gambles at their casinos, and makes policy as head of senate Indian affairs. NO ONE has used the Indians like McCain has!
Indians, Lobbyists and Arizona Politics...OH MY!
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2440173/posts
J.D. is clean on this, but McCain is dirty as dirty can be.
Buried in McCain/Feingold was a special exemption for Indian tribes, who just happen to line McCains pockets.
Mc/Feingold was never about campaign finance reform. It was about getting what McCain thought he needed.
The McCain-Feingold Indian Giving Loophole
by Michelle Malkin (April 11, 2001)
[snip] deep-pocketed special interest group remains curiously silent amid the furor over campaign finance reform: Indian tribes. Why?
You might think tribal leaders would be swarming Capitol Hill, joining other business groups and trade associations that are rightly worried about the McCain-Feingold bills deleterious effect on their ability to participate in the political process. Under McCain-Feingold, so-called soft money donations (which are currently unregulated and unlimited) would be banned. That would presumably be a big blow to Indian tribes, particularly those who run casinos, whose soft-money giving has exploded in the last few years.
Final tallies are not in yet, but analysts say the top individual recipient of Indian gaming money during election 2000 was none other than anti-soft money crusader Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., who sits on the Senate Committee of Indian Affairs.
Shouldn’t this be a moot point anyway since, if Indian tribes donated, it should be “foreign money” under the tribes’ “soveriegn immunity” self-governing reservation system?
Okay; I’ll climb back up the rabbit hole to the real world now.