Posted on 09/13/2003 10:33:09 PM PDT by Recovering_Democrat
Imagine a political organization with more than $250 million in the bank, a fine-tuned direct-mail operation, some of the best political minds in the country, and legions of volunteers at the ready.
This group is America Votes, a confederacy of liberal causes that is mobilizing to fill the money void left by a new campaign-finance law that is hampering Democrats' fund-raising. With a Presidential election bearing down, America Votes pulls together some 20 progressive interests in a kind of shadow party.
America Votes is the first evolutionary response to the law's fund-raising restrictions. And it might be the only way for Dems, who long have relied on now-banned donations from unions and wealthy givers, to stay in the game against the GOP President George W. Bush and the Republican National Committee are on target to raise a record half-billion dollars before Election Day 2004.
America Votes has the potential to replace the Democratic Party as the center of liberal efforts. It will be governed by a top-flight list of Democratic insiders. President Cecile Richards, is a former deputy chief of staff to House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.). Founders include AFL-CIO President John Sweeney, New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson, and Gregory T. Moore, executive director of the NAACP National Voter Fund.
The goal is to turn out the vote in swing states Member groups will share polling data, research, and mailing lists, including "Demzilla," the Democratic National Committee's massive voter data bank. They'll hire coordinators in as many as 17 states.
America Votes will have help from a new political action committee, America Coming Together, which expects to raise $75 million by Election Day in pledges from wealthy donors. Among them: billionaire financier and Bush critic George Soros, who is kicking in $10 million A $50 million media campaign to support the Democratic nominee, led by Harold Ickes, President Clinton's former deputy chief of staff, will complement ACT's ground war.
But some critics wonder how helpful these groups will be. If the nominee depends on America Votes, any attempt to move to the center to woo swing votes risks muddling the message or alienating America Votes funders. "This is one of the greatest dislocations of political power in the 200 years of the republic," says GOP lawyer Jan Baran, who represents BCRA challengers.
(Excerpt) Read more at businessweek.com ...
Breaking News!! Sun rises in East -- tape at eleven!
What's unbelievable about it. Didn't you think the DemocRATS had already figured out a way around campaign finance reform for before they voted for it?
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