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What Do McCain's Public Interest Group Allies Say About His Campaign Finance Claims?

27 Feb 2008 04:13 pm

I've wondered this, as have others. So far, there's been mostly radio silence, particularly from groups like the Campaign Legal Center and Democracy 21, both with deep ties to McCain, both with deep roots with the campaign finance legislation reform community, both usually quick to the draw when lawmakers attempt to interpret election laws to their advantage.

Larry Gold has attempted an answer. He has the credentials, being a litigator of McConnell v. FEC before the Supreme Court. He is a critic of McCain's.

In a two-page document he's posted on Rick Hasen's campaign law blog, he muses:

Like others, I have been awaiting with interest the analysis of these important matters from the Campaign Legal Center (CLC) and Democracy 21 (D21). CLC and D21 are ardent advocates and litigants on the ethical and legal behavior of candidates, political parties, unions, corporations and other private organizations with respect to politics and lobbying, they are often quoted by the media as objective and authoritative arbiters of such behavior, and they rely on their media relationships for their own fundraising and influence. Ordinarily, CLC and D21 would be outspoken about an imbroglio concerning a presumptive presidential nominee’s belated effort to withdraw from public financing at a time when the FEC is raising legitimate procedural and substantive questions about his doing so. And, ordinarily they would be quick to weigh in about potentially unethical contacts between a lawmaker and lobbyists and possible attempts to cover them up.
"[D]on’t CLC and D21 believe that Senator McCain is now trying to exploit a “loophole” in that system, isn’t he violating at least the “spirit” of the law, and doesn’t his current effort to withdraw from his public-funding commitment seek to “circumvent the rules”?"]

Regardless of whether McCain is doing something nefarious -- whether he's violating the spirit or letter or intent or a law, his assertions have raised the type of questions that the Campaign Legal Center and Democracy 21 usually jump into in earnest. Indeed, both groups have been vocal in urging Barack Obama to abide by the pledge he made last year to enter into the public financing system for the general election provided his opponent did so.

A spokesperson at Democracy 21 said: "We have not put out any statements."

Dave Vance, at the Campaign Legal Center, acknowledged the perceptual pressure his organization faced. Its president, Trevor Potter, is McCain's general counsel. Mr. Potter has taken a leave of absence from the group, although he "might be talking to people on behalf of fundraising," Vance said. As for McCain, "he happens to be on the same page as us for reasons for political expediency right now."

I asked Vance whether the CLC would hesitate to take a shot at McCain if he violated any of the CLC's principles.

"No," he said.

In truth, the matter is complex and turns on fairly obscure points of law that the CLC and Democracy 21 usually wouldn't be expected to master, much less to advocate for. But it's no doubt a cautionary tale for them: their critics will be watching how they respond to McCain's every interaction with campaign finance.

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Comments (9)

Marc's credulousness is endless.

McCain is a fraud. He says one things and does something totally different. A Double Talk Express for sure! He has no credibility on campaign finance. It is very clear that he got himself signed up for public financing for the primaries.

As noted, Trevor Potter is both the President of CLC and McCain's counsel of the moment. He is trying to get McCain out public financing by using strained and lawyerly arguments (McCain did not encumber any of the public funds in the loan deal) that he and CLC and others would condemn (and have condemned) if they came from others.

No mention here of Saint Barack's views on public financing once he discovered he could raise more money privately than the GOP nominee.

If you were Obama, and you saw the hair splitting that McCain is in the midst of, would you trust him to adhere to any agreement? (And Obama's pledge is to negotiate an agreement, not jump right into public funding.)

If McCain is willing to dodge his own law, why wouldn't he put Mr. Potter on finding ways to dodge the agreement, or even putting loopholes in the agreement for later exploitation? The devil is always in the details, and McCain now has a track record.

Sorry, but McCain's credibility on this issue is toast.

Sorry people but McCain was never IN public financing to begin with. He asked that funds be cleared for him in case he wanted to take them but none had actually been paid to him.

Until you actually physically take one cent you are still not in the system. That is why it is important that no money was encumbered. There are no laws regarding loans other than to say they cannot be used as colatteral - which it wasn't.

thanks for the post. i hope to listen some more.
Best regards from Sebbi

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