Issue of the Week: New John Doe 2 Ruling Lacks Common Sense
In a ruling Friday by retired Appeals Court Judge Gregory Peterson, subpoenas issued in the new John Doe investigation to some conservative groups that supported Gov. Scott Walker and other Republicans in the 2011 and 2012 recalls were halted, according to an unsigned op-ed printed in the Wall Street Journal.
John Doe 2 allegedly is looking at whether Walkers campaign committee and outside groups had illegally coordinated during the recalls. Candidates and independent groups arent allowed to link their campaign messaging, fundraising or strategy. As you may recall, evidence revealed in the first John Doe investigation found that Walkers campaign and his county staff were in communication and were coordinating efforts to further his ambitions. John Doe 2 is looking at a different issue. It is illegal for independent expenditure groups, where billionaires have no limit on what they can contribute, to communicate or coordinate with the candidates campaign. John Doe 2 apparently was looking into whether this type of coordination occurred after Walker became governor and during the recalls. For example, Walkers top campaign advisor, R.J. Johnson, is also the longtime spokesman for Wisconsin Club for Growth, which launched pro-Walker ads immediately after Walker announced his controversial plan to gut public employees bargaining rights in 2011. Overall, Wisconsin Club for Growth spent $9.1 million on recall adsapparently while Johnson was still advising Walker.
The Journal reported that Petersons ruling stated that some of the groups that had been sent subpoenasincluding Friends of Scott Walker, Wisconsin Club for Growth, Wisconsin Manufacturers and Commerce and the Johnson-connected Citizens for a Strong Americadid not commit any violations of campaign finance laws. It seems that Peterson is arguing that because the outside groups didnt directly state Vote for Scott Walker that they didnt coordinate their efforts with his campaign.
It is questionable whether Petersons ruling is even technically correct, but because Wisconsins campaign finance laws are so easily bent in favor of large donors, it might actually be although to many it defies common sense. At the very least, the links between Walker and shadowy political groups should be investigated thoroughlynot stymied because of a technicality.
http://expressmilwaukee.com/article-22506-issue-of-the-week:-new-john-doe-2-ruling-lacks-common-sense.html