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How McCain Is Skirting His Own Spending Caps

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AZBlue Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-08-08 12:14 AM
Original message
How McCain Is Skirting His Own Spending Caps
More hypocrisy and deceit from the "maverick"! So much for the fake outrage over Obama's decision to forgo public funding. We must all do what we can to support Obama or McCain will outspend him and win. I for one can not afford to donate much - but I can participate in organizing fundraisers and volunteer a great amount of my time. Hopefully we can all do at least that much.

When you combine McCain's individual war chest with his party's bankroll, it turns out the Republican nominee has about $90 million currently burning a hole in his pocket, while Obama and the DNC weigh in at a relatively paltry $47 million, or half as much. And even though McCain has agreed to an $84.1 spending limit by accepting public funds--a decision he likes to portray as a principled stand against the corrupting influence of money on politics--at least double that sum will be dropped on his behalf before Election Day thanks to loopholes in the law that allow outside groups to effectively skirt such limits with largely unregulated "soft money" contributions.

Well, that's no longer a theoretical proposition. Starting last weekend, McCain finally saw the first tangible benefits of his joint fundraising account with the RNC--just as moneyed interests unable to donate directly to the senator's taxpayer-sponsored campaign began to reveal how they plan to circumvent spending limits and play an outsized part in the election.

First up: the RNC. On Sunday, OnMessage Inc., a Virginia-based company with Republican ties, rolled out a series of pro-McCain, anti-Obama television ads in the battleground states of Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. The energy-centric campaign--a $3 million RNC buy set to air over 10 days--is a perfect example of how, when it comes to spending, the distinction between McCain and the RNC is pretty much irrelevant. While McCain is "pushing his own party to face climate change," says the ad's announcer, "Barack Obama... just says no to lower gas taxes... no to nuclear... and no to more production." This is exactly the same (misleading) message McCain's campaign delivered in a spot released online late last month. But because McCain "had nothing do with the ads," and the RNC merely funded the spots--it apparently didn't consult on content--they're subject to neither the candidate's $84.1 million spending limit nor the $20 million cap on what the party can spend in coordination with the campaign. In other words, the RNC can invest unlimited sums of money in commercials like this. Given that GOP donors can each contribute $28,500 to the national party--or about $25,000 more than Dems can give directly to Obama--expect to see plenty more On Message-style spots before Election Day. After all, it's not like they're going to sound any different from the ads McCain would air if he could afford to.

Meanwhile, McCain campaign is stepping around federal spending limits by funneling cash through the state and national party machinery--and potentially benefiting from donations to a non-RNC organization that could boost his chances in key states. As the Wall Street Journal reported last Thursday, the Republican Governors' Association, a GOP group unrestrained by federal spending limits because it's designed to elect governors, is now "marketing itself as a home for contributions of unlimited size to help Sen. McCain." "While using a fund... to boost a national candidacy would seem to cross legal restrictions against federal electioneering," as the New York Times wrote this morning,* so far the benefits for McCain seem to outweigh the risks. According to the Journal, the group "has seen a "significant" increase in contributions from individual donors since began mentioning the side effects for Sen. McCain's campaign," doubling its take in the first six months of 2008 to $14 million, compared with the same point in the 2004 election cycle. Currently, Team McCain is soliciting checks of up to $70,100 from each donor--$28,500 for the RNC, $40,000 for a quartet of state parties and $2,300 for the candidate himself. But if the Governors' Association actually works on a local level to boost McCain's bid,* even that ceiling on individual contributions--which is already high enough to ensure that the senator's publicly-financed campaign will raise about half of its money from private sources--would be shattered.

Finally, the well-funded but completely unregulated outside groups known as 527s are beginning to shell out on McCain's behalf. The operatives who bankrolled the Swift Boat attack ads against Sen. John Kerry four years ago are investing in the governors’ kitty. The National Rifle Association plans to spend about $40 million on this year’s presidential campaign, with $15 million of that devoted to portraying Obama as a threat to voters' Second Amendment rights. And just this morning the Christian Defense Coalition launched a new campaign called "Barack Obama: The Abortion President" designed to blunt Obama's attempts to make inroads with evangelicals. All of which boost McCain--without depleting his war chest.

The irony here, of course, is that it was McCain who co-sponsored the 2002 law meant to curtail the influence of wealth on presidential politics by limiting direct donations to the campaigns. Now he's the one's doing everything imaginable to circumvent the very caps he fought to create.

http://www.blog.newsweek.com/blogs/stumper/archive/2008/07/07/for-mccain-money-talks.aspx


Of course, this is hardly front-page news. The media ought to be ashamed of itself this year - they've really outdone themselves in bias and spin.
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NattPang Donating Member (993 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-08-08 12:16 AM
Response to Original message
1. The media lets McCain tell lies right on television,
while the media lies on Obama,
right there on television.

Round and round we go.
Who ends up elected?
Some will soon know.
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AndyTiedye Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-08-08 01:11 AM
Response to Original message
2. It's the Billions of Dollars Worth of FREE AIRTIME From the Networks That Really Sticks it To Us
Whatever they say in those spots will become "news" and be endlessly repeated by the Mighty Slime Machine.
Multiplies their $3M ad buy by 100 or 1000.



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NattPang Donating Member (993 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-08-08 03:50 AM
Response to Reply #2
3. I agree.
Edited on Tue Jul-08-08 03:51 AM by NattPang
That is why Obama opted out
of public financing.
And still,
he won't be able to compete
with the free media that
McCain's base is providing.

I have seen those anti-obama ads
more than I care to,
on cable news shows.

Free publicity
is priceless.

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GoldieAZ49 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-08-08 06:27 AM
Response to Original message
4. The DNC does the same thing as the RNC, they raise money to get their candidates
elected. The DNC has not raised as much money in this election cycle. Why? Maybe because more people are donating directly to Obama?

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AZBlue Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jul-08-08 07:47 PM
Response to Reply #4
5. Probably that and the fact that we had a much longer primary.
So money went to Clinton and other candidates beyond a point when they were already settled on their nominee. We've got 4 months - we can make it up!
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