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http://www.konformist.com/50reasons/50reasons.htm
50 Reasons Not to Vote for Bush
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Bush's Secret Stash
By Nicholas Confessore, Washington Monthly
Alternet.org, May 14, 2004

Like the natural world, campaign finance is governed by inescapable
laws of physics. One is that what goes up usually keeps going up:
During every presidential election, the two parties manage to raise
more money than they did the last time around. Another is that any
given action rarely produces an equal and opposite reaction. Every
four years, the GOP outraises and outspends the Democratic Party,
usually by tens of millions of dollars.

Until recently, the Democrats could even the scales somewhat by
raising "soft" money, the unlimited contributions from rich
individuals, corporations, and labor unions that flowed to both
parties in roughly equal amounts during the 1990s. But two years ago,
the McCain-Feingold Act prohibited parties from raising soft money, a
goal long sought by liberal newspaper editorialists and good-
government activists. Ever since, the Democratic Party's fundraising
has lagged even farther behind the GOP's than usual.

But last summer, a coterie of labor campaign operatives, liberal
advocacy-group leaders, and old Clinton hands began exploiting one of
McCain-Feingold's loopholes. They organized several groups under
Section 527 of the tax code to raise and spend the soft money which
the Democratic Party no longer could. Scores of wealthy liberals,
among them George Soros, have together given tens of millions of
dollars to these "527s," which have generic names like Americans
Coming Together and Voices for Working Families. And in March and
April, these groups spent a chunk of the money on issue ads attacking
Bush, just as Bush was spending $50 million from his campaign war
chest to attack Kerry. Though Kerry has raised $85 million worth of
the $2,000 and under "hard money" donations permitted under McCain-
Feingold -- a Herculean amount for a Democrat -- Bush has raised more
than twice that. Without help from the 527s, the Kerry campaign would
probably be in big trouble.

The GOP, of course, is well aware of this. Which is why its lawyers
have filed legal challenges with the Federal Election Commission to
get the 527s shut down, charging that this "Democratic shadow party"
represents a "conspiracy" to "illegally" pump soft money into the
presidential race. Such campaign finance groups as Democracy 21, the
Campaign Legal Center, and the Alliance for Better Campaigns -- which
once butted heads with Bush over his opposition to McCain-Feingold --
have joined the battle against this new Democratic weapon, as have
anti-soft money editorial boards at newspapers across the country. In
an editorial titled "Soft Money Slinks Back," The New York Times
inveighed against "political insiders" who were "carving a giant
loophole" in election law, while the Los Angeles Times called upon
the FEC to "issue tough new rules" against the 527s. The Boston Globe
was even more acerbic, raging in April that the commission "has all
but declared itself impotent to act during this election cycle."

Thus chastened, the FEC last month held two days of hearings on the
issue. But a curious thing happened. Instead of coming in for the
kill, the GOP's lawyers who were invited to testify refused to
appear. Why did they pass up an opportunity to potentially cripple
the Kerry campaign, an opportunity for which they had implored the
commission for months? Because the FEC had decided that, as long as
it was trying to figure out what kind of political activities were
legal for 527s, it should also take a look at another category of
organizations, known as "501(c)s." Many well-known groups -- from
AARP to the Nature Conservancy -- are set up under Section 501(c) of
the tax code, and are also allowed to raise and spend donations for
political purposes, including running television "issue ads" that
mention candidates. And such 501(c)s as the National Rifle
Association and the National Right to Life Committee are vital allies
of the GOP; they raise money mostly from their members and use it to
buy ads or direct mail supporting the position of one candidate
(usually the Republican) or attacking the position of another
(usually the Democrat) on issues important to the group. The GOP
lawyers had an obvious interest in not wanting the FEC to do anything
that might cripple these groups' ability to help the party.

But they were also eager to protect a whole other category of 501(c)
s -- one that has garnered little attention from campaign finance
reform groups or reporters covering the 2004 election. Like the
Democratic 527s, these groups have innocuous-sounding names:
Americans for Job Security, for example, and Progress for America.
Like the 527s, these groups are staffed by veteran party operatives
and, in practice, are wholly or primarily devoted to getting their
side's candidates elected. And like the 527s, they may raise and
spend unlimited amounts of soft money on radio and television ads,
direct mail, and voter contact efforts.

There are, however, a few key differences that make 501(c)s a far
more insidious vehicle for soft money. The law does not require that
they disclose how much they spend until well after Election Day.
Worse, they don't have to disclose who their donors are at all. Even
foreign governments can in theory give money, with no questions
asked. No one knows how much the Republican shadow party has raised
or will spend this year. But the tens of millions they spent in 2002
were instrumental in putting the Senate back in GOP hands -- and
there's every possibility they could help push Bush and the
Republicans over the line come November.

They've got issues

One of the peculiarities of Washington's influence industry is that
large parts of it aren't actually in Washington. If you wanted to
learn what issues are important to, say, the American Academy of
Physician Assistants or the National Rural Letter Carriers
Association, you'd have to journey beyond the district line, and in
particular to Alexandria, Va., a small suburb located a few miles
down the Potomac. Not too long ago, Alexandria was a fading
industrial center, its economy kept afloat by tourists and antique-
hunters treading the quaint brick sidewalks of colonial-era Old Town.
But beginning in the early 1990s, hundreds of trade associations --
drawn by the cheap office space, city-subsidized financing, and easy
access to Capitol Hill -- began setting up shop here. So many trade
associations have flocked here during the past decade, in fact, that
they've become the city's second biggest industry, producing almost
as many jobs as the local tech businesses.

One of the recent arrivals is Americans for Job Security, located in
a tidy brick building on the northern border of Alexandria's new
white-collar sprawl. "It's so much cheaper out here than being
downtown," says AJS's president, Michael Dubke, as he greets me at
the front door and leads me into a nondescript conference room. Like
many of its neighbors, AJS is organized as a 501(c)(6), which is to
say a not-for-profit "business league" or trade organization. But as
trade organizations go, it is rather unusual. Not only is the group's
membership -- several hundred individuals, corporations, and other
trade organizations -- secret, but by all appearances, the members
don't share a particular line of business. Despite a budget of
millions of dollars a year, AJS doesn't have the kind of public
relations or policy staff that, say, the Chamber of Commerce does. In
fact, Dubke, a cheerful, clean-cut 33-year-old with the rangy build
of an ex-jock, is AJS's sole employee. The group has no Web site,
puts out no policy briefs or press releases, and does no lobbying on
the Hill.

About the only thing that AJS does is buy television, radio, and
newspaper advertisements -- lots of them. This is a source of pride
for Dubke. "Ninety-five percent of the money that we take in
membership [dues] is spent on our grassroots lobbying," he tells me,
like a discount carpet salesman bragging about his low overhead. "We
spend our money on product." During the hotly contested 2000 race,
widely regarded asa watershed election for issue advertising, AJS
spent about $9 million on political ads. A chunk of the money went
towards attacking Democratic presidential candidate Al Gore for his
prescription-drug plan, with ads airing in such key media markets as
Spokane, Wash., and Tampa, Fla. (All told, according to a study by
the Brennan Center, AJS was the most active outside group supporting
Bush in 2000.) But AJS didn't stick to the presidential race. It also
spent millions of dollars on behalf of Republican candidates in
closely-fought Senate races in Michigan, Nebraska, and Washington.
During the midterm elections two years later, with Democratic control
of the Senate at stake, AJS dumped another $7 million into
advertising, again mostly in key races, notably Minnesota's.

Traditional 501(c) groups run ads on a narrow set of issues important
to their members. This year, for instance, the NRA might run ads
attacking candidates who support extending the ban on assault
weapons, while the Sierra Club might air spots against candidates who
support drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. AJS, by
contrast, is more catholic in its interests. During the last two
election cycles, the group's campaign ads have addressed taxes,
education, tort reform, prescription drugs, immigration, dam removal
in the Pacific Northwest, even federal regulation of drinking water --
 "basically anything we label a 'pro-paycheck' message," Dubke
remarks.

Much like a political party, AJS only seems to lurch into action at
election time, even if one of its many core issues is being debated
in Congress at some other time. Traditional Washington trade
associations expend most of their resources trying to affect the
legislative process, but Dubke sees this as a waste of time. "Our
main purpose is to get these public policy issues out into the
debate," he told me. "I have yet to have somebody tell me when is a
better time to talk about public policy issues" than during campaign
season.

Aside from timing, about the only thing AJS's ads have in common is
that nearly all of them attack Democrats, usually those in tight
races. And although groups running "issue ads" are not supposed to
coordinate with candidates, in at least some cases AJS appeared to do
just that. During 2000, for example, AJS launched a massive ad
campaign in support of embattled incumbent Sen. Spencer Abraham (R-
Mich.). As Newsweek reported that year, funding for the ads came from
the tech industry, which cut checks to AJS at the request of then-
Senate Majority Leader, Trent Lott (R-Miss.), Abraham's mentor. In
2002, the group ran ads in Alaska, where incumbent Republican Sen.
Frank Murkowski was in a tight race with the state's Democratic
lieutenant governor. According to published reports at the time,
AJS's ads followed a conference with Murkowksi's political consultant
and used the same themes that Murkowski's own campaign was employing.

The other shadow party

By all appearances, AJS's main purpose is rather like that of a
Democratic-leaning 527. Just as the 527s collect soft money from
traditionally pro-Democratic interests and spend it to help defeat
Republicans, AJS collects soft money from traditionally pro-
Republican interests and spends it to defeat Democrats -- but without
facing any of the scrutiny the 527s do. Indeed, that's the whole
idea. The Democratic shadow party has received massive press coverage
during the past year, their donors demonized as shady fat cats by
Bush surrogates in the conservative press. Contributors can give to
the Republican 501(c)s, however, with no fear of being outed. Dubke
allows that his donors include corporations, other trade
associations, and individuals, but won't disclose their names (though
a few, including the American Insurance Association and the American
Forest and Paper Association, have gone public with their
involvement). It makes sense that corporations and trade groups that
give to AJS might not want their names to get out. With business on
Capitol Hill, and hence a need to court Democratic members of
Congress, they don't necessarily want to be seen contributing to a
group that might be targeting some of those same Democrats. As Dubke
puts it, "We have the ability to say things that other people might
be afraid to say because they have other agendas and other interests."

Another GOP soft-money conduit is Progress for America, a self-
described "national grassroots organization" that listed zero income
from membership dues on its last tax return. Like many such groups,
it is run by a handful of operatives with a half-degree of separation
from the GOP. Its founder is Tony Feather, the political director of
President Bush's 2000 campaign. Feather's own consulting firm handles
direct-mail and get-out-the-vote contracts for Bush's reelection
effort, the Republican National Committee, and the party's
congressional campaign committees. The former political director of
one of those committees, Chris LaCivita, is now executive director of
PFA. The group's Web site used to describe its purpose as "supporting
Pres. George Walker Bush's agenda for America," but that slogan,
apparently too brazen to pass legal muster, has since been changed;
now PFA supports "a conservative issue agenda that will benefit all
Americans." The group hopes to raise up to $60 million in soft money
this year, and has enlisted the help of some prominent Republicans to
do so, including Bush's campaign manager, chief campaign counsel, and
party chairman. Thus, when Bush's lawyers accuse the Democrats of
organizing a "soft-money conspiracy," they know what they're talking
about.

Other GOP soft-money front groups include the American Taxpayer
Alliance, run by Republican operative Scott Reed, and two groups
chaired by former RNC lawyer Christopher Hellmich, Americans for
Responsible Government and the National Committee for a Responsible
Senate. Then there's the benignly-named United Seniors Association
(USA), which serves as a soft-money slush fund for a single GOP-
friendly industry: pharmaceuticals. USA claims a nationwide network
of more than one million activists, but, just like Progress for
America, listed zero income from membership dues in its most recent
available tax return. USA does, however, have plenty of money on its
hands. During the 2002 elections, with an "unrestricted educational
grant" from the drug industry burning a hole in its pocket, the group
spent roughly $14 million -- the lion's share of its budget -- on ads
defending Republican members of Congress for their votes on a
Medicare prescription-drug bill.

So how much will these groups spend on behalf of the GOP this year?
There's no way to know now, because, unlike 527s, these 501(c)s won't
have to disclose their 2004 fundraising activities until 2005 at the
earliest. But it's a pretty fair guess that they'll give their
Democratic doppelg?er a run for its (soft) money. According to an
investigation by The Washington Monthly, just three of the pro-GOP
groups -- Americans for Job Security, the United Seniors Association,
and the American Taxpayer Alliance -- spent close to $40 million
during 2002. And that was an off-year election. By contrast, the
eight Democratic groups currently being sued by Bush's reelection
campaign have raised about $50 million so far during the 2004
presidential cycle.

Primary colors

To the average person, it might seem that if the Democratic 527s are
a cynical mechanism for evading the ban on soft money, then surely
the GOP-leaning 501(c)s are even more so. How, then, does the
Republican shadow party get away with it? First, while the 527s admit
that their ads are meant to affect elections, the 501(c)s do not.
Instead, they insist that they're running "issue ads" intended merely
to rouse debate about specific issues, not get anyone elected or
defeated. Legally, this is considered "grassroots lobbying," an
activity on which 501(c)s can spend unlimited amounts of money.

Now, the IRS code wisely allows 501(c)s to spend some of their money
on ads meant to affect elections. Otherwise, traditional membership
groups like the NAACP or Concerned Women for America wouldn't be
allowed to make their voices heard on a candidate's position on, say,
voting rights or gay marriage. So the second legal test is whether a
group's "primary purpose" is to affect elections. The Democratic 527s
admit up front that electioneering is their primary purpose; indeed,
that fact is built into the legal definition of a 527. But to merit
501(c) status, the GOP groups must -- and do -- insist that
electioneering is not their primary purpose. Indeed, like most of the
GOP shadow groups, AJS reports on its 2000 returns spending zero
dollars on political activity.

This is a curious claim for a group like AJS to make, considering it
spends 95 percent of its budget on campaign-season ads that mention
candidates. Indeed, were you to compare almost any Democratic 527
spot to one run by the Republican 501(c), you would be hard pressed
to explain why one is intended to influence an election and the other
is not. Following the 2000 elections, University of Wisconsin
political scientist Kenneth Goldstein surveyed the issue-ad campaigns
run by dozens of outside groups. As part of the study, his student
volunteers viewed a series of AJS spots and answered the
question, "In your opinion, is the purpose of the ad to provide
information about or urge action on a bill or issue, or is it to
generate support or opposition for a particular candidate?" They
found without exception that what they had seen fell into the second
category. When I mentioned the study to Mike Dubke, he responded, "I
think that's ridiculous."

So who should decide whether AJS's ads are electioneering (and,
hence, whether AJS's primary purpose is or is not political)?
Legally, it's up to the Internal Revenue Service. But here, the GOP
has yet another advantage. Because when it comes to checking up on
nonprofits, the IRS makes the notoriously lax FEC look like a band of
jackbooted thugs. Given that there are 1.4 million tax-exempt
organizations in the United States, and enough personnel to inspect
about 2,000 of them per year, the chance of a random audit is about
one in 700. In practice, the IRS rarely investigates a nonprofit
unless somebody files a complaint. And even then, privacy concerns
constrain the IRS from revealing whether or not it has opened an
investigation, and indeed whether or not it has come to any judgment.

But even if the taxmen did decide to take a closer look at AJS, it
would still be in little danger of an unfavorable ruling. Since the
IRS was never intended to police elections, the rules governing
political activity by nonprofits are extraordinarily vague. In fact,
there is no bright-line test for deciding whether an activity is
political in nature or whether a 501(c) organization is "primarily"
engaged in electioneering activities, and thus in violation of its
tax status. Instead, IRS auditors judge organizations' activities on
more than a dozen criteria and decide whether or not all the "facts
and circumstances" of those activities taken together "tend to show"
a violation. In other words, the process is completely subjective.

Not surprisingly, this subjectivity makes the auditing process
vulnerable to political pressure. And since taking control of
Congress in 1995, the GOP has done its best to frighten the IRS away
from snooping around. In 1998, Senate Republicans, hoping to
galvanize the anti-tax vote for the upcoming elections, staged an
elaborate series of hearings featuring horror stories of abusive
behavior by IRS agents. A review by the General Accounting Office
would later conclude that "no evidence was found of systematic abuses
by agents." But by then Congress had passed legislation that
hamstrung the agency's enforcement efforts. "IRS audit activity fell
off dramatically across the board" after the hearings, notes Marcus
Owens, a former director of the IRS's Exempt Organizations
Division. "While it has recovered somewhat for individuals and
corporations, it has not recovered for tax-exempt organizations."

When the IRS does try to step up to the plate, the agency usually
gets smacked down. During the late-1990s, the IRS decided to revoke
the tax exemption of a charity run by former Republican congressman
Newt Gingrich, after finding that Gingrich had used it as a slush
fund for his political action committee. But later, under pressure
from a GOP member of Congress, the IRS reopened the case and restored
the group's tax exemption.

Cop out

It may not be surprising that, with President Bush in the White House
and Congress run by his fellow Republicans, the IRS isn't going after
the GOP's shadow party. A greater mystery is why the press and
campaign finance groups haven't blown the whistle, even as they pound
away at the Democrats' 527s. One reason is that -- as with most
things -- the GOP "won the early game to define the issue," observes
Simon Rosenberg of the New Democratic Network, a 527 which runs
electioneering ads. "They convinced reporters that this was only
about 527s." Another reason is that reformers in Washington are often
like the drunk who looks for his keys not where he thinks he dropped
them, but under a streetlamp, where the light is better. Because 527s
must disclose their donors and expenditures every quarter, it's
easier for political reporters and watchdog groups to blow the
whistle on them in real time, issuing reports and press releases
about the latest soft-money outrage. The 501(c)s disclose virtually
nothing -- and by the screwy rules of Washington, no data, no
foul. "When it comes to 501(c)s, the information is so sparse that
hardly anyone has ventured into this area," says Craig Holman of
Public Citizen, one of the few groups that tries to keep tabs on 501
(c) political activity.

Holman suggests that a first step towards minimizing this abuse is to
require 501(c)s to be at least as transparent as 527s: They should
disclose their donors and electioneering expenses quarterly, and the
IRS should make that information available on the Web. This
disclosure solution probably makes more sense than what the FEC
seemed to be contemplating in April: Banning all 501(c)s from using
any soft money for any political purpose, a move that might have, for
example, made it impossible for nonprofits to run non-partisan voter
registration drives. Not surprisingly, the FEC has backed off that
idea and now seems inclined to take no action against either 501(c)s
or 527s, at least until after Election Day. That's good news for the
Kerry campaign, though the GOP's campaign of harassment may well have
scared off some liberal donors. But it's great news for the Bush
campaign, since it means that groups like AJS can continue to work
their magic under the radar with far less oversight than Democratic
527s.

Should the Republican shadow party give Bush the extra artillery he
needs to prevail against Kerry, the newspaper editorialists and good-
government activists may someday regret the fact that they decried
the Democratic shadow party while blithely ignoring the Republican
version. Not because it may help get Bush reelected (what do they
care?) but because it will drive the whole soft-money political
economy deeper underground. Should Kerry lose, the Democratic
operatives running 527s may conclude that there's little value in
declaring themselves openly as electioneering outfits. Instead,
they'll likely transmogrify their groups into 501(c)s. Nobody will be
able to see how much money George Soros gave this quarter, or figure
out who sponsored that $500,000 ad campaign in the St. Louis suburbs.
Soft money won't disappear. It will just become invisible.

Additional reporting for this article was provided by Jason Stevenson
and Kathryn Williams.

Nicholas Confessore is an editor of The Washington Monthly.




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directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
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