Deep-Sixing 527s
Jacob Sullum | September 21, 2005, 10:31am
This week the Federal Election Commission sued the Club for Growth, arguing that the group, which supports low taxes and smaller government, should have registered as a political committee and abided by contribution limits during the last election cycle, when it raised $8.5 million through its 527 spinoff. The FEC, which is responding to a complaint from the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, suggests that the club's leaders should consider themselves lucky that the commission did not decide to treat it as a corporation, in which case its political speech would have been entirely illegal.
If the FEC's latest interpretation of the law is upheld, it looks like the 527 "loophole" will be closed. And then politics will be clean, the people's faith in government will be restored, and John McCain will be vindicated--unless people who take an interest in politics find some other sneaky way to criticize public officials without running afoul of the government's speech regulations.
thoreau | September 21, 2005, 10:54am | #
Announcement of Gathering in the DC Area
This is a thread-jack. If you do not cooperate we will unleash the wrath of Allah on your server!....oh, wait, never mind.
Anyway, in light of how successful the other gatherings have been, Mr. Nice Guy and I are looking to have a gathering in the DC area, any weekend from Oct. 28 through mid-December.
Here's how it works:
-If you're interested, contact me. The address is real if you remove the part about spam.
-Let me know which weekends you can meet in the DC area. If you aren't sure of your schedule but want to be on the mailing list for the event, just send me an email and I'll keep you in the loop.
-Most popular weekend wins.
-I'm fairly new to the area, so if you have a suggested venue, preferably near a Metro stop, let me know that too.
I'm thinking an evening, preferably a Saturday, but whatever time works for the most people is what we'll do. Mr. Nice Guy and I will try to organize a trip to the shooting range (in Maryland, not DC, obviously) in the afternoon before the event for those who are interested. Both of us live near Metro stations and can probably take in somebody who wants to crash.
Also, Smacky is coming to DC for a wedding Oct. 14-16. I'm busy that weekend, her schedule with the wedding is kind of busy, and I figure that the shorter notice might not work for those wanting to come from out of town, but if somebody is interested in putting something together, you might want to get in touch with her and see who else is interested.
Evan Williams | September 21, 2005, 10:57am | #
The most absurd thing about all this idiotic election campaign cracking-down is the fact that while, supposedly, this is all an attempt to separate politics from big money, K-street continues to buy favors and influence legislation directly with dollars. For all McCain's and others' self-righteous posturing about the influence of money, the real place where money buys influence is the "fifth branch of government".
Campaign financing is, at best, peripheral to the matter of buying political influence, considering that, no matter who gets elected, they will almost undoubtedly dabble in influence peddling with the K-Street leeches. Spend as much money as you want on getting one or the other idiot beaurocrat elected, but the result will be the same: their influence will be purchased by the lobbyist class.
At the same time, the members of Congress themselves are the true crooks; what's worse, a corporation voluntarily giving a few million of their own dollars to a campaign, or a congressman stealing federal taxpayer dollars and shamelessly funnelling that pork to their home state?
Meanwhile, in this idiot attempt to scratch the surface of financial influence in politics, our constitutional rights are being raped wholesale. Well, I guess it at least makes it
look like they're doing something, eh? Like DOT workers tearing up and repaving a perfectly good road just so they have something to do. Except, here, they're tearing up our constitutional rights, and failing to repave the road.