Tuesday, October 12, 2010

So Proud They Are Anonymous

The NY Times discovers that people are giving millions to Karl Rove's super PAC in order to influence the midterms precisely because they can make anonymous, unlimited donations to Republicans who will write laws to benefit them.

Stoking the flow of dollars has been the guarantee of secrecy afforded by certain nonprofit groups. Mel Sembler, a shopping mall magnate in St. Petersburg, Fla., who is close to the Republican strategist Karl Rove, said wealthy donors had written six- and seven-figure checks to Crossroads GPS, a Rove-backed group that is the most active of the nonprofits started this year. Republicans close to the group said that last week, the group received a check for several million dollars from a single donor, whom they declined to identify.

I think most people are very comfortable giving anonymously,” Mr. Sembler said. “They want to be able to be helpful but not be seen by the public as taking sides.” 

Sure.  Because giving a million dollar to Karl Rove's Super PAC doesn't mean you're taking sides at all.

Republicans involved in Crossroads say the groups owe their fund-raising success to a hope that a Republican Congress would undo some of the Obama administration agenda. But they also credit their fund-raising strategy.

When Mr. Rove and Ed Gillespie, the former Republican chairman, began their efforts last spring, they first helped set up a group called American Crossroads under a tax-code provision that requires the disclosure of donors. It took in several seven-figure contributions from high-profile donors, including Trevor Rees-Jones, president and chief executive of Chief Oil and Gas, and Robert Rowling, chief executive of TRT Holdings.

Then in June, Mr. Rove and Mr. Gillespie helped organize Crossroads GPS under the provision that allows donors to give anonymously. A Republican operative who speaks frequently with Mr. Rove said the public donations, revealed over the summer, were used as “a way to energize others to give large amounts anonymously.”

The operative added, “It has worked like a charm.” 

And that, ladies and gentlemen, is how our democracy works now.  Like a charm, if you're one of the ruling class elites who can give hundreds of thousands or more to make sure you get Republicans to write laws that directly benefit you.  You don't have to say who you are, and you can give as much as you want.

And it's all perfectly legal.

Some are more equal than others.

3 comments:

Lowkey said...

Blergh. A perfect feedback loop: masterfully built and applied Republican shadow slush funds that buy looser campaign finance laws. The Dems can either dive in to this ethical cesspit and become even more corrupt (gag), or continue to get outspent 7 to 1 in perpetuity.

I am zingerless.

Zandar said...

Oh, and in Nevada, a state with a 14%+ unemployment rate, Sharron Angle raised $14 million in the 3rd quarter alone.

$14 million.

How much of that came from in state?

Who knows?

Anonymous said...

"How much of that came from in state?"

It was all grassroots money from individual small donors.

Just like Obama if I recall...

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