"A wise and frugal government which shall restrain men
from injuring one another, which shall leave them otherwise free to regulate their own pursuits of industry and improvement, and shall not take from the mouth of labor the bread it has earned. This is the sum of good government."
(Thomas Jefferson)


Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Herman Cain And Mitt Romney Used Campaign Funds To Enrich Themselves And Their Associates

This is what candidates like Hermain Cain are doing with their donations?  Buying up their own books?  Did Cain get in this race to sell books and make money?  Something about using your campaign funds to buy your own books goes against what most people would expect when they donate to a candidate.

Over the past several months, businessman Herman Cain has spent tens of thousands of dollars in campaign cash on his own books and pamphlets, multiple outlets reported on Tuesday. The money -- which went to Cain's company T.H.E New Voice -- represented a significant percentage of the total funds raised by his campaign. ...
But the move is still not particularly surprising. Cain may be the most flagrant abuser of the practice -- his schedule contains a relatively equal mix of campaign events and stops on his book tour.
In the past few days we have discovered that Herman Cane may not be the most honest man on the stage from his spin of his time as an intern with the Navy, to his time at Godfather Pizza, to his comments about the electrified fence flip flopping all over the place, to now using campaign funds to buy his books to send them up the charts to make more money.

This using campaign dollars or PAC funds for private use has always driven me up a wall.  That was one huge complaint I had about Palin using her PAC like a slush fund for herself and her family.  People don't send money to a candidate for a campaign for the candidate to use for them and their friends to increase their wealth, they donate so the candidate has money to run a campaign.  No wonder Cain doesn't have much money to show for fundraising as he uses the funds for personal enrichment.  Yet this man wants to be President and calls himself a conservative?  Give me a break!

Romney is even worse with his campaign dollars hiring his son's firm and using planes of donors at will for no cost.  Looks like Romney is not self-financing this campaign but relying on dollars from Wall Street.  Do we really want another President who uses Wall Street dollars to fund their campaign?  I certainly don't.

This new SEC rule that state elected officials for federal office cannot take donations from fund managers on Wall Street which applies to Perry is great because he can stand on stage and say he takes no large money donations (limited to $300) from the Wall Street funds managers because he is the Governor of Texas who overseas investments by the State of Texas.  He is also frugal with his campaign dollars as anyone can see who has watched his campaigns.

Want to know why so many people are supporting Cain?  Have they not bothered to check his background? This is just one more item where he uses the system on the edge but it sure smells.  Same with Romney.  Do we want the Republican candidate for President to be someone who skirts the rules while a candidate because we have seen what happens as President for the last 2 1/2 years.  I know I don't and sincerely hope there are a lot of people in the Republican Party who agree.

stein@huffingtonpost.comHerman Cain And Mitt Romney Used Campaign Funds To Enrich Themselves And Their Associates
Herman Cain Mitt Romney
First Posted: 10/18/11 12:30 PM ET Updated: 10/18/11 04:56 PM ET  
WASHINGTON -- Over the past several months, businessman Herman Cain has spent tens of thousands of dollars in campaign cash on his own books and pamphlets, multiple outlets reported on Tuesday. The money -- which went to Cain's company T.H.E New Voice -- represented a significant percentage of the total funds raised by his campaign. 
Cain's use of his presidential campaign as a means of personal enrichment has already attracted the attention of watchdog groups, which find his behavior troubling. David Donnelly, national campaigns director of the Public Campaign Action Fund, argued that it could represent a Federal Election Commission violation, since Cain would personally profit by driving his book up the bestseller list. 
But the move is still not particularly surprising. Cain may be the most flagrant abuser of the practice -- his schedule contains a relatively equal mix of campaign events and stops on his book tour -- but he is hardly the only one. In late September, the Washington Post reported that fellow Republican presidential candidate Newt Gingrich was intertwining his campaign activities with promotional stops for his and his wife's books. 
Senator Scott Brown (R-Mass.), like Cain, petitioned the Federal Election Commission to determine whether or not he could use campaign funds to purchase "up to several thousand copies of the book to be used solely in campaign related activities." Tim Pawlenty, upon dropping out of the presidential race, tried to parlay his time on the campaign trail into a gig on Fox News. He was turned down. 
If campaigns have the potential to become vehicles for candidates to advance themselves financially, far more often they serve as veritable bank accounts for associates or friends of those candidates. Take, for instance, the latest financial disclosure reports for Mitt Romney's presidential campaign. From July 1 to Sept. 30, the former Massachusetts governor paid more than $2.15 million in fees to SJZ LLC, a financial consulting firm that manages the campaign’s fundraising efforts nationwide. 
SJZ LLC was founded by Spencer Zwick, the national finance director for Romney's 2008 campaign and Romney's son Tagg's current business partner at the private equity firm Solamere Capital. That's on top of the more than $666,000 the campaign paid SJZ LLC in the second quarter of the campaign, and the nearly $1 million it received from Romney's Free and Strong America political action committee. (It's worth noting that SJZ has done political work for other campaigns in the past. Between March 2009 and January 2011, for example, it was paid $1.4 million by Meg Whitman's failed gubernatorial campaign in California.) 
Zwick wasn't the only Solamere official to be on the receiving end of Romney's presidential campaign funds. John Miller, who is Romney's National Finance Co-Chairman and an operating partner at Solamere, is also the Chief Executive Officer of JR Miller Enterprises, an official at the company confirmed. A JR Miller Enterprises affiliate, JRM-C Management, received a $12,391 check from the Romney presidential campaign to pay for air travel on August 19, 2011. 
In other words: According to the flight manifest, Miller likely rented out his corporate jet for a flight from Utah, where Romney was fundraising at the time, to San Diego where Romney is renovating an oceanfront home. 
That Romney would turn to close associates and his son's business partners for campaign assistance or a trip on a private jet is not unprecedented. President Obama acted similarly when he paid millions of dollars to David Axelrod's political consulting firm during the 2008 campaign.
But, as they were back then, questions have been raised about both the type of relationship resulting from these expenditures and whether it is ethical for candidates to use donor money in this manner. 
"It is not illegal, but it sure doesn't smell right when it comes to politics," said Bob Edgar, chief executive of Common Cause, a national nonprofit advocacy group that first raised concerns about Romney's Solamere connections to the Boston Globe
"They themselves have become wealthy by using Romney's political activities over the past few years," Edgar said. "I think the general public would question: a. what is this all about, and b. How much is Spencer Zwick making off of Romney, both with the equity firm but also continuing to help him in the development area?" 
Read More at Huffington Post

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