John Edwards: What’s not to like

December 22, 2007

Edwards bundler a lobbyist

Filed under: 2008 Primary, Bundlers, Energy, Ethanol, Lobbyists — is @ 1:15 am

Loyal Edwards Fundraiser Killed Ethanol Initiative In Wisc.

Scott Tyre, a Wisconsin lobbyist who sits on John Edwards’ national finance committee, has worked to kill ethanol mandates in Madison. In fact, Tyre’s own firm, Capitol Navigators, advertises his efforts to tank that bill next to quotes from longtime Edwards loyalists Ed Turlington and Nick Baldick praising Tyre’s “work ethic” and “brain power.”

“Scott is regarded as one of the top contract lobbyists at the Capitol. When it comes crunch time and you need votes as we did during the ethanol mandate debate in the 2005-06 session, Scott was one of the first persons I called for help. His contacts and lobbying skills are certainly one of the reasons we were able to kill the bill in the Senate.”
–Erin Roth, Executive Director of Wisconsin Petroleum Council/Division of the American Petroleum Institute

Tyre is an Edwards bundler, according to Public Citizen.

Edwards has said on the campaign trail that ethanol is one key to moving the country toward energy independence.

snip

But Tyre’s anti-ethanol efforts — his firm has also represented the American Petroleum Institute — contradict Edwards’ campaign trail pitch for expanded production of renewable energy sources. And Edwards, as we all know, slams lobbyists at every diner, community center, debate and school rally. It seems perplexing at best then that he’d have one on his team who is fighting his very policies.

Hotline 12/21/07

December 3, 2007

Edwards vs. lobbyists: A posture, not a principle

Filed under: 2008 Primary, Lobbyists, Negative Campaigning — none @ 10:33 pm

JOHN EDWARDS has launched a Web site, Americabelongstous2008.com, to decry the influence of lobbyists and PACs. On it, he asks Democrats to pledge not to vote for a presidential candidate who has accepted campaign donations from either evil entity. To put it another way, he has asked Democrats to pledge not to vote for Sen. Hillary Clinton.

This is yet another Edwards attempt to disguise self-serving posturing as moral righteousness. (Did anyone believe his claim that he was accepting federal matching funds because it was the moral thing to do and not because Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama were sucking up all the Democratic donor money before he could get to it?)

Edwards’ spiel against the “special interests” is as phony as his Cheshire cat smile. Edwards might not accept lobbyist money, but he accepts money from corporate executives and managers at firms that employ lobbyists. How is that any different from accepting the donations of the contractors (lobbyists) those business people hire to represent them in Washington?

Edwards’s self-serving class warfare rhetoric is getting tiresome. Someone should tell him. Maybe we can hire a lobbyist to do it.

The Union Leader

http://www.unionleader.com/article.aspx?headline=Edwards+vs.+lobbyists%3a+A+posture%2c+not+a+principle&articleId=f251ddb2-6850-48e2-8564-70077d6b5b84

October 5, 2007

Edwards Slams Top Clinton Strategist’s Ties to Blackwater

Filed under: 2008 Primary, Hedge Funds, Lobbyists, Negative Campaigning — none @ 11:44 pm

In a scathing attack, Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards went after front-runner Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., Friday, calling her a “corporate Democrat,” comparing top Clinton campaign strategist Mark Penn to former Bush aide Karl Rove and assailing Penn’s ties to Blackwater USA, the embattled private firm of military contractors accused by the Iraqi government of firing upon and killing 11 unarmed Iraqi civilians last month.

snip: Edwards said that he thinks “it is important for Iowa caucus-goers to understand the choices they have in this election. And it is the reason I continue to say we don’t want to replace a group of corporate Republicans with a group of corporate Democrats. I think it is important for caucus-goers to see this choice.”

In addition to his role as a top campaign consultant to the Clinton campaign, Mark Penn is the worldwide president and CEO of Burson-Marsteller. The firm’s lobbying subsidiary BKSH helped Blackwater’s top executive, Erik Prince, prepare for his congressional testimony this week.

snip: His rhetoric against “corporate Democrats” notwithstanding, Edwards, it should be noted, has his own senior strategist with corporate clients, Harrison Hickman, one of the principals in the Global Strategy Group. Global Strategy Group’s client list (LINK http://www.globalstrategygroup.com/main.cfm?actionId=globalShowStaticContent&screenKey=cmpClients&categoryKey=clientsClientList&s=gsg) includes Lukoil and General Electric, companies that have done work in Iraq; Oxycontin manufacturer Purdue Pharma; and ABC News.

snip: Earlier in the campaign season, Edwards came under fire for having worked for Fortress Investments, a hedge fund tied to offshore tax shelters and subprime lending, practices Edwards has decried. He has redirected part of the $16 million he has invested with Fortress out of a fund that holds ownership in subprime lender Nationstar Mortgage. Edwards also set up a Louisiana Home Rescue Fund to help New Orleans families upon whose homes Nationstar had foreclosed.

ABC News

http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/story?id=3694881&page=1

September 20, 2007

Edwards divests money from tainted lawyer; keeps money he raised

Filed under: 2008 Primary, Bundlers, Lobbyists — none @ 8:22 pm

WASHINGTON (AP) — Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards’ campaign has donated $4,600 to charity that came from a supporter who pleaded guilty this week to a federal conspiracy charge.

Records show William Lerach and members of his law firm contributed about $81,000 to the former North Carolina senator’s campaign during the first six months of the year.

Lerach raised money for Edwards while Lerach was under indictment on charges that his former firm, Milberg Weiss, paid kickbacks to plaintiffs in class action lawsuits.

Edwards sided with unions and consumer groups this year in pressing the Securities and Exchange Commission to intervene in a suit against Wall Street banks on behalf of shareholders represented by Lerach Coughlin.

The Edwards campaign has denied any connection between the contributions from firm members and Edwards’ stance in support of the shareholders.

WWAY TV3

http://www.wwaytv3.com/edwards_divests_money_from_tainted_lawyer_keeps_money_he_raised/09/2007

September 19, 2007

EDWARDS: Some Lobbyists Are Just More Equal Than Others

Filed under: 2008 Primary, Lobbyists, Transparency — none @ 10:45 pm

Still reporting from SEIU’s conference, TAPPED’s Garance Franke-Ruta was amused to hear John Edwards ‘jazzing up’ conventioners for the SEIU’s ‘Lobby Day’. Franke-Ruta blogs: “John Edwards has made it very clear that he thinks lobbyists are the bane of the American political system, and will prevent needed healthcare reform. …The SEIU has worked with: Bond & Co.; Clark & Weinstock; Colling Murphy Swift Hynes Selfridge LLC; Robert Giroux; Jennings Policy Strategies; the Nueva Vista Group; Bill Lynch Associates; and Tighe Patton Armstrong Teasdale. … I seriously doubt that the Edwards campaign has a problem with any of this SEIU activity, either, despite his anti-lobbying stance.”

The National Journal 9/19

http://blogometer.nationaljournal.com/archives/2007/09/919_why_the_tas.html

September 10, 2007

No contributions from lobbyists?

Filed under: 2008 Primary, Bundlers, Lobbyists, PACs, campaign finance — is @ 3:15 pm

John Edwards and Barack Obama have been the most vocal among the Democratic presidential hopefuls in decrying the influence of lobbyists on government, to the point of both men declaring they will not take campaign contributions from federal lobbyists or political action committees.

“It’s time to tell the big corporations and the lobbyists who have been running things for too long that their time is over,” Edwards said last month in New Hampshire. Obama has joined in the condemnation of lobbyist money and influence in politics, running television ads highlighting his stance and earning a standing ovation at the YearlyKos presidential candidate forum in Chicago for attacking New York Hillary Rodham Clinton’s defense of the lobbying sector.

Edwards has gone so far as to publicly challenge his fellow presidential candidates, as well as both the Democratic and Republican parties, to forgo donations from lobbyists. Except for Obama, all have demurred.

But for all the rhetoric, that doesn’t mean the pair aren’t taking money from lobbyists.

snip

Officials with the Edwards and Obama campaign organizations declined to comment publicly on the precise methods they use to detect and deflect donations from lobbyists, which they say they attempt to do before any check hits their bank accounts. But an analysis of FEC filings from the candidates covering financial activity through June 30 reveals that both lean toward a narrow definition of lobbyist contributions.

Both Edwards and Obama have accepted significant amounts in donations from employees of firms that maintain the top 15 federal lobbying practices based on 2006 receipts. Edwards — formerly a highly successful North Carolina trial lawyer who received many campaign contributions from legal professionals during each of his campaigns — accepted approximately $20,000 in donations from self-reported attorneys and staff at Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP, Hogan & Hartson LLP, The PMA Group, DLA Piper, Covington & Burling LLP, and K&L Gates. None was found to be registered as lobbyists with the Senate Office of Public Records.

Edwards’ totals are peanuts, though, compared with those of Obama’s, who also practiced law before entering politics. Obama has received more than $160,000 in contributions from employees at the Akin Gump, Hogan, DLA Piper, and Covington & Burling firms, as well as at Patton Boggs LLP, Dutko Worldwide, and Holland & Knight. Though none of these contributors was registered as lobbyists in 2007, at least 10 were registered as recently as last year.

Contributions such as those are what fog the “no lobbyist money” policy. When individuals work for firms that earn millions each year lobbying the federal government or have themselves built up lobbying practices, even if they aren’t registered as such in the current year, it at least raises the question of whether the donations are entirely divorced from any association with lobbying.

Are the Obama and Edwards pledges mere window-dressing as some critics say, or do they represent a meaningful effort to throttle the influence of lobbyist money?

Congressional Quarterly 9/10/07
http://www.cqpolitics.com/2007/09/the_race_for_president_saying.html

August 26, 2007

John Edwards’ credibility issue

(The Washington Times)

By any number of standards, John Edwards, the one-term Democratic senator from North Carolina, has earned his place at the front of the line of the “not ready for prime time” presidential contenders.

Exhibit A in the “not ready for prime time” indictment concerns his campaign’s over-the-top response to a minor-league leak. Mr. Edwards recently demanded that all Democratic candidates return donations from employees of Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp., which recently purchased the Wall Street Journal. Charles Hurt, Washington bureau chief of Mr. Murdoch’s New York Post, mischievously reported that Mr. Edwards in 2005 had received a $500,000 book advance and $300,000 in expenses from a News Corp.-owned publisher for a fourth-tier coffee-table book that predictably tanked. In a conversation with us, Chris Kofinis, communications director for the Edwards campaign, complained bitterly about the apparent News Corp. leak and repeatedly charged the whole matter was a “right-wing media” attack on his boss. Refusing to release any evidence, the Edwards campaign claimed the Murdoch-tainted $500,000 advance was donated to charities like Habitat for Humanity and — surprise, surprise — College for Everyone, which Mr. Edwards founded.

The Politico newspaper, hardly a right-wing organ (considering The Washington Post alumni who edit it), then reported that Mr. Edwards’ daughter and his deputy campaign manager shared in the $300,000 expenses for the book…

snip: Mr. Edwards, who has $16 million invested with Fortress and who has received more than $150,000 in donations from Fortress employees, learned as early as May that Fortress was involved in Katrina foreclosures. In July, he “suspended” his presidential campaign in order to take a three-day “poverty tour.” The tour began in a New Orleans neighborhood that included a Fortress foreclosure. The poverty tour neared its end in a Cleveland neighborhood featuring three homes scheduled for foreclosure in August. The lender? Fortress.

snip: “I intend to help these” 34 families, Mr. Edwards told the Wall Street Journal. He will either use his own cash to help them, he said, or he will collaborate with a charity that specializes in repairing homes — which sounds very much like Habitat for Humanity. Thus, not only will Mr. Edwards have used Mr. Murdoch’s money to fund his own charity, College for Everyone, which he has used as a constant campaign prop, but Mr. Edwards now seems poised to use the Murdoch money that he allegedly gave to Habitat for Humanity. (The Edwards campaign refuses to release checks or tax returns, which would detail the tax benefits the Edwards family realized by diverting Mr. Murdoch’s money to the candidate’s charity.) Meanwhile, the well-coifed Democratic contender will continue to keep millions invested in Fortress, the offshore tax-haven specialist.

http://washingtontimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070826/EDITORIAL/108260002/1013

August 21, 2007

Democrats’ Purity Primary

Filed under: 2008 Primary, Bundlers, Lobbyists, Transparency — none @ 5:04 pm

snip: John Edwards and Barack Obama won’t take lobbyist money; Hillary Clinton will. Edwards, angling for attention in the purity primary, has kicked things up a notch. He is calling on all Democrats to reject lobbyist contributions, and calling on Obama to join him in that call.

snip: Of course, the folks who would be most delighted with this outcome are lobbyists, the target of relentless haranguing for campaign cash. Of course, it’s not going to happen: Democrats, back in partial power and desperate to keep it, aren’t about to give up a dime from any (legal) source.

And, as you might have guessed from my tone, I don’t think it would much matter if Democrats were to live in The World According to Edwards, who has never taken lobbyist money. Nice symbolism, perhaps, but how does it make candidates any purer to disdain checks from lobbyists while avidly vacuuming up contributions from the various industries they represent?

Edwards is no less tainted by the trial-lawyer money he scoops up by the bucketful than he would be by lobbyist contributions. Obama is no more ethical now than when he was an unknown Senate candidate dutifully calling lobbyists and asking for a check, please.

snip: Indeed, who takes money from lobbyists is the wrong question about an essential subject. Instead, voters who care — and I think voters should care — ought to ask: What is the candidate’s history on campaign finance reform, lobbying and ethics rules, and open government generally? How transparent is the candidate about campaign and personal finances? What steps will he or she take to limit the influence of money during the current campaign?

On these, there are revealing differences among the Democratic front-runners.

Edwards was part of the legislative team working to pass the McCain-Feingold campaign finance law, but lobbying and campaign reform were nowhere near the top of his agenda in the Senate.

During the 2004 campaign, Edwards gave a useful speech outlining his plan to limit lobbyists’ influence. But, unlike the other Democratic candidates, he refused requests to reveal the identities of his big fundraisers. This time around, after considerable prodding, Edwards agreed to release the names of fundraisers — all his fundraisers, with no specifics about how much they had collected. His campaign argues vehemently that it should be praised for this avalanche of information, not faulted. But the candidate knows who has reeled in $1,000 and who raised $100,000. Why shouldn’t voters?

snip: On this issue, Obama leads the pack — I’d say PAC, but he (and Edwards) don’t take their checks, either. He helped pass a far-reaching ethics and campaign finance bill in the Illinois state Senate and made the issue a priority on arriving in Washington. Much to the displeasure of his colleagues, Obama promoted an outside commission to handle Senate ethics complaints. He co-authored the lobbying reform bill awaiting President Bush’s signature and pushed — again to the dismay of some colleagues — to include a provision requiring lawmakers to report the names of their lobbyist-bundlers.

more

The Washington Post

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/21/AR2007082101420.html

August 20, 2007

EDWARDS AGAIN CALLS ON SENATOR OBAMA TO JOIN HIM IN ISSUING LOBBYIST CHALLENGE TO DEMOCRATS

Filed under: 2008 Primary, Lobbyists, Negative Campaigning, Transparency — none @ 2:41 pm

Today, Senator John Edwards once again called upon fellow Democratic presidential candidate Senator Barack Obama to join him in leading an important effort to end the money game in Washington by co-signing letters that will be sent to all Democratic campaign committees urging them to stop accepting federal lobbyist money from this day forward.

Edwards first issued his “lobbyist challenge” to fellow candidates at the YearlyKos Presidential Leadership Forum on August 4, 2007. There, Senator Clinton refused to accept Edwards’ challenge and went on to say that she would continue to accept donations from federal lobbyists.

The text of the letter sent to Senator Obama today is below:

August 20, 2007

Dear Senator Obama,

Last week, I sent you a letter asking you to join me in taking a stand for millions of working and middle-class American families by calling on the Democratic Party to stop accepting campaign contributions from federal lobbyists and help put an end to the money game in Washington once and for all.

more

nhpols.com

http://campaignsandelections.com/nh/releases/index.cfm?ID=3164

August 17, 2007

Edwards fails to get Dems to ban together

John Edwards is hoping to use ethics as a wedge issue to regain some momentum in the Democratic presidential primary.

But it’s a path fraught with perilous contradictions, centering on an issue that many voters have moved to the back burner after kicking out the scandal-ridden Republican majority in Congress last year. “Ethics is not the issue for 2008,” said Peter Hart, a polling expert.

snip: But consider this: He is asking his national party committees to turn down lobbyists’ donations even though he benefited from such “tainted” cash twice before — in his 1998 North Carolina Senate race and in 2004 as Massachusetts Sen. John F. Kerry’s vice presidential running mate.

During Edwards’ maiden campaign in 1998, the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee spent about $1.5 million to help him win, Federal Election Commission records show. Six years later, the Democratic National Committee poured millions into the presidential race to help the Kerry-Edwards ticket. Both committees accepted lobbyist cash at that time.

Even Edwards’ own ban on donations from registered federal lobbyists doesn’t mean that people with a great deal of influence and interest in the legislative process aren’t still fueling his presidential operation.

Sure, they aren’t registered lobbyists. But they do employ them. A case in point: trial lawyers.

more

Politico

http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0807/5423.html

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