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Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Lane3 who wrote (24274)1/14/2004 7:30:36 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793955
 
I went back and reread your post. I don't think I changed your basic thought by clipping the couples. My point was that the people hired to do it, no matter what census is used, will be Government Social Worker types. BS in some type of Social Science. It may have been a lame joke, but that was the intention.



To: Lane3 who wrote (24274)1/14/2004 7:35:17 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793955
 
Sounds like it is "Nudge, nudge, wink, wink," with Bubba.



THE BUBBA FACTOR
NY POST
By DEBORAH ORIN and STEFAN FRIEDMAN


January 14, 2004 -- Wesley Clark's campaign yesterday played the Clinton card and claimed to have "an edge" in getting help from Bill Clinton - while a top Democratic fund-raiser revealed the former president urged him to support Clark.
Any hint of a wink from Clinton is a major political asset in the Democratic race, where Clark is now running second to Howard Dean in pivotal New Hampshire and drawing huge crowds.

Clark - in New York last night for $600,000 in cash bashes and to tour an exhibit with Jesse Jackson - said: "I'm really happy to have so many people from President Clinton's staff who are my personal friends and are helping me."

Clinton's spokesman said he won't endorse anyone "until a nominee is chosen," but Texas fundraiser Jess Hay said Clinton urged him to help Clark, so he set up a $300,000 cash bash.

"We were talking one day and [Clinton] encouraged me to take a look at Clark and to discuss the possibility with [Clark chairman] Eli Segal of really getting involved in the campaign," Hay told The Post.

"[Clinton] initiated the conversation about Clark . . . He didn't endorse him, but said that he was a very able and smart man. He just thinks [Clark] is a top talent and encouraged me and others in Texas to take a good look," Hay added.

Hay, a former national finance chair for the Democratic National Committee, said Clinton called him in late November or early December.



Spokesman Jim Kennedy said Clinton gave similar help to other wannabes and "in no way has he singled out or treated any particular candidate differently."

But last fall, Clinton did cite his wife, Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-N.Y.), and Clark as the Democratic Party's two "stars."

Clark backers cited Hay yesterday on a conference call with reporters where they listed all the ex-Clinton staffers now pro-Clark.

Campaign chair Segal said those "personal" ties have "probably given us an edge" with the former president. "[Clinton] has been as helpful as he could be for us."

But during the call, Mickey Kantor - once Clinton's campaign chief and now a Clark backer - cautioned: "President Clinton is not going to endorse anyone until we have a putative nominee."

Despite Clinton's denials, many Democratic veterans say they believe he wants Clark to beat Dean for the nomination to keep control of the party machinery in the hands of his pals.



NEW YORK POST



To: Lane3 who wrote (24274)1/14/2004 8:26:42 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793955
 
We don't have to argue about the NY Post. We KNOW it's biased! But Jesse deserves the roasting.



JESSE'S HIJINKS

Kenneth R. Timmerman, author of "Preachers of Hate: Islam and the War on America," is a senior writer for Insight magazine.


January 14, 2004 -- Yesterday, self-appointed civil- rights activist Jesse Jackson began his seventh annual "Wall Street Project" conference, a fund-raising extravaganza intended to put on display the dazzling array of Jackson's corporate sponsors and shakedown victims.
Unlike earlier years, however, this year's event is turning out to be less a show of force than a demonstration of Jackson's waning influence.

During the Clinton years, Jackson could count on keynote speeches from the Rainmaker-in-Chief and top cabinet members, whose blessings translated into millions of dollars in income for Jackson's supposedly nonprofit enterprises. This year, he's glad he could attract the former first lady, now the junior senator from New York. It's not certain how many big corporate donors Hillary will attract.

Jackson still has his friends, and his backers. This year, as last, Time Warner will be a major sponsor, hosting the opening reception and two workshops. Jackson has long had a friend at TimeWarner's CNN, which hosted his weekly talk show, "Both Sides with Jesse Jackson," shortly before the 2000 elections. Perhaps they are thinking of a remake, just in time for this year's open season on George W. Bush.

One thing Jackson has understood with the savvy of the former street operator he is: Corporate America is easily aroused to guilt, and is willing to pay big money to assuage it. In recent years, Jackson has focused on two industries and milked them for millions of dollars in contributions to his Citizenship Education Fund and Rainbow PUSH Coalition: the telecoms, and the consumer banking and brokerage industry.

Both industries fit Jackson's bill as potential shakedown victims. Operating nationwide, they serve large numbers of consumers, including those in traditionally minority communities. That gives Jackson leverage for his satisfy-my-demands-or-I'll-boycott technique.

Victims have included telecoms SBC Ameritech, Verizon, AT&T and GTE, brokerages such as Merrill Lynch, Lehman Brothers and Solomon Smith Barney and banks such as Citicorp and Bank of America.



These days, Jackson no longer needs to rely on the Blackstone Rangers to enforce his threats, the infamous Chicago street gang whose close ties to Jackson I exposed in my book "Shakedown." (Jackson's half-brother, Noah Robinson, is serving multiple life-sentences for drug-trafficking, murder-for-hire and racketeering in connection with gang-related activities, and was Jackson's business partner in his early Chicago days.)

Instead, he invites the authorities with the power to investigate his activities to keynote his conference and embraces them.

Under Clinton, Jackson hosted Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin, whose portfolio included the Internal Revenue Service, which failed to investigate alleged financial improprieties by Jackson and his groups. He also invited New York State Comptroller Carl McCall, and later stumped for his ill-fated gubernatorial campaign.

McCall sat on the compensation committee of the New York Stock Exchange when it awarded $140 million compensation packages to former chairman Richard Grasso and invited Jackson to ring the closing bell. In 2000, the exchange gave Jackson $194,634, tax records show. With McCall and Grasso gone, so went the favors.

Following the revelations in "Shakedown" and pressure from conservative groups, Jackson's flagship Citizenship Education Fund showed a deficit for the first time in 2002, as Jackson's victims got wise to his act.

But Jackson never gives up hope of finding new friends. This year, informed sources tell me, he has asked New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg for a $100,000 contribution. An official with Bloomberg LP's charitable giving division, Chris Taylor, refused to confirm the gift but did not deny it, either. "We don't confirm our corporate giving as a matter of company policy," she said.

Jackson also has invited as keynote speaker New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer, whose office is responsible for regulating charitable corporations operating in the state.

"This has all the appearance of a conflict of interest," says Ken Boehm of the National Legal and Policy Center, a watchdog group.

Jackson's groups present "a dog's breakfast of sloppy accounting," Boehm says. But with Spitzer in Jackson's camp, don't hold your breath for the AG's office to show any zeal in investigating complaints against the good Rev.


NEW YORK POST