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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: American Spirit who wrote (533054)1/31/2004 12:19:01 AM
From: Selectric II  Respond to of 769667
 
Kerry Leads in Lobby Money
Anti-Special-Interest Campaign Contrasts With Funding

By Jim VandeHei
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, January 31, 2004; Page A01
washingtonpost.com

Sen. John F. Kerry (D-Mass.), who has made a fight against corporate special interests a centerpiece of his front-running campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination, has raised more money from paid lobbyists than any other senator over the past 15 years, federal records show.

Kerry, a 19-year veteran of the Senate who fought and won four expensive political campaigns, has received nearly $640,000 from lobbyists, many representing telecommunications and financial companies with business before his committee, according to Federal Election Commission data compiled by the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics.

For his presidential race, Kerry has raised more than $225,000 from lobbyists, better than twice as much as his nearest Democratic rival. Like President Bush, Kerry has also turned to a number of corporate officials and lobbyists to "bundle" contributions from smaller donors, often in sums of $50,000 or more, records provided by his campaign show.

"Senator Kerry has taken individual contributions from lobbyists, but that has not stopped him from fighting against special interests on behalf of average Americans," said Kerry spokeswoman Stephanie Cutter. "If anyone thinks a contribution can buy Kerry's vote, then they are wasting their money."

Kerry on Jan. 19 said he would "happily release any lobbyist meeting I've ever had," but has yet to do so. Cutter said Kerry will not release records until he compiles data on every meeting over the past 19 years, which will be a "pretty lengthy process." Kerry will not release it "piecemeal," she said.

Most members of Congress and presidential candidates turn to corporations and their Washington-based lobbyists for political assistance, most often with fundraising. All of the presidential candidates take money from special interests, including Sen. John Edwards (N.C.), who like Kerry has targeted corporations and lobbyists in his stump speeches. And Bush has far outpaced them all.

Because Kerry has made his fight against "Washington special interests" a new theme of his presidential campaign, campaign rivals and campaign finance watchdogs have accused him of hypocrisy.

Republicans and some Democratic campaigns are compiling information on Kerry's relationship with special interests, anticipating that he could be susceptible to attacks on it.

Retired Army Gen. Wesley K. Clark, a newcomer to national politics, is running a television ad that hits Kerry and others for ties to special interests. "Special interest deals. Promises unkept. Do we really need another Washington politician?" the narrator says in the ad. "A politician won't change the way Washington works."

"John Kerry has been withdrawing money from the special interest bank for his entire career and now -- because it's the popular thing to do -- he wants us to believe that he's going to close the account and go after the people that have funded his political career," said Jay Carson, spokesman for former Vermont governor Howard Dean.

Clark spokesman Matt Bennett said, "We think John Kerry's record speaks for itself."

"The note of reality is he has been brought to you by special interests," said Charles Lewis of the nonpartisan Center for Public Integrity, a watchdog group that has closely studied the senator's relationship with special interests. "It's very hard [for Kerry] to utter this rhetoric without some hollowness to it."

"I think it's harder for someone like Kerry to take on" Bush over special interests "because he's taken money . . . from a lot of the same" corporate sectors, added Larry Noble, executive director of the Center for Responsive Politics, which monitors money in politics. Dean, who has raised more money than Kerry in this campaign, has taken considerably less from lobbyists.



To: American Spirit who wrote (533054)1/31/2004 3:37:10 AM
From: GROUND ZERO™  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769667
 
He has never personally profited from anything he's done unlike the Bushes and Cheney using their connections to get stinking rich

Ah ha!!! The truth comes out... you're just just jealous because those guys have wealth, something seemingly out of reach for you... well, if you stopped all your whining, you could possibly also join the ranks of the wealthy... but you're having too much fun playing the down trodden underdog... well, this is your choice, and something the demohack party has instilled into you all these pitiful years... you know, it's not a crime to get stinking rich, you talk like there's something wrong with being wealthy and using your business network to profit along the way... no wonder you support and protect anti American propaganda... just shameful, just shameful...

GZ



To: American Spirit who wrote (533054)1/31/2004 9:36:06 AM
From: Thomas A Watson  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
john F'ING kerry, two grown daughter and seeks an annulment.

I call that a heart and soul of maggots identification event cue. No wonder spookie is in groveling worship mode.

Such an emotional rape is far worse the the physical rapes of mr. bill.

Was kerry successful in having his darghters become technically classified as bastards???

#reply-18936402

But friction arose again two years later when Kerry, a Catholic, applied to the Washington, D.C., archdiocese to have his marriage to Thorne annulled, even though the couple had two grown daughters.

Thorne "has written a letter of opposition to the archdiocese because she feels the process demeans their relationship and their children," reported the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette in 1997.