Like the protagonists populating Oscar Wilde’s farcical play, Obama
administration mouthpiece Josh Earnest now must don a fictitious persona to
escape the burdens of reality and spin the Obama image.
So far, Earnest has dutifully repeated the fraying line that President Obama
remains the most transparent president in U.S. history, even as that talking
point erodes amid the weight of presidential obfuscation.
“I have a responsibility in this job to try to help the president live up to his
commitment to be the most transparent president in history,” Earnest told CNN’s
“Reliable Sources” on Sunday.
This after a line of journalists ripped the president for limiting media access
and spinning information.
ORGANIZING FOR HYPOCRISY? The Obama front group, Organizing for
Action, isn’t helping President Obama’s cracking image as the
Transparency President. |
Perhaps the biggest fissure in the Transparency Presidency myth is the Obama
circle’s “dark money” narrative.
Since the U.S. Supreme Court’s landmark Citizens United ruling expanded the
confines of political speech, the left has been on the warpath against
politically active conservative groups organized under section 501(c) of the
U.S. tax code, skewering organizations that chose not to disclose their donors.
Forget the fact that anonymous speech has been a core protection since the
founding of the United States.Obama’s front group, Organizing for Action, has
been anything but crystal clear about its long list of left-bending, wealthy
donors.
An analysis of OFA’s donor list by the Center for Responsive Politics and the
Sunlight Foundation shows, since the beginning of the 2014 election cycle, 14
donors have written checks of $100,000 or more to the “social welfare”
organization that bears Barack Obama’s name on its website address.
Tracking the players, however, was no easy feat. It took additional technical
and reporting work by the campaign finance watchdogs to “fully background the
donors that OFA identified only by name and home town,” according to the report.
“The information OFA chooses to provide about its contributors falls far short
of what the Federal Election Commission requires of campaign committees,” the
report states. “Among the key missing details: contributors’ employment
information, which helps the public identify the interests behind a politician.”
Kathy Kiely, managing editor of the Washington, D.C.-based Sunlight Foundation,
called OFA’s “disclosure” of donor names “half-baked.” She said Organizing for
Action has made a concession to the president, in keeping with his transparency
image, to disclose, but the liberal group is a long way from daylight.
“You would think, given how outspoken President Obama has been on ‘dark money,’
and that (OFA) grew out of his campaign, that they would go not just a mile but
an extra couple of miles to give information that a campaign committee would
give to the (Federal Election Commission),” Kiely said.
“They are showing just a little ankle so they can claim transparency.”
Organizing for Action, despite its very public support of the Obama legislative
agenda, has adamantly declared it is not a political organization.
One of the worst-kept secrets in politics, to the peril of Obama’s transparency
image, is that OFA is a “dark money” organization.
Viveca Novak, editorial and communications director for the Center for
Responsive Politics, says OFA is disclosing more than it has to under law, and
certainly more than many 501(c) organizations do. But simply releasing names of
donors makes it very difficult to track precisely who is paying the tab, Novak
said.
CRP and the Sunlight Foundation reports finding the donor list on OFA’s website
is a challenge. And the information has, at times, disappeared.
“When we went through the above process two weeks ago, the link to the donor
page produced an error message,” the report states. “After several emails to OFA
, the information reappeared on the page. The episode illustrates the
capriciousness of ‘voluntary’ disclosure. What is given can easily be taken
away.”
OFA did not return Watchdog.org’s request for comment.
[to top of second column] |
Kiely said the organization did not
return multiple requests for comment from the Sunlight Foundation.
None of what “dark money” OFA is
doing is illegal. Watchdog.org’s parent organization, the Franklin
Center for Government and Public Integrity, as a policy, does not
disclose its donor list. So do many other organizations on the right
and the left.
CRP and the Sunlight Foundation are opposed to such practices,
asserting that voters have the right to know whether donors are
influencing the political process.
The issue with OFA, and the man it
advocates for, is the hypocrisy involved.
Asked, “What does the White House have to say about OFA’s lack of
transparency in light of the whole ‘dark money’ debate?” a White
House spokesman advised Watchdog.org to take it up with OFA.
“The biggest hypocrite on the campaign finance issue is Barack
Obama,” said campaign finance law expert Hans von Spakovsky. “He has
led the charge in speech after speech about ‘dark money,’ yet OFA is
one of the biggest recipients of ‘dark money.’”
Von Spakovsky, senior legal fellow at the Washington, D.C.-based
Heritage Foundation’s Edwin Meese III Center for Legal and Judicial
Studies and former member of the Federal Election Commission, said
Obama set the pace for campaign finance hypocrisy in the 2008
presidential campaign. Then-candidate Obama, a U.S. senator from
Illinois, spoke early and often about the urgent need for campaign
finance reform, on his way to becoming the first presidential
candidate in a general election to refuse public campaign financing
since the inception of the post-Watergate finance system.
“In essence, Obama broke the public funding system,” von Spakovsky
said.
Obama’s Republican challenger U.S. Sen. John McCain of Arizona — he
of McCain-Feingold campaign finance reform — stood by public
financing and lost badly in the 2008 election.
The Republicans didn’t make that mistake again.
“You will never again have any presidential candidate of one of the
two major parties accept public financing,” von Spakovsky said. “The
system is broken even though the law is still there.”
For now, OFA’s voluntary disclosure comes with “half-measures that
are not empowering the public to connect the dots and see the whole
picture,” Kiely said.
“We at the Sunlight Foundation are just trying to help the president
fulfill his pledge of transparency, to get the job done for
Organizing for Action,” she said, chuckling. “We don’t mind doing
all of this work, but we think they can do it themselves.
“To quote the president, ‘Yes they can.’”
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M.D. Kittle
Kittle is a 25-year veteran of radio, newspaper and online
journalism. In July 2011, Kittle joined Watchdog.org as bureau chief
for Wisconsin Reporter. He has spent much of the past three years
covering the seismic political changes taking place in the Badger
State. Last year, Kittle joined Watchdog’s national reporting team,
covering everything from energy policy to governmental assaults on
civil rights. Beyond being published in Wisconsin’s daily newspapers
and in multimedia news outlets, Kittle’s work has appeared on Fox
News, and in Human Events, Reason Magazine, Newsmax and Town Hall.
His special investigation into a politically charged John Doe probe,
“Wisconsin’s Secret War,” was the basis of a 2014 documentary on
Glenn Beck’s TheBlaze. Kittle has made several appearances on Fox
News, including “On the Record with Greta Van Susteren. He serves as
weekly politics commentator for Lake 96.1 FM in Lake Geneva, and
WRJN-AM 1400 in Racine. His resume includes multiple awards for
journalism excellence from The Associated Press, Inland Press,
Wisconsin Broadcast Association and other journalism associations.
Contact Kittle at mkittle@watchdog.org.
mkittle@wisconsinreporter.com
608-257-1395
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