When news broke this week that John McCain would attend a fundraiser in Atlanta that Ralph Reed is helping host, it raised a few eyebrows. After all, McCain helped expose the Jack Abramoff scandal, and Reed was Abramoff’s business partner. Indeed
, as part of the investigation, we learned that Reed and Abramoff teamed up on a money laundering scheme.
Public Citizen’s Craig Holman responded to the news by saying, “[Reed] was involved in money laundering and McCain’s investigation uncovered it. This is a mistake by the McCain campaign. I would be very surprised if he doesn’t cancel this event.”
Republican presidential candidate John McCain so far is ignoring calls from several watchdog groups to cancel an Atlanta fundraiser promoted by Ralph Reed, a longtime friend and business partner of imprisoned lobbyist Jack Abramoff.
Public Citizen, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW), and Campaign Money Watch are urging the Arizona senator to cancel plans for the Aug. 18 fundraiser at the Marriott Marquis in downtown Atlanta and remove Reed from McCain’s Victory 2008 Team.
Pressed for a response, the McCain campaign referred reporters to the RNC, which in turn argued that Reed is not on the official invitation to the Atlanta fundraiser, and is therefore not an actual “host” of the event.
That appears to be true, but it’s leaving out some pertinent details.
The watchdog groups reacted to a “special invitation” Reed sent to friends and political contacts, inviting them to the fundraiser and asking them to contribute to the McCain campaign by sending checks to Reed’s address.
“Attached is a contribution form and a fact sheet that details the event,” Reed wrote. “Please complete the contribution form and return it to me at [address], Duluth, GA 30097. If you select [sic] to use your credit card, you may fax the form to me at [number].”
In the invitation, which was first reported by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Reed also said he had agreed to serve as a member of the McCain Victory 2008 team.
“John McCain also believes that tax cuts work best when tied to spending restraint,” Reed wrote in the e-mail solicitation. “He has a 26-year pro-life voting record and has pledged to appoint conservative judges who will interpret the law, not legislate from the bench.”
As for the notion of McCain, a former champion of campaign-finance reform, accepting help from Reed, CREW’s Melanie Sloan had the right response: “[Reed’s] hypocrisy is legion — now matched only by John McCain’s attending a fundraiser he’s helping host. You just have to wonder who’s the bigger hypocrite.”
It’s a tough call.