Reed, Norquist get subpoenaes from McCain

A month ago, John McCain, as chairman of the Senate Indian Affairs Committee, indicated he wouldn’t use his investigation into Jack Abramoff to target any conservative members of Congress who may have dealt with the corrupt lobbyist.

McCain did not, however, exempt conservative groups with ties to Abramoff.

Organizations headed by two of the best-known figures in conservative political circles, Ralph Reed and Grover Norquist, have been subpoenaed by the Senate Indian Affairs Committee in its long-running probe of GOP lobbyist Jack Abramoff.

The committee is planning to hold its next hearing in the investigation in late June. The Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians, one of Abramoff’s former clients, is expected to be the focus of that hearing, according to sources close to the investigation.

Americans for Tax Reform, for which Norquist serves as president, is refusing to disclose its donor list to the Senate committee, said two officials with the group. Reed’s firm, Century Strategies, is complying with the subpoena. Senate investigators are seeking four years’ worth of records detailing Century Strategies’ business dealings with Abramoff and GOP political consultant Michael Scanlon and entities under their control, said several sources familiar with the issue.

Reed, whose role in the scandal is already affecting his statewide campaign in Georgia, will probably realize sometime soon that his career in elected office has been irreparably damaged. But at least he’s cooperating with the investigation. Norquist is inviting a serious fight with John McCain, who is unlikely to take “no” for an answer.

Keep an eye on this one. It’s going to get ugly.

I dislike most of McCain’s policies. A lot. But I gotta hand it to the guy… he has balls. And principles and scruples and ethics. And an unquestionable committment to his country and to the Constitution. He and maybe Ron Paul are about the only right-wingers I’d call true patriots. McCain already committed to vote NO on the nuclear option, and here he is investigating corrupt right-wing think tanks too. Good for him.

It’s now clear to me why he and Kerry are friends. It’s more than just the Vietnam vet connection. They’re both Navy men: straight-arrow, law-and-order, by-the-book types. I’m wary of McCain winning the 2008 nomination, because he’d give us a hell of a run. Then again, it’d probably be the most enlightening campaign we’ve seen in 40 years, since he’d at least try to run a clean campaign focussed on issues… which would give us room to run the kind of issues-focussed campaign we like to run, with much less risk of getting slimed like Kerry did. So who knows, that could work in our favour, since most Americans agree with the Democrats on the issues anyway.

Last year we had “Battle of the Skull and Bones”. Could 2008 be “Battle of the Navy Vets”? *shrug*

  • I’m wary of McCain winning the 2008 nomination, because he’d give us a hell of a run.

    There is about a 2% chance of McCain winning the GOP nomination.

  • Myself I’m always glad to see the name of reich-wing thug Grover Norquist in the spotlight. The more they learn about him the more they are going to be hip as to what the real Republican agenda is, and it ain’t pretty folks.
    Hey Steve, maybe you could devote some space to educating people about Norquist in case some of them don’t know who he is.

  • Hey Steve, maybe you could devote some space to educating people about Norquist in case some of them don’t know who he is.

    That’s a fair point. Norquist isn’t nearly as well known as he should be. For more background on the uber-lobbyist and his radical worldview, this post and this post might be helpful.

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