McCain to rely on Rove protege for opposition research

From time to time, we’ve seen reports about John McCain’s heartfelt intention to run an honorable, above-board campaign, focused on substance. McCain, we’re told, has no appetite for ugly campaigning, nasty attacks, guilt by association, and all of the untoward tactics that have come to dominate every election cycle.

It’s curious, then, that McCain has hired Tim Griffin. Bob Novak reports:

Indicating what lies ahead is the McCain campaign’s plan to bring in Tim Griffin, a protege of Karl Rove, who is a leading practitioner of opposition research — the digging up of derogatory information about political opponents. Although final arrangements have not been pinned down, Griffin would work at the Republican National Committee, as he did during Bush’s 2004 reelection campaign.

Griffin’s name may sound familiar. There’s a good reason for that.

First, Griffin was a key player in the White House’s U.S. Attorney purge scandal.

Second, remember “vote caging”? Griffin sure does.

If you put aside the Republicans’ law-breaking, cynicism, racism, and assault on democracy, caging is fairly clever. They target eligible voters for disenfranchisement, send them mail knowing it’ll be returned, and then use the “caged” mail to limit those voters’ access to the polls. This is particularly easy for the GOP when targeting soldiers — remember, that’s the pro-military party — who can’t check their mailboxes.

What does this have to do with Griffin and the prosecutor purge scandal? Well, Griffin was the research director for the RNC in 2004 and sent a series of confidential emails to Republican Party higher-ups with the suggestive heading “RE: caging.” The emails contained spreadsheets with the heading, “Caging,” with lists of homeless men and soldiers deployed in Iraq.

From the point of view of the ongoing DoJ scandal, perhaps what’s most urgent about the vote-caging claims is that they go a long, long way toward explaining why Karl Rove and Harriet Miers were so determined to get Griffin seated in the Arkansas U.S. Attorney’s office, and to do so without a confirmation hearing. If, as the Justice Department has continued to insist, Griffin was eminently qualified for the position, why did he need to be spared the hearing at all costs? And once it became clear that he would undergo a hearing, why did Griffin sideline himself with the colorful observation that undergoing Senate confirmation would be “like volunteering to stand in front of a firing squad in the middle of a three-ring circus?”

Griffin — who is now in job talks with the Fred Thompson campaign — sure looks like a guy hiding something, and if vote caging is that something, it becomes even more interesting that the White House was pushing him forward.

And now Griffin is going to help McCain out with opposition research. Just another day in the honorable Republican presidential campaign.

Update: Greg Sargent has more, including a reminder of Griffin digging up old footage that wound up in an ad by the Swift Boat Vets.

Griffin tends to describe his own work in fairly bellicose terms. “We think of ourselves as the creators of ammunition in a war,” Griffin once said. “We make the bullets.”

Shit always floats to the top in the GOP.

  • Time for a litle “oppo” to be released on Grampy and the Forrestfire. Or at least to send him a copy and let him know that the day Griffin pulls any crap, McCain gets the hand grenade stuffed in his pants with the pin pulled.

  • Go after Griffin with everything we have. Bring up his BS in the Attorney scandle. Make it where the Repubs are having to defend him instead.

  • Hmmm. When does McCain meet with Senator Clinton to offer her his VP slot?

    Laugh if you must, but then please list for me any good reason why (a) she wouldn’t take it if offered, and (b) that ticket wouldn’t win in a landslide.

    Go ahead. I’ll wait.

  • I don’t understand why the GOP would “cage” soliders when most believe military members favor Republican policies?

  • Oh, Tom…can’t you just imagine the outrage at any possible denigration of poor Mr. McCain’s service record? It would be screamed from the highest tower 24/7 until the election about what assholes the Dems are for daring to say something about Hero McCain.

    I think that would be a bad idea. But that’s just me.

  • #5 – because soldiers are no longer goopers. They have had their eyes opened to just how messed up this admin is, how little they care about them, about what’s happening to them when they return home and are again deployed.

    I doubt the majority of the military favors the goopers these days.

  • I’m confused as to how caging works. How does sending mail disenfranchise voters?

  • Obama is probably a bit worried now. I wonder how long it will take for Griffin to find out about the affair with the rich gal who was 17 years younger, and the subsequent divorce. Or how about the time he called his second wife a cunt, right in front of a bunch of reporters?

    Oh wait, those are McCain’s skeletons.

  • VTIdealist, What they do is send out letters claiming to be for the purpose of address verification. They tell the voter that they need to return the letter signed. If the letter comes back undelivered, or the person fails to sign and return the confirmation, they challenge the voters’ registration. These people then get to fill out a “provisional ballot”, but as we know many of these don’t get counted. Furthermore, they don’t just send out these letters at random. They target poor neighborhoods, black neighborhoods, and Dem registered voters.

  • as I understand the caging premise: mail is sent to addresses for soldiers stationed overseas and for poor or minorities who tend to move often, etc. then when the mail comes back undeliverable or ‘not at this address’, the GOP says “invalid voter” take them off the rolls. Then when the person goes to vote, their name isn’t there, they may or may not be offered a provisional ballot, assuming they don’t just get fed up and leave, and assuming that further challenges to their provisional status don’t prevent their vote from being counted…

  • VTIdealist said:
    I’m confused as to how caging works. How does sending mail disenfranchise voters?

    The Republicans send mail to the addresses listed on the voter’s registration. If the letter is returned, the Republicans use that as proof that the registered voter does not live in the precinct where they are registered, so they are stricken from the voter rolls — the list of registered voters that they check your name against at your polling place. The first time the the voter finds out that they have been removed is when they try to vote — when it’s too late for them to do anything about it.

    I don’t remember what kind of information is listed on voters’ registrations. But quite a few people register as members of one party or another so they can vote in party primaries. So it would be easy for Republicans to focus on registered Democrats. Also, by cross-checking with places like the Dept. of Motor Vehicles, they could find out the registered voter’s race and target African Americans.

    Diabolically clever — but disgusting.

  • Holy crap on a cracker. These people are evil geniuses! I’m always amazed at the number of ways to defraud someone that I would never, ever, in a million years think of. If only they could use their powers for good…

  • Amazing. Here is a man (Griffin) who should be in prison, being called in to help McCain’s campaign. The corruption at the DoJ has worked pretty well for the republicans. I’ll be so glad when we finally get rid of all these cons and bring back some accountability. People like Griffin turn the election process into a sham. The whole RNC operates like a criminal organization…how are these people still allowed to participate in our government. From Ohio to Florida, from the DoJ to the Supreme Court, republicans will do anything to win.

  • I kinda feel like this info is a political ad in and of itself:

    John McCain is NOT a maverick
    John McCain claims he wants to run a respectable and honorable presidential campaign, yet on his campaign staff is Tim Griffin, protege of Karl Rove and a man instrumental to keeping soldiers from being able to vote.
    If John McCain is willing to stifle the votes of American soldiers, what is he willing to do stifle the votes of ordinary American citizens? We don’t know, but Tim Griffin does, and soon John McCain will know as well.
    John McCain is NOT a maverick. John McCain is a Republican.

  • This moves seems to dovetail nicely with the posting from CB a couple of days ago.

    Last summer, Mark McKinnon, the former chief media adviser to George W. Bush, and now a top aide to John McCain’s presidential campaign, admitted that he liked Barack Obama so much, he didn’t want to work on the campaign running against Obama and he wouldn’t create negative ads against the Illinois senator if he became the Democratic nominee.

    Here’s the permalink.

    http://www.thecarpetbaggerreport.com/archives/15603.html

  • It is not too much to ask that we vet a presidential candidate. A candidate for junior FBI officer is checked out for his/her associations. What do the late John Gotti and Barack Obama have in common? They both utter cries of “guilt by association” (albeit one from the grave). And both have so many, many unsavory associations to cry about.

  • Looks like it’s time to get a head start and do some research on McCain’t. Enquiring minds want to know…..

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