McCain’s lobbying mess starts to look even worse

The McCain campaign has already fired four top aides and the man picked to manage the Republican National Convention because they were lobbyists with awkward clients in their past. Complicating matters is Charles Black, McCain’s senior strategist, whose work on behalf of some nefarious international thugs has prompted calls for his resignation.

Today, however, the story manages to get even worse for McCain, as his campaign manager, lobbyist Rick Davis, takes center stage.

The delicate task of writing and enforcing the new conflict-of-interest policy has fallen to Mr. McCain’s campaign manager, Rick Davis, who was himself a lobbyist until he took a leave of absence from his firm, Davis Manafort, two years ago.

In 2005, Mr. Davis was registered as a lobbyist for corporate clients like the telecommunications company Verizon. Under the campaign’s new rules, issued by Mr. Davis on Thursday, lobbyists who are currently registered either for American companies or for foreign governments or businesses cannot be employed by the campaign. They must also disclose their lobbying work even if they are working for Mr. McCain on a part-time, voluntary basis.

But while Mr. Davis took a leave from Davis Manafort in 2006, the company has developed a specialty in recent years in a type of lobbying for which firms do not have to register — namely, representing the interests abroad of foreign politicians and businessmen.

In recent years, the company’s clients have included the richest man in Ukraine and a former premier of that country whose opponents were supported by Mr. McCain. The Washington Post reported in January that Mr. Davis also set up a meeting in Switzerland in 2006 between Mr. McCain and a Russian businessman, who has been barred from entering this country, apparently because of accusations about past ties to organized crime in Russia. That businessman, Oleg Deripaska, has denied such links.

Well, isn’t that clever. McCain’s campaign manager figured out a way to lobby for shady foreign characters without actually registering as a lobbyist.

Wait, it gets worse.

The NYT report added:

The lobbying clout of Mr. Davis, the campaign manager, derives from his longtime Washington connections, which he drew attention to as recently as three years ago.

In January 2005, he apparently pitched executives of Pegasus Capital Advisors, a private investment firm in Cos Cob, Conn., on the idea of putting money into a new firm in which he would be a partner, documents indicate. He told Pegasus Capital’s representatives that experienced “Washington insiders” like him could use their ties to advance the interests of companies seeking federal contracts, according to documents obtained by The New York Times. A spokesman for Pegasus did not respond to a request for comment on Monday.

The proposal never bore fruit. But it came at the same time Mr. Davis was lobbying the Defense Department on behalf of Imagesat, an Israeli company that sells satellite imagery in which Pegasus Capital had invested. He was also then drawing a salary as the part-time president of the Reform Institute, a Washington group Mr. McCain helped found to champion ideals like reducing “the influence of special interests” in politics and government (emphasis added).

Honestly, you just can’t make stuff like this up.

A few other angles to this controversy to keep in mind this afternoon:

* Randy Scheunemann, McCain’s top foreign policy adviser, has worked as a lobbyist for foreign governments, and was a registered foreign agent while working for the McCain campaign.

* MoveOn.org is still taking on the campaign over Charlie Black. Those are some pretty powerful ads.

* Michael Crowley argues that the controversy is taking its toll on the McCain campaign.

* The number of lobbyists either working for McCain, raising money for McCain, or both, is still 115, even after the recent departures.

* And some McCain insiders are wondering how they fell into this mess in the first place.

Some of McCain’s advisers said Monday they are mystified by the new policy, which they said gives Obama an opening to attack their candidate.

“The most interesting thing in every campaign is the self-inflicted wound. This is a great case,” said one GOP fundraiser, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss McCain’s campaign decisions candidly. “When asked to name the 10,000 things people think are the most important issue, this doesn’t make the list.”

Another adviser said: “There’s scratching of heads. What is going on? Why are we doing this?”

It’s true; the McCain gang just walked into this one. They never vetted aides, they never thought to check client lists, and then when confronted, they started purging lobbyists-turned-aides without thinking about the implications.

This isn’t going away.

That’s a shame.

  • Straight talk isn’t so straight, is it? McCain is the McSame as Bush – only older and more prone to ethical scandals. The republican brand is ruined. Thanks W!

  • I feel obligated to observe that were this happening to Obama or Clinton there would be massive coverage in the media. Chris Matthews’ head would be exploding and countless other members of the media would be orgasmic. So many resignations would at a minumum be an indication of a campaign in crisis. Did I miss something?

  • Unless this is advertised prominently to independent voters from now until election time, it’s almost useless information.

    In fact, by getting rid of these guys now … the furor will be over by the time the majority of those on the fence make their final choice; same as with Obama’s renouncement of Wright. (By the way, I’m not equivocating the two cases – one is clearly worse in *my* viewpoint.)

  • When asked to name the 10,000 things people think are the most important issue, this doesn’t make the list

    If that’s true, you have to wonder why Obama spends so much time talking about it. I think most people just put it under the category of corruption or influence from special interests. But CNN has been making the same argument, while suggesting that McCain’s purge is complete. Nothing to look at here. Move along.

  • When asked to name the 10,000 things people think are the most important issue, this doesn’t make the list

    That is almost surely true of the masses, but it totally misses the point.

    First, it is on the list for many opinion leaders.

    Second, themes and memes work in ways that people don’t necessarily recognize or realize consciously. Most people likely wouldn’t list “straight talker” very high, either, in an open-ended survey – they would list jobs, mortgage, health care, schools, crime, Iraq, gas prices, food prices, food safety, etc. Yet McCain has made a campaign out of being the “Maverick.” It matters. And so will this as it almost subliminally erodes McCain’s entire positive identity over time. People simply will stop believing he is Mr. Straight Talk – even if they can’t tell you exectly why.

  • This was likely to happen to anyone who became the Republican nominee. Republicans are so close to lobbyists that the “pure” Republican is almost extinct.

  • If that’s true, you have to wonder why Obama spends so much time talking about it. — Danp
    It’s the hypocrisy, stupid. If McCain wants to talk about lobbyists and special interests, then by all means let’s talk about the tons of shady one he’s been employing.

  • Mark Pencil is right. It wouldn’t matter a lick had McCain not based his entire political persona on being the scourge of the special interests. There are two things potentially fatal to a McCain bid: George Bush and becoming just another politician. Both are essentially the same thing: People hate Republicans. As long as he can keep the party at arm’s length, McCain has a chance. Make him just another Republican and it’s landslide city.

  • And all because the religious right couldn’t handle a Mormon candidate. I betcha lots of them are going to start kicking themselves for that one. Honestly, it never occurred to me that conservatives would be so stupid as to not get Mitt for the job. The guy was straight out of cental casting and really could have given Obama a run for his money.

    And with every story coming out, it looks like McCain doesn’t have ANY safe subjects to talk about. The reformer who’s the most corrupt. The straight shooter who can’t tell the truth. The foreign policy expert who doesn’t know nuthin’ bout no foreign policy. He’s hopeless. And it’s just a matter of time before his pals in the media smell blood and the pecking party beings. If there’s one thing pack animals can’t stand, it’s a loser.

  • People like these lobbyists can give one more of a certain clarity about run-of-the-mill burglars, muggers, and gang members. It’s easier to figure out who the latter are.

  • I think the target here are the Beltway media types. Give them enough evidence that McCain’s not a maverick and a straight talker and maybe, just maybe, one of them will wander away from the cult compound and do some actual unbiased journalism.

    Maybe.

  • The McCain Campaign – the straightest talk money can buy, for the highest bidder.

  • This may not be going away, but it isn’t hanging around long either. With the kind of media pass McSame gets constantly it will be a momentary flareup, and then relegated to the dustbin of forgotten campaign trivia. If, on the other hand, the entire campaign staff is turned upside down, and new people have to be brought in especially under the watchful eye of the astute media (yeah, right) then there might be some fun as they bumble, mumble and stumble.

  • Doubtful, @12,

    Well… Lobbyists are people too, as Mark Penn’s boss so eloquently stated…

  • I think it’s too early to call the election 538-0 for the Democrats, but this does give them a great way to reach across to Republicans.

    Seriously, the conservatives who have hated McCain may have been wrong about many other things, but they were certainly right about him. He is as bad as they made him out to be, if not worse.

    Maybe if enough liberals admit to having been wrong about McCain, more conservatives will admit to having been wrong about the war.

  • I like what I saw on another blog. McCain can be adopted by a Native American tribe and be given the name “Dances with Lobbyists”.

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