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Hill transcribes RNC demands for investigation into Obama's alleged "special access" for donors, ignores Bush took practice to the extreme

October 28, 2009 1:27 pm ET — 9 Comments

The Hill's Blog Briefing Room reported that Republican National Committee chairman Michael Steele has called for an investigation "into allegations that President Barack Obama gave top donors special access to the White House," stemming from a "report published in The Washington Times." The Hill reported that Steele likened the practice to that which occurred under President Clinton but ignored that the Bush administration made heavy use of rewarding top political donors with overnight White House stays, policy briefings, trips to Camp David, "friend-raisers," and galas.

Hill blog post hypes Steele's call for an investigation into "special access" for donors

From the October 28 post on The Hill's Blog Briefing Room:

Republicans called for an investigation into allegations that President Barack Obama gave top donors special access to the White House.

The Republican National Committee (RNC) demanded an investigation into a report published in The Washington Times that top donors to the Democratic National Committee (DNC) had been rewarded with access to privileged White House tours, behind-the-scenes briefings and other perks.

RNC Chairman Michael Steele said that the White House had effectively become a "full service resort" during Obama's tenure, likening the alleged access to the benefits former President Bill Clinton had offered to some friends and top donors during his time in office.

"The seriousness of this issue requires an immediate investigation looking into the degree and details of fundraising efforts between the White House and DNC, whether there was any quid pro quo offered to donors, and the names of White House officials who were involved in such activities," Steele said Wednesday in a statement.

He also said that the administration should release the names of any White House visitors who received any such access.

"The White House should also immediately release the names of donors who have accessed these perks or received special briefings from administration officials," Steele said. "Candidate Obama pledged to clean up the muddy waters of Washington, but President Obama has jumped in head first."

Drudge linked to The Hill blog post. On his website, Internet gossip Matt Drudge linked to The Hill's post with the headline, "RNC chairman demands investigation." Above it, Drudge linked to the initial Washington Times report with the headline, "Washington Times: Top donors offered 'wide range of perks' since Obama took office." From the Drudge Report:

hillrnc

Bush administration reportedly gave top GOP donors access to Cheney's energy task force

NY Times: 18 of energy industry's top donors to Republicans advised Cheney's energy task force. According to a March 1, 2002, New York Times report (accessed via Nexis), "[e]ighteen of the energy industry's top 25 financial contributors to the Republican Party advised Vice President Dick Cheney's national energy task force last year, according to interviews and election records." From the Times:

[I]nterviews and task force correspondence demonstrate an apparent correlation between large campaign contributions and access to Mr. Cheney's task force. Of the top 25 energy industry donors to the Republican Party before the November 2000 election, 18 corporations sent executives or representatives to meet with Mr. Cheney, the task force chairman, or members of the task force and its staff. The companies include the Enron Corporation, the Southern Company, the Exelon Corporation, BP, the TXU Corporation, FirstEnergy and Anadarko Petroleum.

Critics of the process said that President Bush and Mr. Cheney were quick to respond to executives from the energy sector not only because of campaign contributions but also because they share the philosophy of the oil patch, where both made fortunes.

"It's this bunch of guys in energy who say, 'Boo! We don't like this,' and the Bush administration says, 'Well, they elected us,' " said Eric Schaeffer, who was chief of regulatory enforcement for the Environmental Protection Agency until his resignation on Wednesday. "This is a natural alliance. The administration didn't need a lot of persuading."

Bush reportedly invited donors to White House, Camp David, fundraisers, galas, and briefings

Bush donors reportedly stayed in White House as overnight guests. A March 10, 2004, Associated Press article (accessed via Nexis) reported, "President Bush played host to dozens of overnight guests at the White House and Camp David last year, from world leaders to some of his most loyal supporters, including friends who double as campaign fund-raisers. ... Bush and first lady Laura Bush have invited at least 270 people to stay at the White House and at least the same number to overnight at the Camp David retreat since coming to Washington in January 2001, according to lists the White House provided The Associated Press." From the article:

Some Bush guests stayed in the Lincoln Bedroom, a historic room that gained fame in the Clinton administration amid allegations that Democrats were rewarding big donors such as Hollywood celebrities Steven Spielberg and Barbra Streisand with accommodations there. In all, the Clinton family invited at least 938 overnight guests to the White House in their first four years.

Bush's criticism of the Clinton fund-raising scandal is one of the reasons the White House identifies guests. In a debate with Vice President Al Gore in October 2000, Bush said: "I believe they've moved that sign, 'The buck stops here,' from the Oval Office desk to 'The buck stops here' on the Lincoln Bedroom. And that's not good for the country."

Bush's overnight guest roster is virtually free of the famous -- pro golfer Ben Crenshaw is the biggest name -- but not of campaign supporters.

At least nine of Bush's biggest fund-raisers appear on the latest list of White House overnight guests, covering June 2002 through December 2003, and-or on the Camp David list, which covers last year. They include:

- Mercer Reynolds, an Ohio financier, former Bush partner in the Texas Rangers baseball team and former ambassador to Switzerland. Reynolds is leading Bush's campaign fund-raising effort. He was a guest at the White House and the Camp David retreat in Maryland's Catoctin Mountains.

- Brad Freeman, a venture capitalist who is leading Bush's California fund-raising effort, has raised at least $200,000 for his re-election campaign and is also a major Republican Party fund-raiser. Freeman stayed at the White House.

- Roland Betts, who raised at least $100,000 for Bush in 2000, was a Bush fraternity brother at Yale and a Texas Rangers partner. Betts stayed at the White House and Camp David.

- William DeWitt, a Bush partner in the oil business and Texas Rangers who has raised at least $200,000 for Bush's re-election effort, stayed at the White House.

- James Francis, who headed the Bush campaign's 2000 team of $100,000-and-up volunteer fund-raisers and was a Bush appointee in Texas when Bush was governor. Francis was a White House guest.

- Joseph O'Neill, an oilman and childhood friend who introduced Bush to Laura Bush and raised at least $100,000 for each of Bush's presidential campaigns, stayed at the White House.

- Colorado Gov. Bill Owens and New York Gov. George Pataki, who each raised at least $200,000 for Bush's re-election campaign, were White House guests.

- James Langdon, who raised at least $100,000 for Bush, is a Washington attorney specializing in international oil and gas transactions. Langdon, whose clients include the Russian oil company Lukoil, is a member of Bush's foreign intelligence advisory board and served on Bush's 2000 presidential transition team on energy policy.

Bush reportedly invited donors to Camp David. According to a January 18, 2003, AP article (accessed via Nexis), "President Bush and first lady Laura Bush have played host to more than 240 guests at Camp David since moving to Washington, inviting a range of friends, family, Republican donors and Cabinet members to stay with them at the presidential retreat." The article said that "Bush's guests also include about a half-dozen of his volunteer campaign fund-raisers, known as the 'pioneers.' ... Other Bush supporters making the overnight list include Gerry Parsky, a Los Angeles venture capitalist who served as chairman of Bush's 2000 election effort in California; and Dee Margo, a Bush donor, Texas insurance executive and leader of the Business Industry Political Action Committee whose wife, Adair, is a friend of Mrs. Bush's."

AP: Bush hosted "friend-raisers" for donors to campaign, RNC. According to an April 26, 2002, AP article (accessed via Nexis), Bush had hosted nearly 20 fundraisers for donors -- which he dubbed "friend-raisers" -- including one for 250 donors in Crawford, Texas. The AP reported: "The 250 donors represented the Republican National Committee's elite, and they've already dug deep. The RNC invited its 'Regents,' donors who have contributed $250,000 over the last two years and who helped carry Bush to the White House. He is counting on them to open their wallets for Republican candidates this year and for his own re-election campaign in 2004."

Washington Post: Top Bush donors met with advisers, Cabinet members in wake of fundraising dinners. A May 15, 2002, Washington Post article (accessed via Nexis) reported that "Republicans shattered the record for a single political fundraiser last night by collecting $33 million at a dinner featuring President Bush," and "major donors received private briefings by Cabinet secretaries and top White House officials." From the article:

The activities are part of a Republican fundraising frenzy less than six months before the advent of a law that will bar the political parties from accepting unlimited checks. Throughout Washington yesterday, major donors received private briefings by Cabinet secretaries and top White House officials.

[...]

Before tucking into their balsamic-glazed tenderloins of beef, top donors were invited to breakfast with Cheney's counselor, Mary Matalin, at the St. Regis Hotel, followed by a meeting with senators and House members. About 70 were rewarded with lunch with Cheney at the Willard Inter-Continental Hotel. Other GOP high rollers heard from Commerce Secretary Donald L. Evans; Education Secretary Roderick R. Paige; Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Christine Todd Whitman; Karl Rove, Bush's senior adviser; and White House political director Ken Mehlman.

Previous administrations also rewarded donors

George H.W. Bush offered perks to donors. In a July 6, 1995, AP article (accessed via Nexis) about Clinton aides defending his administration's "offering presidential dinners and trade junkets to major donors," the AP noted that "[t]he Bush administration offered top donors contributing $92,000 special picture-taking sessions with President Bush, lunch with Vice President Dan Quayle, breakfast with GOP congressional leaders and an invitation to a reception with Cabinet members."

Wash. Times: "Obama-era perks still carry shades of the so-called 'donor maintenance' programs of past administrations." The Washington Times article reported that "veteran Washington observers say the Obama-era perks still carry shades of the so-called 'donor maintenance' programs of past administrations, when Bill Clinton rewarded fundraisers with White House coffees and overnight stays in the Lincoln Bedroom and George W. Bush invited 'Pioneers' to Camp David or his Texas ranch." The nonprofit Texans for Public Justice reported that "[b]y the time of his reelection in November 2004, George W. Bush's campaign committee identified 548 individuals who had achieved Ranger (minimum of $200,000) or Pioneer (minimum of $100,000) status as elite fundraisers for the 2004 reelection effort."

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    • Author by Diosnomeama (October 28, 2009 1:39 pm ET)
      5  
      What's with all this selective amnesia all of a sudden? Forget swine flu, we need an amnesia vaccine.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by aBeck in 10-O-C (October 28, 2009 3:33 pm ET)
      3  
      Welcome to the preview of a several hours of Fox programming frenzy. This story will hit all the bases starting today. My god, this is so predictable.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by MickD (October 28, 2009 3:49 pm ET)
        3  
        They must take turns being the "source." Matt Drudge, here comes your turn in 3...2...1...
        Report Abuse
    • Author by rumpleteasermom (October 28, 2009 5:35 pm ET)
         
      And once again, there is a lesson to be learned by the Rightwingnuts. If you are going to try to vilify the current administration about something they are doing, make sure your guys didn't do the same thing, more, first. Otherwise, you are going to start showing up in dictionaries as the definition of hypocrite.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by truthseeker77 (October 28, 2009 5:40 pm ET)
      1 5
      Obama promised to televise negotiations on health care on C-SPAN so all of us could be aware of what was going on. Then he made a secret deal with the Pharmaceutical industry and kept us in the dark.

      Bush sucked, but I would expect more from Obama.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by libertycop (October 29, 2009 1:19 pm ET)
          2
        Big thumbs up there truthseeker77; but didn't you know that calling Obama on his short comings is a no-no here?(3 thumbs down) That's because the Statist Progressives can't refrain from attacking Bush when defending Obama's short comings.(Neither can Obama for that matter) Oh and don't bother to say you didn't support Bush, because if you call out the dear leader, you are a trolling, teabagging, uneducated, non-intellectual, birther, neo-con, racist who wants poor, sick people to die in the streets and you hate puppies and kittens! (did I cover it all guys?).

        Transparency - FAIL.
        Post partisanship - FAIL.
        Focus Afghanistan - FAIL.
        Stop Unemployment over 8% - FAIL.(didn't expect that one anyway)
        Shovel ready jobs - FAIL.

        "But the Right wing Republicans are standing in his way!"
        As one Re-pubic-an congress member so eloquently put it:
        "We only have 178 seats, we couldn't stop a one car parade."
        Anyone remember?:
        We are not going to pass universal health care with a 50 plus one strategy. We're not going to have a serious, bold energy policy of the sort I proposed yesterday unless you build a working majority. - BHO
        ? Not so much.

        I'm glad the Statist Progressive agenda is meeting with some resistance from within the Democrat Party, it means that there might be hope for a move toward a more Constitutional government and away from this long drift into statism, slim as it might be.

        I just listened to Regan's speech from the 1964 Republican National Convention, he was pulling for Goldwater (who lost by a landslide to LBJ), but the content of that speech is so eerily pertinent to our current political situation. It was as if Ronnie saw the future. Ask yourself the same questions about policy he did. I don't blame the Democrats, I blame anyone who sits by and endures or participates in this movement toward Progressive Statism.

        Progressives support a guy who believes:
        Under my plan of a cap and trade system, electricity rates would necessarily skyrocket
        ??? Oh Yeah I extrapolate that he cares about the poor in this country, the middle class, America in general. Don't you get that? This isn't some right wing clip job, this is what the man said and means in context. Left-wing, right wing, it doesn't matter; Skyrocketing electricity costs for EVERYONE in America. Do you think the ultra rich will be adversely effected; or would this hurt working people and the poor you Progressive Statists claim to care so much about? Did you miss that or do you just not care? Health Care in the dark. Great, we could save costs on health care by closing the hospitals at dusk.
        And once again, there is a lesson to be learned by the Rightwingnuts. If you are going to try to vilify the current administration about something they are doing, make sure your guys didn't do the same thing, more, first. Otherwise, you are going to start showing up in dictionaries as the definition of hypocrite.
        WHAT? If you could put the breaks on this circular logic for a moment, you would see that it doesn't matter when or where it stops, just that it does. So you're not holding Obama to a higher standard of ethics? Really? Just so you can put you finger in "the rights" eye? I thought the "left" were supposed to be the intellectual elite? So I'm correct when I look here and see this isn't really about "truth" "ethics" "honesty" or any other virtuous endeavor, this is about it being someone else's turn in the barrel. If that's the case, I hope FNC keeps on the Dear Leader nice and tight, because the rest of the MSM and the Progressive Statists won't. I hope they hold his feet and the feet of every Progressive Statist in Government to the fire on every move. I'm sure the rest of the MSM and progressives will keep the Right Wing under a watchful eye (right Maddow, Olbermann, Schultz?), but can they can get the viewers/readers?
        Let's see if one Progressive Statist can respond to the issues without bringing up Bush, conservatives, and Republicans or without getting personal. I'm betting against it.
        Report Abuse
    • Author by wzwriter (October 28, 2009 6:09 pm ET)
      1  
      Does Michael Steele realize how foolish he looks every time he opens his stupid piehole?
      Report Abuse
      • Author by apneville (October 28, 2009 7:50 pm ET)
           
        No, unfortunatlely, Mr. Steele obviously doesn't realize how foolish he looks, sounds, and is perceived. I don't think he cares, but what an idiot. I am still shocked, dazed and amazed whenever I read something about him. The BOY is an embarrassment, but I guess he's doing the RNC's bidding and getting paid. Why would he sell his soul to the devil? I wonder if he can look at himself in the mirror?????



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