Records Link Kerry's Nominations to Donations
NewsMax.com Wires
Friday, Feb. 6, 2004
More: Kerry Blocked Law and Drew Cash
WASHINGTON – At least three times in his Senate career,
Democrat presidential hopeful John Kerry has recommended
individuals for positions at federal home loan banks just before or
after receiving political contributions from the nominees, records
show.
In one case, Kerry wrote to the Federal Housing Finance Board to
urge the reappointment of a candidate just one day before a Kerry
campaign committee received $1,000 from the nominee, the records
show.
"One has nothing to do with the other," said Marvin Siflinger,
who contributed around the time of Kerry's Oct. 1, 1996,
recommendation that he be reappointed for another term to the
board.
Kerry's office, like the nominees, insists the timing of the
donations and the nominations was a coincidence.
"Sen. Kerry recommends dozens of very qualified individuals
each year without regard to their politics or contributions. In
this case each of the individuals were highly qualified for the
jobs they were appointed to and served with distinction,"
spokeswoman Stephanie Cutter said.
'Grateful'
"John Kerry is grateful for their support, and we should be
thanking them for their service, not questioning it. The timing of the contributions was completely circumstantial."
But a longtime government watchdog says it is common for
Washington appointees to donate just before or after they are
nominated.
"This is just business as usual in Washington," said Larry
Noble, the former chief lawyer for the Federal Election Commission
who now heads the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics.
"Kerry is out there saying he is not being part of that game, yet
he is the product of the same money system."
With Kerry more vocally portraying himself on the presidential
campaign trail as an opponent of special-interest money in
Washington, scrutiny of his dealings with donors and special
interests has increased among his rivals and the news media.
'Game'
Noble said that though Kerry long has advocated campaign finance
reform, he also has benefited from the big money system he now
distances himself from on the campaign trail. "It's like a game
where you say the people who support me just want good government,
but the people who support my opponent are special interests," he
said.
When he first ran for the Senate, Kerry promised voters he would
carefully choose nominees on merit.
"I will act as a persistent watchdog over presidential
appointments to ensure that only people of integrity, ability and
commitment hold positions of power in our national government,"
Kerry wrote in a June 1984 fund-raising appeal.
All three of the people Kerry recommended got the positions they
sought on boards of Federal Home Loan Banks in Boston and
New York that provide money for home mortgages.
Kerry's recommendations went to the five-member Federal Housing
Finance Board, the regulatory body that votes on the final
selections. Recommendations come from members of Congress, the
White House and trade associations.
Siflinger, who was a state housing finance official when Kerry
was lieutenant governor of Massachusetts, was first appointed to the
bank board in Boston during President George H.W. Bush's presidency
and in 1996 sought Kerry's help to get reappointed.
"You normally seek the support of prominent people who are
respected. Certainly in this instance I sought the support of
Senator Kerry, and I sought support of other members of the
congressional delegation," Siflinger said in an interview
Thursday.
Siflinger made his first donation to Kerry's Senate campaign
committee in 1995 more than a year before his reappointment,
according to the Federal Election Commission's records. His most recent
donation to Kerry was several weeks ago, Siflinger said.
'Happenstance'
Investment banker Derek Bryson Park says it's "pure
happenstance" that he made a pair of $1,000 donations to Kerry a
month before the senator's Dec. 29, 1998, letter recommending Park
for a position at the Federal Home Loan Bank of New York.
"I got assistance from both ... Democrats and Republicans" in
attaining the bank board post, Park said.
The only political donations Park made to federal candidates
around the period of his appointment were to Kerry, according to
FEC records.
"I've been fortunate to be invited to Senator Kerry's home, and
we've had a number of meals together and get-togethers," said
Park, who got to know Kerry through a longtime supporter of the
senator.
Former congressional staffer Patrick Dober said that "there's
absolutely no relationship" between his $408 donation nearly three
months after Kerry's Oct. 9, 1998, recommendation to the federal
bank board. Kerry's letter praised Dober for having "worked
closely with my office" on "the banking crisis in the early
1990s."
At the time, Dober worked for Boston Capital, a real estate
financing and investment firm co-founded by Kerry supporter Jack
Manning. Manning, who has donated more than $800,000 to the
Democrat causes over the past 14 years, gave $65,000 in 2001 and
2002 to a tax-exempt political group Kerry set up.
Dober says he thinks his $408 for tickets to a Kerry fund-raiser
is the only contribution he's ever made to Kerry.
"There was a fund-raiser for Kerry, and they had James Taylor
and Robin Williams playing," Dober recalled. "My wife and I said
this looks like fun. The tickets were a hundred bucks and a $2
service charge, so my wife and I went with another couple, and I
wrote the check."
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