GOP Accuses Kerry of Illegally Using Soft Money
NewsMax.com Wires
Wednesday, March 31, 2004
WASHINGTON President Bush's campaign and the GOP on
Wednesday accused Democrat John Kerry's campaign of illegally
coordinating political ads and get-out-the-vote activities with
independent groups.
The Bush campaign and Republican National Committee said they would file a complaint with the Federal Election Commission accusing Kerry and pro-Kerry groups of violating a campaign law that broadly bans the use of "soft money" - corporate, union and unlimited individual donations - to influence federal elections.
The Bush campaign and GOP say that pro-Kerry groups are illegally
spending soft money in the presidential race, and that Kerry's
campaign is illegally coordinating that spending. The groups have
contended they are operating legally.
Groups such as MoveOn.org Voter Fund and Media Fund,
which work on behalf of Democrats but independently of the Kerry
campaign, have been running ads this month criticizing Bush in
several battleground states. Kerry, too, has been airing ads in key
states, but on a much smaller scale.
The coordination complaint is the second the Bush campaign has
filed against the groups.
The campaign in early March asked the FEC to investigate soft-money spending by Media Fund on anti-Bush ads. Media Fund,
using large individual donations to fund its ads, argues its
activities are legal.
When Media Fund and MoveOn ran ads in mid-March, the Bush
campaign called them "bitter partisan groups." The two groups
have helped Democrats match Bush ad for ad in key media markets.
The Republican complaints come as the commission considers
placing broad new limits on soft money spending by tax-exempt
political groups.
Its decision could have the greatest short-term effect on
Democrats, whose party depended more heavily on soft money than the
GOP did before the law banned national party committees from
collecting it.
The Republican Party collects millions of dollars more than the
Democratic Party in limited donations from individuals allowed
under the law. Bush, meanwhile, has raised more than $170 million,
more than twice as much as Kerry has.
Trying to counter those advantages, several Democrat activists
set up partisan groups to spend soft money after the law banned the
parties from doing so in November 2002.
Campaign finance watchdogs often call such groups "shadow
parties" because they have taken on types of spending the parties
used to have soft money to finance, such as get-out-the-vote drives
and political ads.
Republicans have also created such groups, but so far they have
not been as prolific in their efforts as Democrats have.
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