I just finished reading
Vanity Fair's piece on Jack Abramoff, and while it's certainly devastating for Republicans - notably Bob Ney, Tom DeLay, and Newt Gingrich, among others - the article still maintains that "Democrats did it too."
There are just a few throwaway paragraphs in the article relating to Democrats, with no real details about their alleged connections to Abramoff. For example:
"Most lobbyists meet with a committee chairman, staff, a few members," Abramoff recalls. "We'd meet with the whole leadership of the House and Senate, the entire committee on both sides, then create a roster of who might ideologically support the idea and get them in the war."
And:
Democrats, too, mainly in the Senate, could do Abramoff favors, and, while they may have abhorred his politics, his money still smelled good. They got more than a million dollars.
Who are these Democrats taking "more than a million dollars" of money that "smelled good?" Vanity Fair gets it right on personal contributions (Democrats did not receive a penny of Abramoff's political donations) but continues to muddy the water by noting that Democrats took money from Abramoff's clients:
Democrats insist that the Abramoff scandal is strictly a Republican affair. Of the more than $200,000 he gave away of his personal money, not a dime went to the Democrats. He always stipulated that his lobbying activities accord with his staunchly conservative beliefs. But Democrats received money from Abramoff's tribal clients, including: Senate minority leader Harry Reid of Nevada ($30,500); Senator Byron Dorgan of North Dakota ($28,000); Senator Tom Harkin of Iowa ($14,500); and Representative Patrick Kennedy of Rhode Island ($31,000).
That's very misleading. It's common knowledge that Indian tribes have traditionally donated to Democrats - Vanity Fair even acknowledges this in their article:
Abramoff quickly brought in clients such as the government of Pakistan and, most important, the Northern Mariana Islands, an American territory in the Pacific whose exemption from certain American labor laws — factories there could pay their workers a pittance but still label their products "Made in the U.S.A." — was for Abramoff a classic case of free enterprise at work. So, too, he felt, were the Indian reservations. The Indians had always been Democrats, for Democrats were more sensitive to their social-welfare needs.
Vanity Fair mentions that Abramoff "promptly made (the tribes') agenda mesh with that of the conservatives," but as I noted back in January, Bloomberg News reported the important fact that tribes which hired Abramoff dramatically increased their contributions to Republicans while maintaining or decreasing their traditional contributions to Democrats:
Bloomberg NewsBetween 2001 and 2004, Abramoff joined with his former partner, Michael Scanlon, and tribal clients to give money to a third of the members of Congress, including former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, according to records of the Federal Election Commission and Internal Revenue Service. At least 171 lawmakers got $1.4 million in campaign donations from the group. Republicans took in most of the money, with 110 lawmakers getting $942,275, or 66 percent of the total.
Of the top 10 political donors among Indian tribes in that period, three are former clients of Abramoff and Scanlon: the Saginaw Chippewa Tribe of Michigan, the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians, and the Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians of California. All three gave most of their donations to Republicans -- by margins of 30 percentage points or more -- while the rest favored Democrats.
(snip)
Abramoff's tribal clients continued to give money to Democrats even after he began representing them, although in smaller percentages than in the past.
The Saginaw Chippewas gave $500,500 to Republicans between 2001 and 2004 and $277,210 to Democrats, according to a review of data compiled by Dwight L. Morris & Associates, a Bristow, Virginia-based company that tracks campaign-finance reports. Between 1997 and 2000, the tribe gave just $158,000 to Republicans and $279,000 to Democrats.
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000103&sid=arVHles5cKJc&refer=us# So I'll ask again - how is it that Democrats are tainted by tribes which gave them
less money after hiring Abramoff? Why does Vanity Fair insist that Abramoff's money "smelled good" to Democrats, when they had been taking similar contributions from Indian tribes for years, and were actually facing a
decrease in those contributions?
This is not a rant about the conservative media - there's plenty of other evidence to support that claim. In fact I think Vanity Fair did quite well with this piece. And if Democrats really were involved in a quid pro quo with Abramoff then of course they should face the same consequences as Republicans.
But Vanity Fair's failure to connect the dots between Democrats, Abramoff, and a decrease in tribal contributions, instead choosing to throw out the ambiguous claim that "Democrats did it too," is just plain lazy. I guess we'll just have to wait and see who gets indicted over this.