http://www.huffingtonpost.com/norm-ornstein/culture-of-corruption-th_b_19419.html<snip>
The Jack Abramoff case is providing more than enough evidence of thorough corruption in the system. But now we have another case to underscore the point. Yesterday, Freddie Mac, the giant quasi-public mortgage company, agreed to pay a record $3.8 million fine to the Federal Election Commission to settle charges that it had used its corporate resources to raise $1.7 million in campaign funds at political fundraisers for House Financial Services Chairman Michael Oxley (R-Ohio) and many of his committee Republican colleagues, all while the committee and Congress were considering tough measures against Freddie Mac and its counterpart Fannie Mae. Freddie Mac also contributed an illicit $150,000 to the Republican Governors Association.
Much of the money went to Oxley, and much of the rest-- raised at fundraisers where Oxley was chairman or co-chairman-- went to other Republicans on his committee. In other words, money that was channeled as if it were from Oxley's Leadership PAC. The campaign to raise the money and distribute it-- all while federal law clearly prohibited corporate contributions or resources to be used for that purpose-- was clearly and explicitly designed not just to gain access, something Freddie Mac and its lobbyists and officers had in abundance, but to shape legislation, to deflect tough oversight, to alter public policy. And of course the lawmakers were delighted to go to the fundraisers, get the checks, cash them and spend the money without asking any inconvenient questions about who might be behind it.
The settlement sounds like a lot, but $3.8 million out of Freddie Mac's corporate coffers is chump change. In return, the officers of the company, including its then-chief and its chief lobbyist, get off scot-free, with no further investigation or action in the offiing. We will see one or two days of embarrassing news stories-- this one was on the front page, above the fold, of the Washington Post-- and then the story will fade. No one will go to the slammer or face more serious discomfort for the abuse of the system.
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