http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/news/20070618/a_campaignfunds18.art.htmLawmakers used campaign funds to pay relatives
Some would like to tighten rules on family, payrolls
By Matt Kelley
USA TODAY
WASHINGTON — Seventy-two members of the House of Representatives spent $5.1 million in campaign funds to pay relatives or their relatives' companies or employers during the past six years, a liberal watchdog group says in a report to be released today.
Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) found nearly $3.5 million in campaign payments to relatives during the past three election cycles, from 2001 to 2006. Campaigns paid about $1.6 million to firms owned by or employing the lawmakers or their relatives, the group found.
It is not illegal for federal candidates to pay family members for political work, as long as they are paid fair market value, the Federal Election Commission has ruled. Some would like to change the law because of recent investigations.
Reps. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., and Mike Castle, R-Del., introduced a bill this month that would prohibit congressional candidates from paying their spouses with campaign funds and require campaigns to disclose close relatives on the payroll.
"I think the ban on spouses drawing campaign checks is needed because there's simply been too much abuse of the practice," Schiff says.
The House member cited in the CREW report as spending the most campaign funds on a spouse says she supports that proposal.
Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif., paid her husband's firm, Collins and Day, $285,481 over the past six years, the report says.
Lofgren says her husband, John Marshall Collins, has dissolved the firm, which provided accounting, fundraising and regulatory compliance services.
In addition, Lofgren's campaign paid John Marshall Collins PC, a second company controlled by her husband, $62,705 for rent and office services, the report found.
Campaign records show that neither company received any payments this year.
"It was good, because the work was done right," Lofgren says of her campaign's relationship with Collins and Day. "But people didn't feel comfortable with it. … If you have to use more than two sentences to explain it, that doesn't work."
CREW analyzed campaign-finance reports from 337 House members: Democratic and Republican leaders, as well as chairpersons and ranking members of all committees and subcommittees. Fifty-three paid one or more relatives with campaign funds; eight paid firms owned by or employing relatives; and 11 did both, the report found.
Of those 72 House members, 41 are Republicans and 31 are Democrats.