September 04, 2007
The Democrats'
Immigrant Funny Money
By
Michelle Malkin
Here's a peculiar thing
about the holier-than-thou
Campaign Finance Reform crowd. Whenever the stench
of dirty money starts wafting from
Democrat Party coffers, the clean election lobbyists
are nowhere to be found.
They'll raise hell and
hackles over
American corporate donors. But when it's shady
foreign operators infusing cash into our electoral
system, you'll only hear one sound: the deafening swell
of crickets chirping.
Hillary and Bill Clinton
have declared themselves "shocked" at revelations
about one of the Democrat Party's mysterious,
deep-pocketed bagmen, Hong Kong native Norman Hsu. Hsu,
a prodigious Democrat donor, was arrested last week
after having evaded the law for 15 years over grand
theft swindling charges. Hsu
pleaded no contest to those charges and was supposed
to serve jail time. Instead, he managed to remain a
fugitive while raking in hundreds of thousands of
dollars for Democrat candidates and officeholders—and
posing openly for photographs with the likes of Hillary
Clinton.
According to investigative
blogger Flip Pidot, who delved into public records
and crunched the numbers, Clinton took the lion's share
of political cash ($174,000) from Hsu and his network of
suspected donor-bundlers whose campaign checks dwarfed
their income. New York Attorney General
Andrew Cuomo and New York Governor (and former
Attorney General)
Eliot Spitzer accepted the largest sums of direct
cash from Hsu.
Reports Pidot:
"Among
state parties, campaign committees, and advocacy groups,
the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee topped the
list, with $122,000, though three state Democratic
parties or committees (Tennessee, New York, and New
Jersey) took more from Hsu directly. Of the 32
organizations that took money from Hsu and his
associates, 10 were state Democratic parties and several
others were Democratic campaign committees. The 84
individuals who received money from Hsu and his
associates included 17 gubernatorial candidates, 17
Congressional candidates, 27 Senatorial candidates, and
a variety of statewide and local candidates. All were
Democrats, with the exception of Tom Gallagher,
Florida's former CFO and an unsuccessful primary
challenger to Charlie Crist in the 2006 Governor race.
Including candidate-specific PACs, these individuals
have taken just over $1 million from Hsu's group since
the 2004 cycle. . . . Another 22 organizations received
support from Hsu's network since 2004, primarily
Democratic campaign committees and state Democratic
parties."
[New
Hsu Review: Following [the Rest Of] the Money,
September 3, 2007]
Former President Clinton,
who left
the White House up to his eyeballs in
campaign finance scandals, retreated to Southern
folksy talk when asked about the Hsu scandal over the
weekend.
"You could have knocked
me over with a straw, especially when I heard the L.A.
people had been allegedly looking for him for 15 years
when he was in plain view,"
he told Newsday. [Bill
Clinton 'shocked' Hillary donor was a fugitive,
September 2, 2007]
With a straw? How about a
cluebat?
Funny money? In the party
of Clean Campaigns? No!
The truth smarts like a
snapped thong. Thwack. The straw donor scheme has clear
shades of the Clintons' Chinagate scheme: Dubious
givers. Con artist rainmakers. And disingenuous pleas of
ignorance and shock.
While the campaign finance
reform crowd ducks under the table, there is one
vociferous group making noise. Like clockwork,
Asian-American groups were
first out of the gate protesting public scrutiny of
the foreign donors and whining about profiling. Deja vu
all over again.
"It would be wholly
inappropriate to link this in any way to the '96
campaign cycle investigations, just because both involve
Asian-Americans,"
Lawrence Barcella, a lawyer for Hsu, who is a top donor
to Hillary Clinton and other Democrats, told
Politico.com [Asian-Americans
angry at GOP focus on Hsu, By Ben Smith Aug 31,
2007]
No. It's because both
involve the craven Clintons, a trademark incuriosity
about the backgrounds of big donors and a network of
generous contributors of notably meager means.
Executive director of the
Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund in New
York, [send them
mail] Margaret Fung, a prominent voice who decried
every last newspaper story about convicted campaign
finance felon John Huang during the 1990s, recycled her
old talking points again:
"It links
Norman Hsu and the
Paw family to other
Asian-American donors in previous campaigns, solely
because of their race. It insinuates that
Asian-Americans are more prone to making improper
donations and have been doing this for years. What is
this obsession with Asian-American donors?"
What is this knee-jerk
obsession with crying racism and wallowing in collective
ethnic grievances? It's not just about
"Asian-American" donors. It's about felon and
fugitive donors of a rainbow of races and backgrounds.
It's about the Clintons'—and the Dems'—systemic
corner-cutting, campaign corruption and double
standards.
There is a Chinese saying:
"When you drink water, always think about the source."
Peering into the poisoned
well isn't "racism." It's the duty of a
responsible republic.
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
Michelle Malkin's latest book is "Unhinged:
Exposing Liberals Gone Wild."
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