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Today's Must Read

Nobody does compromise quite like the Bush administration.

If you're a regular reader of TPM, you're familiar with Hans von Spakovsky and in particular, Spakovsky's remarkable track record at the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division. It is because of that record -- one of ignoring, marginalizing, and intimidating career lawyers in order to institute restrictive voting laws all over the country, a pattern amounting to "institutional sabotage" as one former career attorney there put it -- that Senate Democrats (Barack Obama and Russ Feingold in particular) opposed his nomination to the Federal Election Commission.

Spakovsky was one of four nominees -- two Dems and two GOPers -- to the commission. The other three were uncontroversial. Senate Republicans insisted that all nominees be voted on together, and the Democrats objected: Spakovsky would have to get his own vote. The Republicans refused, and there things have stood for more than four months. Without the necessary number of commissioners, the FEC has essentially shut down.

It is a problem that has a relatively simple solution: if the White House were to submit another nominee, that nominee would more than likely be quickly confirmed without much trouble.

Instead, the Bush administration proposed something different yesterday.

Spakovsky remains a nominee. Instead, the administration has submitted a new nominee to replace the current chairman, David Mason. Mason is one of the only two seated commissioners, and it just so happens that he's been creating a whole lot of trouble for John McCain lately.

In February, the McCain campaign notified the FEC that it was withdrawing from the public financing system for the primary. Although McCain had once opted in, his campaign said that it had never received public funds and so could opt out. The move meant that McCain would not be bound by the $54 million spending limit for the system.

But Mason balked. McCain couldn't just opt out -- the FEC had to approve his request before he could. And Mason also indicated that a tricky bank loan might mean that McCain had locked himself in to the system. That would be disastrous for the campaign, since the Dem nominee would have a tremendous spending advantage through August. So McCain's campaign has continued to spend away, far surpassing the limit already. The Democratic Party has filed a complaint with the FEC and has also taken the matter to court.

And now Mason is getting the boot.

So where's the compromise, exactly? A White House spokeswoman tells The New York Times that Republicans are now willing to have a separate vote for Spakovsky. Whether that actually is the case, we shall see. If so, that means Democrats will have the chance to actually vote down Spakovsky once and for all.

But there is no shortage of cynicism about the White House's move. As Fred Wertheimer of Democracy 21 put it: "The only apparent reason for President Bush to drop Commissioner David Mason at this stage, an FEC candidate he had twice proposed for the Commission, is to prevent him from casting an adverse vote against Senator McCain on important enforcement questions pending at the Commission. The questions deal with Senator McCain's request to withdraw from the presidential primary public financing system and the consequences of a loan the McCain campaign took out and the collateral provided for the loan."


Comments (14)

Good article.

It must be tough being a Republican these days, in particular those honest Republicans who work for the criminals in the White House. But I have no doubts for those fools on the far right, it's going to get worse before it gets better.

Expect huge gains by the Democrats next November in both the house and the senate. Yes, president elect Barack Obama will have long coattails. Furthermore he will approve a special commission to investigate all of Bush's criminal doings and there will not be anything the Republicans can do about it.

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The whole GOP game plan is the minimize the loses. This is a "do nothing" diversion that they hope will keep the FEC frozen until November.

Rules are for little people. Hans Vote Suppressky is perfectly suited to oversee federal laws governing elections because his primary motivation isn't to ensure free and fair elections. His primary motivation is to ensure the GOP wins at all costs.

On the other hand, this little Mason maggot isn't suited to serve on the FEC commission. He thinks GOP candidates like McBush need to "follow the rules". Hasn't he learned anything the last eight years. What was Bush thinking appointing this clown to the commission twice?

Mason out, Vote Supressky in. That's a compromise and good GOPer can live with.

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Expect a lot more of this. The Bush gang has proven time and again that they will rig anything that can't be won legitimately, starting with Bush v. Gore. Rove is secretly working for McCain and trying to poison the well for the next Dem nominee with his media involvement. Everything is rigged, right down to the way Cheney "hunts". He shoots birds that are disabled so that they can't fly far. He's been a guest more than once on Operation Chaos (vote fraud) Limbaugh's show.
I've been hearing today that Operation Chaos was bigger in Rush's mind than in reality. No surprise there. Rush is a legend in his own mind.

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Ummm... this would be a lot easier if Bush were really out of the picture.

Can we please impeach him for the many acts of Treason and High Crimes & Misdemeanors? Please?


ITMFA

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Nobody does compromise quite like the Bush administration.

That is a quote for the books.

Maybe an alternate word for compromise would be Cheney-ise?

We can't impeach him for the many acts of Treason and High Crimes & Misdemeanors... he hasn't had sex with a female intern yet!

Paul also did a good job of pointing out that Von Spakovsky declared victory when the Indiana Voter ID law was upheld by the Supreme Court.

"This decision not only confirms the validity of photo ID laws, but it completely vindicates the Bush Justice Department and refutes those critics who claimed that the department somehow acted improperly when it approved Georgia's photo ID law in 2005," said Hans A. von Spakovsky, a former member of the Federal Election Commission and a former Justice Department official.

The Bush/Cheney cabal knows no shame.

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For Bush, "compromise" has always meant "everybody agrees to do it my way."

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Furthermore he will approve a special commission to investigate all of Bush's criminal doings and there will not be anything the Republicans can do about it.

that's just short of delusional.
The loudest chorus you'll hear from either Dim, in the extremely unlikely event that either one of them actually gets inaugurated, will be "I have no cojones, so let by-gones be by-gones." This will be followed by the full orchestral suite of "We must look ahead, not backwards. We must heal the nation's wounds."

Which worked out so well w/Nixon-Ford, dinnit?

But it's probably moot what any Dim might do, because I am pretty sure the fix is in and Bombin' Johnnie McShame's gonna be #44...

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This is about as blatant as the vote counting in upstate IN last night!!!

I think Spakovsky represents and embodies the worst of the Bush administration, and Bush's continual nominations are as appalling and disgusting a scandal as any of the other obscenities of George W. Bush. It's just as disgusting in its own way as the war in Iraq and the total lack of concern for the poor and (how Spakovskian) disenfranchised. Bush's total arrogance, the gutting of the courts, the elimination of skilled government workers who are then replaced by crackpot functionaries--Spakovsky embodies all of this in one smug, smirking, pudgy little package.

(You might want to change the "Von" in the photo caption to "von," since the "v" is apparently lower case. You do want to be accurate and consistent, don't you?)

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Can anyone explain why it is McConnel and the Republicans who get to decide whether the nominations are voted on individually or as a group?

"Is Bush Trying to Fix McCain's FEC Problem?" That's what the link on TPM to this article said.

It's a hilarious question! Yes.

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