Posts Tagged ‘campaign’

No cash, no campaigns

May 18th, 2010 by John Feehery

Enron Complex / Photo credit: Alex (http://budurl.com/nwem)

Originally posted at http://thehill.com/opinion/op-ed/98251-no-cash-no-campaigns

It has become an almost weekly ritual, especially in the Age of Obama.

A major corporation, let’s say Goldman Sachs or British Petroleum, or in days past, Enron or Halliburton, gets into some hot water politically.

The inevitable committee hearings are called, and the major executives of said corporations are brought before the assorted members of Congress and publicly flogged to the satisfaction of the representatives’ staffs and family members and to the titillation of national media.

And as the flogging commences, inevitably, the congressional committees of one side or the other publicly demand representatives return the campaign contributions from the corporations that were publicly flogged.

This same thing happens when a member of Congress gets into legal trouble. It happened to Tom DeLay, to Mark Foley, and to Charlie Rangel and John Murtha. The money they gave to their colleagues is suddenly tainted and must be returned — or else.

The irony is that the campaign committees, usually the ones who are calling for the campaign money to be returned, wouldn’t survive without these campaign contributions.

The Ground Shifted Beneath Them

January 21st, 2009 by John Feehery

The Ground Shifted Beneath Them

 

            “What the cynics fail to understand is that the ground has shifted beneath them — that the stale political arguments that have consumed us for so long no longer apply.”

 

            That was the most significant line from the Obama speech yesterday for Republicans. 

 

            The ground has shifted beneath them.

 

            Five years ago, when I first heard about an ambitious legislator from the Illinois State Senate who wanted to be President, a guy with a strange name whose father was from Africa, I scoffed.  No way that was going to happen I said.

 

            I thought the first African-American President was going to be someone like Colin Powell, not a guy whose middle name was Hussein.

 

            But the ground shifted beneath me.

 

            The reasons Barack Obama won this last election are routinely citied.  He ran a good campaign.  He raised a lot of money.  He gives a great speech.  People hate Republicans and George Bush and they are tired of the Clintons.  John McCain ran a lousy campaign.