Karl Rove May Yet Face The Music Over Crossroads GPS Campaign Activities
Public Citizen and ProtectOurElections.org are taking aim at the FEC for dropping the ball on Rove's failure to disclose donors.
Earlier this year, FEC Commissioner Ann Ravel was so frustrated by the partisanship within the panel that she took to the op-ed pages of the New York Times to shake her fist at the way her Republican colleagues went out of their way to protect Karl Rove and his shady donors.
In frustration, Ravel invited the groups who brought the FEC complaint to sue them, writing that "unless Public Citizen and ProtectOurElections.org prevail in their lawsuit, there will be no inquiry, and Crossroads GPS will continue to spend millions of anonymous dollars to influence our elections."
Public Citizen and ProtectOurElections.org have now done just that. Last week both organizations along with two individual plaintiffs filed a lawsuit in federal court against the FEC, demanding that they pursue action against Crossroads GPS to force disclosure of their secret donors in compliance with federal election law and the principles of disclosure laid out in the Citizens United ruling by the United States Supreme Court.
There are no guarantees in courtrooms, but the organizations have put forward strong arguments. The complaint rests on the question of what defines "direct political activity" which 501c4 organizations must limit to less than 51 percent of their total spending, versus "advocacy," which is not subject to the same limits. The organizations also point out that FEC's general counsel recommended that the case be pursued, only to see it blocked by naked partisanship by Republican commissioners.
Here's one example of what Crossroads GPS calls "advocacy" and what the rest of us think is "direct political activity." The text of one of the ads they ran against Jack Conway in his race in 2010:
“Obamacare” is taking health care in the wrong direction, and Jack Conway has gone the wrong way, too. Conway endorsed “Obamacare,” with its higher taxes and Medicare cuts, and Conway refused to join thirteen other attorneys general and defend Kentucky from Obama’s health care mandate. “Obamacare” and Jack Conway are taking Kentucky’s health care down the wrong road. Tell Jack Conway: turn around, stop defending “Obamacare,” and protect Kentucky from the federal insurance mandate.
Is that ad advocacy, or direct political spending? It does not mention Rand Paul by name, but it suggests that voters register their discontent somehow with Jack Conway, which implies they should vote for his opponent, which is exactly what they did.
Even Stephen Colbert caught on without much effort, as evidenced by his Committee for a Better Tomorrow, Tomorrow ad.