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Mail
Magazine 24
Obama Being
‘Outspent’?
by Arnold Ahlert
According to the latest media-aided meme emanating from the Obama
re-election campaign, the president and his supporters are being
outspent by the Romney campaign. A fund-raising email sent out in late
June reveals the level of purported angst. “I will be the first
president in modern history to be outspent in his re-election campaign,
if things continue as they have so far,” it reads. “I’m not just
talking about the super PACs and anonymous outside groups–I’m talking
about the Romney campaign itself. Those outside groups just add even
more to the underlying problem.” Yet like so much of what the president
has said about a variety of things over the last three years, this is
yet another statement at odds with the truth.
The email continues. “The Romney campaign raises more than we do, and
the math isn’t hard to understand: Through the primaries, we raised
almost three-quarters of our money from donors giving less than $1,000,
while Mitt Romney’s campaign raised more than three-quarters of its
money from individuals giving $1,000 or more,” it said. “We can be
outspent and still win–but we can’t be outspent 10 to 1 and still win.”
That is undoubtedly true. It’s also complete hyperbole. As the charts
from the Center for Responsive Politics shown here indicate, the
president’s campaign has not only raised more money that Romney’s
campaign it has spent more and has more cash on hand. Yet campaigns are
only part of the picture. When President Obama attends fundraising
parties, such as the one at the home of celebrity Sarah Jessica Parker
attended by 50 donors who paid $40,000 each for the privilege–even as
the above email excoriated Romney for raising money “at a secretive
retreat for the biggest donors to both his campaign and the super PACs
that support him”–that money goes to both the president and the
Democratic National Committee (DNC). The DNC spends a substantial
portion of that money to re-elect Obama. As of now the DNC has also
raised more money that the Republican National committee as well.
So what is President Obama talking about? Much like former president
Bill Clinton, parsing the language becomes a critical element in this
deception. Romney has indeed out-raised Obama on occasion, meaning in a
given month his cash intake may be higher than the president’s. But the
number of months President Obama has out-raised Romney far is higher.
With respect to outside money, such as 527 organizations, which are
tax-exempt groups that engage in political activities, Obama may have a
point, since Romney currently maintains a small edge. Yet if the
president insists on counting 427s, etc., then the part of his email
contending he will be “the first president in modern history to be
outspent,” is also untrue: in the 2004 election campaign, George W.
Bush was outspent by challenger John Kerry.
The Washington Post, hardly a bastion of conservative thinking, further
undermines President Obama’s contention. “The lie needs to be put to
the very idea that President Obama might be outspent during the 2012
election. Nobody knows how much the candidates and campaign will raise
in the weeks ahead, but, so far, the numbers are pretty clear,” writes
Ed Rogers. Rogers totals up the amount of money raised by three
elements: the respective campaigns, national committees (RNC vs. DNC)
and the so-called Super PACs, which are political action committees
arising as a result of a federal court case known as SpeechNow.org v.
Federal Election Commission. Super PACs can raise unlimited sums of
money from sources such as corporations, unions, associations or
individuals. They can spend those unlimited sums to overtly advocate
for or against political candidates. But they are prohibited from
donating directly to candidates.
Rogers reveals that as of July 2nd, the Obama campaign and affiliates
has raised $471,400,000. The Romney campaign comes in at $264,223,126.
Yet if major labor union promises are fulfilled, President Obama will
be the main beneficiary of the more than $400 million labor leaders
have promised to spend electing Democrats in 2012. If only 15 percent
of that money is directed towards Obama’s campaign, that pushes his
above total over $530 million, giving him a 2-1 spending edge over
Romney. Thus, President Obama’s lament that he cannot win if he is
being “outspent 10-1″ is revealed to be utterly disingenuous.
One other X factor rarely mentioned in the media is the amount of money
Obama is spending — courtesy of the taxpayers — on trips that bear a
striking resemblance to election campaigning. In April, RNC chairman
Reince Priebus wrote a letter of complaint to the Government
Accountability Office (GAO), noting that President Obama “has been
passing off campaign travel as ‘official events,’ thereby allowing
taxpayers rather than his campaign to pay for his reelection efforts.”
White House spokesman Eric Schultz countered that such travel “has been
part of the president’s official responsibility.” Yet a report complied
in 2011 by Brendan Doherty, a U.S. naval academy assistant professor
and expert on presidential travel revealed that Obama had conducted
“official business” in critical battleground states more times in a
shorter time span than either George W. Bush or Bill Clinton.
Reasonable people can disagree on what constitutes the difference
between official business and overt campaigning, but it would be
exceedingly difficult to argue that there is no bleed-through
whatsoever and that total campaign expenditures on such trips equal
zero. It is hard to put a dollar amount on the advantages of
incumbency, but that advantage exists, nonetheless.
Yet even without incumbency, President Obama outspent Sen. McCain in
2008 by a more than 2-to-1 margin of $778 million to $384 million. He
was able to do this because he broke his promise to finance that
campaign using public funding, despite answering “yes” regarding the
subject on a questionnaire from the Midwest Democracy Network. “I have
been a long-time advocate for public financing of campaigns combined
with free television and radio time as a way to reduce the influence of
moneyed special interests,” the president wrote at the time.
One year later, Obama was more than willing to take money from “moneyed
special interests” including his favorite class-warfare whipping boys
in the financial sector. They accounted for 20 percent of what Obama’s
top fundraisers collected during the 2008 presidential campaign. In
fact, the $15.8 million collected by Obama from Wall Street during his
2008 run represented the largest take by any politician in history.
Yet in spite of the realities of both 2008 and today, the president
continues to portray himself as a victim. “In 2008 everything was new
and exciting about our campaign,” Obama said, according to a recording
of a call obtained by The Daily Beast. ”And now I’m the incumbent
president. I’ve got grey hair. People have seen disappointment because
folks had a vision of change happening immediately. And it turns out
change is hard.” Joe Trippi, a leading Democratic strategist explained
the rationale behind such an effort. “People have to perceive that they
are threatened before they give,” he told The Daily Telegraph.
In other words, never let a crisis — even a totally manufactured one
built on a tissue of lies — go to waste.
Source: Breitbart
Read this and other articles at Mail Magazine 24
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