McCain Surrogate Hits Obama On Public Financing, Sidesteps On McCain Loan

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First Posted: 06-23-08 10:07 AM   |   Updated: 07- 1-08 05:12 AM

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Nan Pfoten

On CNN's American Morning today, McCain surrogate Nancy Pfotenhauer continued last week's attacks on Senator Barack Obama's decision to opt out of public financing in favor of his own dedicated funding mechanism. Pfotenhauer continued the McCain camp's ongoing message that Obama somehow violated the public trust, saying, "It's doing the right thing when it's difficult that character is revealed. So juxtapose Obama, who has a preacher's gift for a righteous statement but side steps like a politician when it's going to cost him anything, with John McCain who wouldn't take the easy way out, even when his life was on the line as a prisoner of war."

CNN's John Roberts did offer up a little bit of pushback, raising the question of whether McCain cheated the campaign financing system to secure a loan when he needed one. Josh Marshall has the details over at Talking Points Memo:

McCain opt[ed] into public financing, accepted the spending limits and then profited from that opt-in by securing a campaign saving loan. And then he used some clever, but not clever enough lawyering, to opt back out. And the person charged with saying what flies and what doesn't -- the Republican head of the FEC -- said he's not allowed to do that. He can't opt out unilaterally unless the FEC says he can.


The most generous interpretation of what happened is that McCain's lawyer came up with an ingenious legal two step that allowed him to double dip in the campaign finance system, eat his cake and spend it too. But even if you buy that line, successful gaming of the system doesn't really count as strict adherence. And the point is irrelevant since the head of the FEC -- a Republican -- says McCain cannot do this on his own.

Pfotenhauer's response was a mouthload of gibberish about how the "primary season is broken" and how McCain is a "bold man" who takes "bold action." Like, say, boldly breaking the law!

Right about now, it would be worth noting that maintaining a strained and strenuous opposition to the new G.I. Bill, only to slip in at the last minute when its passage became inevitable and cravenly attempt to take credit for the bill - as McCain has done - is neither "bold," nor the actions of someone who's built his character by doing the "right thing" when it was "difficult." So there, I've noted it.

[WATCH.]

ROBERTS: There's been an awful lot of criticism of Senator Obama for this decision from the McCain campaign. Isn't that just because it puts Senator McCain at a distinct financial disadvantage?


PFOTENHAUER: I don't think so. This is something that both gentlemen said they would pursue because it was the right thing to do. It was the right thing to do because pursuing public financing is a way of keeping corruption and special interest politics to a minimum. And the bottom line is that Obama broke his word to the American people. You know, it's easy -- doing the right thing is easy, it doesn't really test your character. It's doing the right thing when it's difficult that character is revealed. So juxtapose Obama, who has a preacher's gift for a righteous statement but side steps like a politician when it's going to cost him anything, with John McCain who wouldn't take the easy way out, even when his life was on the line as a prisoner of war. And he was offered early release and special treatment and he refused to take it because that wasn't the right thing to do.

ROBERTS: Let me try to keep this focused on campaign finance. We had Robert Gibbs, the communications director from the Obama campaign on this program on Friday. He says that the McCain campaign uses financing -- that the public system only when it suits his purpose and that he's got his own problems when it comes to public versus private financing. Let's listen to what Robert Gibbs said.

GIBBS (taped): John McCain used the public financing system over the last two years and gamed it every step of the way. When his poll numbers were good he was out of the public financing system. When his poll numbers were bad, he was using the public financing system as nothing more than a shell game.

ROBERTS: So what he's talking about there, Nancy, is back in the early stages of the primary campaign when John McCain wasn't doing so well, it looked like he was going to take public financing and then when his poll numbers came up he decided to opt out. Then there was this idea of this line of credit for $4 million that he took and still some lingering questions over whether or not he used that as collateral for public financing. The FEC still wants to know about this and the democrats are going to refile a lawsuit on that issue tomorrow morning. So what do you say about that?

PFOTENHAUER: Of course they are. That's the nature of politics. But you know, John, that there's a big difference between public financing at the primary level and the general election. People have acknowledged from both parties that the primary system is broken, if you will, from the standpoint of financing. And it was the people who were kind of the cream of the crop who are committing to public financing in the general election. And Obama, that he would aggressively pursue it and threw it out the window the second it was inconvenient. Bold talk, not bold actions. Frankly, bold actions that makes the man.


On CNN's American Morning today, McCain surrogate Nancy Pfotenhauer continued last week's attacks on Senator Barack Obama's decision to opt out of public financing in favor of his own dedicated fundin...
On CNN's American Morning today, McCain surrogate Nancy Pfotenhauer continued last week's attacks on Senator Barack Obama's decision to opt out of public financing in favor of his own dedicated fundin...
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- Donnat I'm a Fan of Donnat 24 fans permalink

They got nothin'. This temptest in a thimble is just more proof.

Obama '08!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:35 PM on 06/23/2008
- shel3364 I'm a Fan of shel3364 38 fans permalink
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Yep. Looks like they'll have to go back to the major CLM of not wearing a flag lapel pin.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:46 PM on 06/23/2008
- edwarvir I'm a Fan of edwarvir 36 fans permalink

I donate to Senator O and I am part of the public . So if we the Public keep on giving
money to him to be used for his campaign, that is called public funding. LOL

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:33 PM on 06/23/2008
- Puddin I'm a Fan of Puddin 4 fans permalink

I am 52yrs old and I have voted since I was 18. This is the first time in my adult life that I have been so engaged in the political process. This is the first time in my adult life that I have donated to a campaign. I want my money to be used for Senator Obama's campaign. I can't donate my time, so I feel my small donations may help him win the election. I feel like I am part of the system and I will have some say so in what goes on in Washington. I can hold Senator Obama to his promises to us, the people and not the corporations, etc.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:46 PM on 06/23/2008
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Please---

1) No republican would give up 300 million in campaign funding for 85 million because it is the "right thing" to do. Whatever.

2) Republicans have had a $$$ advantage for a couple generations--(Corporate and ruling class money).

Personally, I would be disappointed if Obama did stick to public financing.

Bottom line: we need significant social change in this country and Obama's fund raising machine can make that happen.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:26 PM on 06/23/2008

Thank you.
Also, I fail to understand how NOT SPENDING $85M of TAXPAYER money is somehow a bad thing?
(I know that's been pointed out before, but the 'logic' -- and I used that term loosely -- used to achieve that conclusion escapes me.)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:22 AM on 06/24/2008
- Paula1953 I'm a Fan of Paula1953 6 fans permalink
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Frankly, I don't give a d*** about public financing. I do care about gas prices, the wars and the economy as a whole. Flip-flop all you want on public financing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:26 PM on 06/23/2008
- legoh I'm a Fan of legoh 3 fans permalink

Ditto! I'm so tired of the Republicans making this into a character issue when it's clearly not. The man answered a question on a questionnaire. He did not 'pledge'.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:34 PM on 06/23/2008
- JJeff88 I'm a Fan of JJeff88 23 fans permalink

I'm not crazy about Obama's position and wish he'd amend his policy to include spending-parity (accompanied by his holding onto the option of spending more later on should McCain, the RNC and the 527's welsh on the deal).

But by no means are McCain's hands clean on campaign finance reform either.

- First he used his future public financing funding to secure a loan of private campaign monies.

- Then he opted out of public financing; preferring instead to spend the loan money he obtained against the public financing program he was opting out of.

- And finally, it took less than a day after Sen. Obama's announcement that he was opting out of public campaign financing for McCain to opt right back in so he could score political points.

So much for John McCain's "character."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:17 PM on 06/23/2008
- JUSTME I'm a Fan of JUSTME 17 fans permalink

This is it? This is what these sanctimonous jerks are going to whine about? They want to whine about Obama's character? Why? Did Obama abandon his first wife when she was crippled by an auto accident and put on some weight to marry a skinny blond with tons of money? Is Obama using his rich wife's plane in violation of FEC laws and getting a free ride from the MSM (in addition to the obvious one)? Character? Did Obama put his arms (literally) around George Bush and embrace the man who slimed his daughter????

That McCain has got some character all right. What a maverick!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:11 PM on 06/23/2008
- DaOne I'm a Fan of DaOne 45 fans permalink
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So let me get this straight. The Rethuglican party is angry because Obama WON"T be using public funds? I guess they are all turned around on the free market system.

The question should be why IS McSame using public money.

Oh wait yeah he can't get any.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:07 PM on 06/23/2008

I think the media needs to be called out more about this.
America got an earful of "Obama broke his word" comments from the right, and the MEDIA!
And yet, you have McCain BREAKING THE LAW!
And he doesn't get called out on this! Everyone wants to talk about media bias and being in the tank for Obama, but this is a prime example of how McCain has the media in his back pocket!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:59 AM on 06/23/2008
- Norsky I'm a Fan of Norsky 2 fans permalink

Well, I agree with you. But the truth seems to be that if you are a republican candidate (I am a Republican) then you get some kind of special right to ignore those laws that are inconvenient or don't help you. Breaking them is just bold.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:48 PM on 06/23/2008
- lennix I'm a Fan of lennix 8 fans permalink

are the msm lost are it's nerve they let mccain and his people keep getting by with the bs they are saying is mccain got all of them except olberman and moyers and this web site in its back pocket come on msm s top being cowards and do your job and stop being puppets for your rich bosses

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:58 AM on 06/23/2008
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