July 06, 2004
Just Your Average Democrat Donors
By
Michelle Malkin
The self-proclaimed
Party of the Little People is rolling in cash, and
Democrats are positively gloating. "The strength of
the small donor has helped level the financial playing
field with the Bush campaign," Mary Beth Cahill,
Sen. John Kerry's campaign manager,
crowed last week.
Just who are these "small
donors"—these ordinary Americans, these average Joes
and Janes, filling the Democratic Party's coffers?
They are regular folks such as Beth
Dozoretz,
Washington doyenne and suspected facilitator of the
infamous Marc Rich pardon under the
Clinton administration, and Bernie Schwartz, former
CEO of the disgraced Loral Corp., which paid $20 million
in fines for its too-cozy relations with China that
apparently endangered national security under the
Clinton administration. This year, for their prodigious
giving habits, Dozoretz was designated a Democratic
National Committee "trustee" and Schwartz was
named a DNC "patriot."
(The Democrats, by the way,
insisted on concealing the names of these "trustees"
and "patriots" until the Washington Post
shamed them into disclosing their identities.) [
Patriot Names, June 17, 2004]
They are joined by typical donors
such as Rick Yi, an Asian-American businessman and
former Kerry fund-raising vice chairman who passed the
plate to his girlfriend (whose
immigrant status and donor eligibility were
immediately suspicious) and to old pals such as Chun Jae
Yong, the recently arrested son of a disgraced former
South Korean president. Yong faces charges of tax
evasion on $14 million in inheritance money. While the
Kerry campaign has
returned Yong's money, both Kerry and the Democratic
Party have held on to an estimated $500,000 in Yi-raised
funding.
And then there are common Democrat
givers such as Connie Milstein. She is just like you and
me. If you happen to be the pampered heir to a
multibillion-dollar real estate fortune in New York
City. Milstein calls herself "an ordinary Park Avenue
matron." Really. She is just your usual
elbow-rubbing, partisan
fundraiser/philanthropist/business mogul next door.
During the 1999-2000 election cycle
alone, Milstein contributed at least
$932,515 to various Democratic party soft money
accounts, and spread another $40,000 in hard money
donations to various candidates and political
committees. In the fall of 2000, Milstein did what any
regular Democrat donor would do: She flew herself to
Milwaukee and
bribed homeless people to vote for Al Gore in exchange
for cigarettes. Milstein was caught on video
[click here to see it in
RealVideo] by
local ABC affiliate WISN-TV toting bags of cancer sticks
for vagrants outside the
Milwaukee Rescue Mission.
Then chairwoman of the Democratic
National Committee's Major Supporters Committee,
Milstein told the TV station she was an official
representative of the Gore campaign and "was asked to
come down and ring doorbells, go to shelters, see if I
can get as many people as I could out to the polls."
It was just your run-of-the-mill
campaign to smoke out (er, get out) the vote. Honest.
Wisconsin outlaws the procurement
of votes with gifts worth more than $1. It's a felony.
But what average Democrat donor lets a little thing like
illegality get in the way? Milstein received a flimsy
slap on the wrist and a puny
$5,000 civil fine. Big whoop. She probably drops
that much in one afternoon at Cristophe's (he's the
high-priced barber of other ordinary Democrat folks with
ordinary hair such as
John Kerry-Heinz and Bill Clinton).
After the smokes-for-votes debacle,
Milstein went right back to raising money for the Party
of the Little People. And the party gladly accepted. In
2001, Milstein—known campaign finance con artist—gave
$50,000 to the Democratic Congressional Campaign
Committee (DCCC). In 2002, Milstein donated $100,000 to
the Democratic National Committee (DNC), $50,000 to the
DCCC, and $10,000 to the Democratic Senatorial Campaign
Committee (DSCC). In 2003, she donated $25,000 to the
DNC and another $25,000 to the DCCC, in addition to
$19,000 in hard money donations to congressional and
presidential candidates, including
Howard Dean, Joe Lieberman and John Kerry. In 2004,
Milstein has given at least $4,000 to the Friends of
Hillary and $1,000 to the DCCC.
So, let us hail the diversity of
everyday Democrat donors: The pardon-pushing socialite.
The Communist-coddling corporate sellout. The reckless
Asian-American rainmaker. And the nicotine-stained
heiress/almost-felon who keeps on giving.
It's a bankroll that looks like
America. Really.
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
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