McCain’s national finance co-chair resigns
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Race for the presidency The trips, the speeches, and the moments of Decision ’08. A look at the campaigns of Barack Obama and John McCain. more photos |
Resignation adds to several others
McCain advisers Doug Goodyear, who was to run the Republican convention in St. Paul, Minn., and Doug Davenport, a regional campaign director for the Mid-Atlantic states, also resigned this month. Both worked for DCI Group, a consulting firm hired to improve the image of Myanmar's military junta.
When the policy was announced last week, McCain fired energy policy adviser Eric Burgeson, who represents energy companies as a lobbyist.
The campaign also asked Craig Shirley to resign from McCain's Virginia leadership team because he was behind an independent group that has been criticizing Democrats Hillary Rodham Clinton and Obama on the Internet. McCain's new policy also states that no one with a campaign title or position may participate in so-called 527 groups, which can raise unlimited amounts of money for television ads not controlled by campaigns.
But the policy also underscored the fine line McCain has drawn. Several top strategists working on his campaign are lobbyists who have taken leaves of absence from their jobs to work for McCain. Among them are campaign manager Rick Davis, whose past clients have included a Russian industrialist, and Charlie Black, a high profile Washington lobbyist with domestic and foreign clients
In adopting the policy and making it public, the McCain campaign sought to stabilize the bad press he was getting and turn the tables on his most likely Democratic opponent.
"Sen. McCain has put forward the most strident policy to date," said McCain spokeswoman Jill Hazelbaker. "It now falls on Barack Obama to meet this level of transparency and disclose which lobbyists are serving as advisers to his campaign."
Obama's own ties to lobbyists
Obama has been a vocal critic of Washington lobbyists and, unlike McCain, has refused to accept contributions from federal lobbyists and from political action committees. However, he has accepted money from the corporate executives who retain lobbyists and who have special causes before Congress. He also has had unpaid advisers with federal lobbying clients. Some campaign officials previously had lobbying jobs.
Earlier this year, Obama deputy campaign manager Steve Hildebrand told The Associated Press the campaign has no problem with lobbyists volunteering to work, but no federal lobbyists are on the campaign's payroll and they cannot donate money or collect it from others. "We're not going to prevent people from being volunteers on this campaign," he said.
Hildebrand said he gave up federal lobbying work for an environmental group, as a condition of taking his paid staff position. According to lobbying records, Hildebrand was lobbying on behalf of climate change legislation written by McCain and Sen. Joseph Lieberman, I-Conn.
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