[Congressional Record Volume 152, Number 38 (Thursday, March 30, 2006)]
[House]
[Pages H1368-H1369]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                         REFORM LIBERAL LUNACY

  The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania). Under a 
previous order of the House, the gentleman from North Carolina (Mr. 
McHenry) is recognized for 5 minutes.
  Mr. McHENRY. Mr. Speaker, today I rise to speak about 527s. 527s are 
groups, shadowy groups, that work outside of campaign finance 
disclosure laws. They work outside of our campaign finance reforms that 
we passed just a few years ago. They are groups that do not disclose 
their donors in the way that other traditional campaign groups do. They 
are groups that have unlimited contributions. They are groups that come 
in and perhaps target members in different races or candidates in 
different races, yet they do not actually say who they are.
  So today I want to say that as a conservative and as a Member of this 
House what I am fighting for is openness and full disclosure and 
allowing sunshine on this political process that we as Americans grow 
to trust.

[[Page H1369]]

  Look, in 527s last year, in the 2004 campaign cycle, there is $370 
million. $370 million, Mr. Speaker, that flowed through these groups 
outside of campaign disclosure. These groups can come in and do all 
sorts of campaigning, but yet they do not have to disclose like a 
campaign would. So the voters do not know who is working, who is out 
there putting this information out. $370 million, Mr. Speaker, flowed 
through 527s. That is more than both the Kerry and Bush campaigns 
combined spent on the Presidential election. This was done outside of 
campaign disclosure.
  Over one-fifth of the $370 million funded through 527s came from four 
individuals; one-fifth of the $370 million, four individuals. So much 
for taking big money out of politics, which is what my colleagues on 
the left wanted to do through campaign finance reform and many active 
in politics wanted to do. So much for taking big money out.
  We created a loophole that 527s are allowed to use, or have taken 
advantage of, I should say. Over 80 percent of 527 donors gave at least 
a quarter of a million dollars. Think about that. That is truly big 
money in politics, Mr. Speaker. Forty-six individuals gave at least a 
million dollars to 527 groups. That is even bigger money. So we have 
created a two-tier system in campaign finance: one where people have to 
disclose; another where they shadow a group's act.
  Look, the biggest big daddy of them all for 527s was a billionaire, 
what I like to call the Daddy Warbucks of the Democrat Party, George 
Soros, the Daddy Warbucks of the Democrat Party. He is pumping wads of 
cash into 527s to influence elections for his left wing agenda. Soros 
is one of the richest men in the world. He spent $18 million on 
campaign finance reform to root out big money in politics. How 
hypocritical is that? He spent all that money for campaign finance 
reform, yet once campaign finance reform is passed, what does he do? He 
pumps wads of cash, millions, tens of millions of dollars to those 
shadowy 527 groups.
  Fortune Magazine called him the world's angriest billionaire. He is 
without a doubt the most powerful Democrat in the country right now. He 
has a far left agenda and you cannot move any farther left to him until 
you go down south to Havana, to be honest with you.
  Soros is an example of liberal lunacy, and it goes to the heart of 
what my colleagues on the left have been articulating, which is a 
culture of hypocrisy. A culture of hypocrisy, Mr. Speaker, that we need 
to take on as the majority in the House. As a Republican and as a 
conservative, I am going to point out the culture of hypocrisy that the 
527 groups that the left wing in this body are taking advantage of.
  That is why I think we need to come forward with true campaign 
finance reform, make the 527 groups accountable and disclose to the 
American people who their donors are and abide by the same rules and 
regulations that all campaign groups must abide by.
  The original intent from the Democrats was to root out big money in 
politics. They said not just a few years ago, not but just a few years 
ago, `` . . . money that threatens to drown out the voice of the 
average voter of average means, money that creates the appearance that 
a wealthy few have a disproportionate say over public policy.'' Yet 
today, Mr. Speaker, the Democrats and the left in this body are more 
beholden than ever to big money politics and 527 groups and we will 
reform this liberal lunacy.

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