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The Nation: Did Terry McAuliffe Try to Buy Off a Political Foe?
Consumer activist Ralph Nader has made a significant charge against former Democratic National Committee chair Terry McAuliffe -- that of attempting to bribe a political foe in order to influence an election result.

Remarkably, McAuliffe, now a candidate for the Democratic nomination for governor of Virginia, is not denying it.

In an upcoming book, Grand Illusion, The Myth of Voter Choice in a Two-Party Tyranny (The New Press), veteran Nader aide Theresa Amato -- who managed his 2000 and 2004 presidential campaigns -- details efforts by McAuliffe, then the DNC chair, to get Nader to stop campaigning in key states. (It's part of a smart, thorough dissection of what ails the political process, which Phil Donahue hails as "the biggest swing--not a jab, but a roundhouse punch--at America's corrupt electoral system.")

The charge is that then-DNC chair McAuliffe offered Nader -- who was mounting an independent campaign that some observers thought could pose an electoral threat to the candidacy of Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry -- an unspecified amount of money, presumably in the form of contribution checks from big donors allied with the Democratic party, to avoid campaigning in 19 battleground states.

Nader confirms that McAuliffe made such an offer.

"When you get a call like that, first of all it's inappropriate," the consumer activist told The Washington Post.

Nader says he immediately refused the money. "(If) you don't immediately say 'no,' it's like taffy, you get stuck with it," he explained.

That's the appropriate response to the offer of an old-fashioned political bribe -- and, make no mistake, paying a political rival to pull his punches is just that.

So what does the former DNC chair who now seeks to serve as governor of Virginia have to say for himself?

"McAuliffe isn't denying the charge," says Post writer Anita Kumar.
Posted by: Fred 2009-05-30
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=270817