[Mb-civic] Abramoff Scandal Threatens to Derail Reed's Political
Ambitions Bloomberg
Michael Butler
michael at michaelbutler.com
Wed Jan 11 11:10:11 PST 2006
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Abramoff Scandal Threatens to Derail Reed's Political Ambitions
Bloomberg
Wednesday 11 January 2006
The Washington scandal over lobbyist Jack Abramoff may claim a casualty
outside the nation's capital: Ralph Reed, a former presidential-campaign
adviser who once headed one of the U.S.'s largest Christian activist groups.
Disclosures that Reed once ran an anti-gambling campaign that was
secretly financed by casino-owning clients of his friend Abramoff have
damaged his ability to raise funds for a bid to become Georgia's next
lieutenant governor, other Republicans say. That may undercut his chances of
winning an office that he could use as a steppingstone to national political
ambitions, they say.
Campaign-finance reports filed this week show that Reed, 44, lagged
behind opponent Casey Cagle in fundraising for the July 18 Republican
primary during the past six months, after collecting more than twice as much
money as his rival before that. Cagle raised $667,000 from June 30 to Dec.
31 to Reed's $404,000.
"A lot of those big corporate donors are now hedging their bets," said
Matt Towery, the 1990 Republican candidate for lieutenant governor, who was
once a colleague of Reed's on Capitol Hill. "Ralph faces a very difficult
and now problematic candidacy."
An Atlanta Journal-Constitution poll last month showed Cagle and Reed
would perform about equally well against the Democrats in the November
election. The poll was conducted by Zogby International before Abramoff
pleaded guilty to fraud and conspiring to corrupt public officials.
For Reed, who once seemed invincible, with broad support in his party
and wide name recognition, that isn't good news, said Towery, who now
publishes Insider Advantage, a guide to politics.
Up the Ranks
Reed, who is making his first run for public office, climbed through the
political ranks because of his connections in Christian and Republican
circles. From 1989 to 1997, he ran the Christian Coalition of America, a
then-powerful group founded by evangelist Pat Robertson. Reed served as a
consultant to George W. Bush's 2000 presidential campaign and oversaw the
Southeast region for his 2004 re-election.
Reed's fund-raising slowdown in the past six months coincided with the
drumbeat of news about Abramoff and Reed's connections to him. Those ties
are gaining more attention in the aftermath of Abramoff's Jan. 3 guilty plea
and the widening probe into the potential bribery of lawmakers.
"There are concerns as to whether Ralph will continue to make headlines
that are harmful to the party," said Eric Johnson, who as the Georgia
Senate's president pro tem is a top Republican. Johnson said he's staying
neutral in the primary election.
'Significant Doubts'
The Cagle campaign is playing off those concerns. "The polling data
we've seen as well as fund raising show how people in Georgia have
significant doubts about whether they can trust Ralph," Cagle spokesman Brad
Alexander said.
Reed is still ahead of Cagle, 39, in overall fundraising, having
collected a total of $1.8 million to Cagle's $1.3 million.
"We raised more from more donors on our first report than our primary
opponent has raised in two reports," Reed spokeswoman Lisa Baron said. "It
is not uncommon for second reports after such a strong first report to
reflect the obvious, which is many donors have already contributed the
maximum."
Reed declined to comment for this article.
Tarnished Image
Reed's image as someone more interested in Christian causes than his own
financial well-being has been tarnished by a stream of e-mails released by a
Senate committee that investigated Abramoff's bilking of Indian-tribe
clients.
"I need to start humping in corporate accounts," Reed wrote to Abramoff
in 1998. "I'm counting on you to help me with some contacts."
In 2001 alone, he received more than $2.5 million from entities
connected with Abramoff and partner Michael Scanlon, according to documents
released by the Senate Indian Affairs Committee.
Abramoff and Scanlon used the organizations so Reed wouldn't be paid
directly by their clients, who wanted to block new gambling competition. The
e-mails show that Reed knew casino-owning tribes were the ultimate clients,
though he says he wasn't paid with gambling proceeds.
"Had I known then what I know now, I would not have undertaken that
work," Reed said in the text of a Dec. 9 speech to a Georgia youth group.
"On reflection and with the benefit of hindsight, it is clear it associated
my longstanding opposition to gambling with those who did not share it and
has caused difficulty for the faith community with whom I worked."
Connections
Reed and Abramoff have known each other since the early 1980s, when they
were leaders of the College Republicans along with another now-powerful
Washington player, anti-tax activist Grover Norquist. They made an odd trio:
Abramoff, an orthodox Jew who went to high school in Beverly Hills,
California; Reed, a Christian southerner with boyish looks; and Norquist, a
Massachusetts native with a penchant for dramatic monologues in his tax-cut
crusade.
The three continued to work together until word broke that Abramoff may
have defrauded his tribal clients. One, the Mississippi Band of Choctaw
Indians, in 1999 donated money to Norquist's Americans for Tax Reform, which
then wrote checks to Reed's anti-gambling coalition.
Cayman Islands
Reed also depended on Abramoff to help his political campaigns. In one
e-mail exchange in 2001, he asked Abramoff to contribute to his successful
bid to become state Republican chairman in Georgia. When Abramoff asked
where to send the donation, Reed joked, "The actual committee is 'The Reed
Family Retirement and Educational Foundation.' The address is 200 Bay Drive,
Grand Cayman, BCI, R59876."
Before the Abramoff scandal, Reed was the best known of the three
because of his work for the Christian Coalition. By 1984, he had helped to
re-elect Senator Jesse Helms in North Carolina by organizing a Christian
conservative constituency that later became the foundation for Robertson's
1988 presidential bid.
The young Republicans following in Reed's footsteps - students, budding
activists and campaign managers - now don't want him to run, said Charles
Bullock, a political scientist at the University of Georgia in Athens.
"Without exception, they are hoping he's not on the ticket," Bullock
said. One concern is "that he gets the nomination, and then sometime in the
fall the smoking gun shows up and he brings down Republicans," he said. "The
drumbeat is going to be playing throughout the year."
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