ABRA-MATHON
On today's YDN opinion page, Eli Luberoff writes a letter responding to the statement in my Tuesday column that
While Abramoff made strategic donations to members of both parties, it was Republicans with whom he collaborated to break the law and the trust of the American people.Eli agrees with the second part of the sentence, but he disputes the first part - that Abramoff made "strategic donations to members of both parties." In retrospect, my wording was needlessly imprecise. Literally, Abramoff did make "strategic donations to member of both parties," in that he made in-kind donations to Democrats as well as Republicans. More important, though, are the donations Abramoff directed through his clients to Democrats as well as Republicans, which were more substantial. Better wording here would have more clearly encompassed those contributions, which while heavily skewed towards Republicans, didn't go exclusively to them. But as my column made clear, I agree with Eli that this is a Republican scandal through and through. My Tuesday piece also comes up in Roger Low's column today. Roger notes that Democrats do corrupt things sometimes too, which I think we can all acknowledge without losing sight of the underlying ideological edge of the Abramoff scandal: this is a story about concentrated economic power trumping popular majorities in setting policy and distributing resources. Roger rightfully calls the Democrats on their failure to champion a more aggressive reform agenda, and then veers off into an encomium to John McCain, who - besides being a staunch conservative except for his opposition to torture, global warming, and soft money (talk about defining deviancy down) - hasn't championed any of those reforms either.
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