The money game in US politics has long been out of control. Adding foreign money to the mix is more a case of too little too late. Yet we are surely condoning treason again.
Campaign finance reform is desperately needed in the USA. Getting it appears impossible because what has grown up is an industry that taps the lolly. Worse than that is that i really doubt if anyone really gets what they think they are entitled to because every thing is now beholden.
It has all degenerated into the spectacle of the Jeb Bush super pac and the Clinton foundation.
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First Evidence Surfaces of Foreign Money Pouring Into US Elections After "Citizens United"
Thursday, 04 August 2016 00:00
By Amy Goodman, Democracy Now! | Video Interview
http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/37109-first-evidence-surfaces-of-foreign-money-pouring-into-us-elections-after-citizens-united
Six years ago, President Obama warned the nation that foreign
corporations could soon pour money into the US election system thanks to
the Supreme Court Citizens United decision. Now, direct evidence has
emerged for the first time showing a foreign company has indeed donated
money to a federal campaign. Documentation obtained by The Intercept
shows a company owned by Chinese nationals donated $1.3 million to Jeb
Bush's super PAC after receiving advice from a
prominent Republican lawyer. To talk more about the exposé, we are
joined by The Intercept's Lee Fong, who co-wrote the multi-part series
"Foreign Influence."
TRANSCRIPT
This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.
AMY GOODMAN:
Six years ago, President Obama warned the nation that foreign
corporations could soon pour money into the US election system, thanks
to the Supreme Court Citizens United decision. Obama made the warning during his 2010 State of the Union speech as members of the Supreme Court looked on.
PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA: With all due deference to separation of powers, last week the Supreme Court reversed a century of law that I believe will open the floodgates for special interests, including foreign corporations, to spend without limit in our elections. I don't think American elections should be bankrolled by America's most powerful interests or, worse, by foreign entities. They should be decided by the American people. And I'd urge Democrats and Republicans to pass a bill that helps correct some of these problems.
AMY GOODMAN:
That was President Obama speaking in 2010. Now, for the first time,
direct evidence has emerged showing a foreign company has indeed donated
money to a federal campaign. Documentation obtained by The Intercept
shows a company owned by Chinese nationals donated $1.3 million to Jeb
Bush's super PAC after receiving advice from a prominent Republican lawyer. On Wednesday, The Intercept published a multi-part series
looking at the actions of two Chinese citizens living in Singapore who
own a US-based firm called American Pacific International Capital, that
has ties to the Bush family. Jeb's brother, Neil, serves on the
corporation's board. The Intercept reports suggest there might be more
such instances of foreign contributions, as the 2016 election has
witnessed a surge of contributions to super PACs by so-called ghost
corporations, whose ownership remains unknown.
To talk more about the exposé, we're joined by The Intercept's Lee Fang, who co-wrote the series, "Foreign Influence."
Welcome back to Democracy Now! It's great to have you in studio live for the first time.
LEE FANG: Thank you for having me, Amy.
AMY GOODMAN: So, Lee, why don't you start off by talking about how Citizens United opened up the floodgates for money -- now, in fact, foreign money -- and where super PACs fit into this?
LEE FANG: In 2010, the Supreme Court decision Citizens United
rolled back about a hundred years of campaign finance law, basically
doing two things: one, allowing corporations and unions to spend
unlimited amounts in this election; and, two, separating the way we look
at campaign finance. No longer can we trace all donations back to
individuals; instead, fictions of the state, corporations and other
legal entities, could contribute unlimited amounts.
AMY GOODMAN:
So talk about this many-month investigation that you have done and,
again, how super PACs fit into this and open up the floodgates.
LEE FANG:
We worked on this for several months. I wrote this with my colleague,
Jon Schwarz, and a freelancer, Elaine Yu, along with a fantastic team at
The Intercept of researchers and editors. We simply looked at some of
the largest corporate donations to presidential super PACs and tried to
find out their ownership structure. By chance, we found that one of the
largest corporate donors to the Jeb Bush super PAC,
Right to Rise, was owned -- or, is owned by two Chinese nationals.
They're permanent residents of Singapore. And they gave $1.3 million to
the Jeb Bush super PAC.
They were advised by one of the most prominent Republican campaign
lawyers in the country, Charlie Spies. Charlie Spies has a very long
history in big money politics. He was an adviser to George W. Bush's
campaign, to the Republican Governors Association. He helped set up the
massive Mitt Romney super PAC. And he set up the Jeb Bush super PAC.
He, in fact, wrote a memo that is essentially a roadmap for how
foreign-controlled domestic corporations may give in US federal
elections, basically setting all the parameters and rules inviting these
types of donations. So this wasn't an anomaly. And he wrote this memo,
that we obtained and published with the story, in February of 2015. And
the donation from the American Pacific International Capital Company --
this is the company controlled by two Chinese foreign nationals --
provided their $1.3 million donation to the Jeb Bush super PAC one month later.
AMY GOODMAN: And explain who this couple is.
LEE FANG:
Gordon Tang and Serena Chen, they're Chinese nationals. They amassed
their wealth living in southern China, in Shantou. They had an
import-export business with various goods that they sent abroad. They
now have a very large diversified company that has a biofuel refinery,
various investment properties, luxury towers, malls, other commercial
property in southern China, Malaysia, Singapore. And over the last seven
years, they've been amassing a large portfolio in the US, as well.
AMY GOODMAN: And Jeb Bush's brother, George W. Bush's brother, Neil Bush, sits on the board of APIC?
LEE FANG:
That's right. Neil Bush was appointed to both APIC's board and a sister
company also controlled by Gordon Tang called the SingHaiyi Group. We
don't know the compensation from APIC, but
through the Singapore Stock Exchange, we know that Neil Bush has been
paid at least $700,000 for serving on the SingHaiyi board. And he's been
a prominent kind of figurehead for the company, appearing on company
documents, giving speeches and appearing in the Singapore media on
behalf of the company.
AMY GOODMAN: And how does Gordon Tang also connect with the former governor of Washington, Gary Locke?
LEE FANG:
Yeah, this is an interesting angle to the story. In addition to
providing the first documented case of a foreign-controlled corporation
giving to an American super PAC, a
presidential election vehicle, this is also a story about incredible
influence peddling. Gordon Tang and his company worked meticulously to
gain US political friends, as his brother-in-law called it, bringing US
politicians to his ribbon cuttings, and also soliciting the help from
Gary Locke, the former governor of Washington, former secretary of
commerce for Obama and the former US ambassador for Obama to China.
Locke worked briefly for APIC in 2008, went
into government serving the Obama administration, and while serving as
ambassador to China, was looking to sell his house, and sold his home in
Bethesda to the -- to Tang's family for $1.6 million. It was a very
unusual transaction for a sitting ambassador to sell their home to a
foreign national of the country they were serving in.
AMY GOODMAN:
I want to get to an exchange between Gordon Tang and reporter Elaine
Yu, who is working with you at The Intercept. When she asked him about
rumors about his past, he offered her a bribe. This is an excerpt from
an audio recording of their exchange.
GORDON TANG: [translated] I'll come to Hong Kong later and give you a red packet of $200,000, so we can be friends. I shall arrive at Hong Kong on July 20th, for five days, and leave on the 25th. I hope to see you, and then we can be friends. I don't even know why you want to be a reporter. Reporters make so little money.
ELAINE YU: [translated] OK, we're really more interested in the Sino-US relationship. What about SingHaiyi, Neil Bush? What do you think are his good qualities? I want to understand the attitude of how Americans do business.
GORDON TANG: [translated] Once we're friends, I'll have a lot to tell you. And we shall be friends if you don't write about the last three points [i.e., the rumors about his past].
AMY GOODMAN:
That's Gordon Tang speaking to Intercept reporter Elaine Yu. And he
called her from the airport in Hong Kong to say he had an envelope for
her, a red envelope.
LEE FANG: That's right. He had a lai see,
which is a traditional Chinese envelope for giving gifts. But he
offered what is essentially a bribe not to report certain aspects of the
story, offering $200,000 in unspecified currency.
AMY GOODMAN: What was he so concerned about?
LEE FANG:
He was concerned about allegations about a company he controlled that
was investigated for smuggling and tax evasion in Shantou.
AMY GOODMAN: And was he implicated?
LEE FANG: Members of his family and his business were implicated.
AMY GOODMAN:
Well, we're going to do Part 2 of this conversation. It's a lengthy
exposé, and we want to really dig into it. And you can watch it at
democracynow.org. Lee Fang, investigative journalist at The Intercept
covering the intersection of money and politics. This series is called
"Foreign Influence."
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