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Author: muckety
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Sen. Joe Biden’s younger son gets scrutiny for lobbying, financial dealings
Sen. Joseph Biden may boast that he takes Amtrak home to Delaware every night, but his younger son, Robert Hunter Biden, appears to be a creature of the Washington establishment.
“Hunter,” as friends and family call him, is a 38-year-old lawyer whose work as a lobbyist and a hedge fund principal has created some awkward moments for the elder Biden, just as the Democratic vice-presidential nominee is emphasizing his working-class origins and how he has tackled moneyed interests on behalf of ordinary Americans.
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Click to activate the interactive map (requires Java)MAP HINTS: Click expands a name. Control+Click centers map on a name. Solid lines are current relations. Dotted lines are former relations. For advanced tools choose Tools > Options from the menu at top. More help. Not seeing the maps? Please go here to check for the latest version of Java.Hunter Biden, the second son of Biden and his late wife, Neilia, served in the Jesuit Volunteer Corps after graduating from Georgetown University. Right out of Yale Law School, he landed a job with financial services giant MBNA, the largest employer in Delaware and a major contributor to his father’s campaigns.
After stints as a presidential appointee in Bill Clinton’s Commerce Department and a consultant for MBNA, he went into business with William Oldaker, a former Federal Election Commission counsel and longtime adviser and fund-raiser for his father.
Oldaker, Biden & Belair, LLP made $1.7 million in the first six months of this year, and is registered to represent clients including the government of the Northern Mariana Islands, the National Association of Shareholders & Consumer Attorneys and a number of colleges and hospitals.
Biden’s clients reported paying the company $470,000 so far this year, according to the analysis by USA Today.
It is not illegal for a member of Congress to have a relative in the lobbying profession. At least 24 House members and 31 senators had relatives registered as lobbyists in the 2002, 2004 and 2006 election cycles, according to research by Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, a liberal watchdog group.
But the reports about Hunter Biden’s business activities are particularly sensitive at a time when presumptive Democratic nominee Barack Obama has vowed to reduce the influence of special interest groups on policymaking and barred contributions from lobbyists.
The Washington Post, for instance, documented how the younger Biden sought help from Obama’s staff to secure earmarks for several of his Illinois clients, including a college nursing program and a hospital.
The paper reported that Hunter Biden got the cooperation of Obama’s office to win $190,000 in federal funds for St. Xavier University, a four-year, 5,600-student institution run by the Roman Catholic Sisters of Mercy in suburban Chicago.
Biden also sought help from Obama’s staff to get funding for Chicago’s Thorek Memorial Hospital. In 2006, Obama asked for $2 million for a cancer research treatment center there, according to a letter requesting the money posted on Obama’s campaign website. Hunter Biden was the registered lobbyist and his firm was paid $120,000 for representing Thorek, which has not received funding, according to the Post.
Obama spokesman David Wade told the Post that Hunter Biden never appealed directly to the senator.
“Hunter Biden met with the Obama Senate office, not with Senator Obama,” Wade said. “It’s hardly surprising that a senator from Illinois would fight for investments in Mercy Hospital, Thorek Hospital and St. Xavier University right in Illinois, or that he’d be joined in that effort by a Republican colleague, Representative Judy Biggert.”
Prior to working for Oldaker, Hunter Biden was the senior vice president and then a consultant for credit card company MBNA Corp.
From 2001 to 2005, he was paid an undisclosed amount by the company, which has since been purchased by Bank of America.
Those were the same years that his father was helping the credit card industry win passage of a law making it harder for consumers to file for bankrupty protection – a law opposed by Obama and which was finally passed in 2005.
Obama aides told the New York Times that Hunter Biden had never lobbied for MBNA and that there was nothing improper about the consulting payments.
Besides his lobbying and consulting work, Hunter Biden is also chairman of a New York-based hedge fund group, called Paradigm Global Advisers, which faces lawsuits from a former business partner, a former investor, and a former executive, all of whom claim they were defrauded. Besides Hunter Biden, his uncle, James Biden, is a principal in Paradigm.
In one lawsuit, former investor Anthony Lotito contends that James Biden called him in January, 2006, asking him to arrange a job for Hunter Biden because of Joseph Biden’s concerns that his son’s lobbying career might hurt his bid for the White House.
Lotito provides no evidence of the senator’s involvement in the court papers, however. Hunter and James Biden countersued, accusing their former partner defrauded them by misrepresenting his experience in the hedge fund industry and recommending that they hire a lawyer with felony convictions.
In an affidavit, Hunter Biden said his father had nothing to do with the deal and that it is Lotito who swindled the Bidens.
The campaign of Sens. Barack Obama and Biden declined to discuss the case with reporters, referring questions to Nicholas Gravante Jr., a lawyer representing Hunter and James Biden. Gravante told the Washington Post that assertions that Joseph Biden told his brother he was concerned about his son’s lobbying are “absolutely false.”
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Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin is McCain’s surprise VP pick
Sarah Palin, governor of Alaska since 2006, is John McCain’s choice for his vice-presidential running mate.
The selection is considered a potentially high-risk, but also high-reward gamble to woo conservatives, as well as female voters who may still feel alienated by Barack Obama’s defeat of Hillary Clinton.
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She is also a lifetime member of the National Rifle Association and an opponent of abortion, whose pick is expected to reassure the evangelical base of the Republican party.
In a rousing introduction, Palin portrayed herself as a reform-minded governor of Alaska who has challenged the party’s old guard, attacked pork-barrel spending and taken a strong interest in energy issues.
“I stood up to the special interests, the lobbyists, the oil companies and the good old boy network,” she said, noting she had turned down federal funding for the “bridge to nowhere,” a project championed by two Republican congressmen from Alaska that became a symbol of wasteful spending.

Sarah PalinExpectations had been that McCain would choose a more experienced politician. High on the list of potential VP candidates were Minnesota Gov. Tom Pawlenty, failed presidential candidate Mitt Romney, former Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Ridge and Sen. Joe Lieberman.
But picking a woman from outside the beltway could pay dividends with voters looking for confirmation that McCain is a maverick determined to change politics as usual. It also gives the McCain campaign the ability to claim that it, too, is potentially historic.
Palin went out of her way to invoke the precedents set by Geraldine Ferraro, the first woman on a Democratic presidential ticket, as well by Clinton, saying she had left “18 million cracks” in the highest glass ceiling in the land.
Then, making a direct appeal to Clinton’s supporters, she said, “It turns out that the women in America aren’t finished yet, and we can shatter that glass ceiling.”
The down side of the selection, however, is that by putting a first-term governor on the ticket, GOP attacks on Obama’s youth and inexperience may now ring hollow.
In addition, McCain and Palin have disagreed on energy policy, an issue that will play a major role in the general election. As governor of Alaska, Palin supports drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. Earlier this week, The Weekly Standard described her as “the nation’s most prominent advocate” of drilling in the wildlife refuge that environmentalists see as one of America’s most precious natural wilderness areas.
McCain, who recently reversed his position on offshore drilling, had long opposed oil exploration in the wildlife refuge.
In her first remarks on a national stage, however, Palin stressed their shared belief in the need to challenge the status quo. “This is a moment when principle and political independence matter a lot more than the party line,” she said.
The daughter of a science teacher and school secretary, Palin is a former Miss Alaska runnerup, who holds a degree in journalism from the University of Idaho. She describes herself as “a hockey mom,” who initially got involved in politics through the PTA.
Palin served two terms on the city council of Wasilla, a suburb of Anchorage, AK, from 1992 to 1996, was elected mayor in 1996, and ran unsuccessfully for lieutenant governor in 2002.
After charging then-Republican Gov. Frank Murkowski with misconduct, she won election in 2006, by defeating the incumbent governor in the Republican primary, and then a former Democratic governor in the general election.
Details of Palin’s personal life have contributed to her own image as a political maverick. She hunts, eats moose hamburger, ice fishes, rides snowmobiles, and owns a float plane.
Her husband, Todd, is a commercial fisherman and, she noted in her introduction, “a proud member of the United Steelworkers union.” Outside the fishing season, he works for BP at an oil field on the North Slope and is a champion snowmobiler, winning the 2,000-mile Iron Dog race four times.
The couple have three daughters: Bristol, 17, Willow, 13, and Piper, 7. Three days after giving birth to her second son, Trig Paxson Van Palin, on April 18th, she returned to the office.
As governor, Palin is facing a state investigation related to her firing of Public Safety Commissioner Walter Monegan who alleged that his removal was due in part to his reluctance to fire an Alaska state trooper, Mike Wooten, who had been involved in a divorce and child custody battle with Palin’s sister, Molly McCann.
Palin disputes that charge, asserting Monegan was dismissed for not filling state trooper vacancies, and because he “did not turn out to be a team player on budgeting issues.”
In a prepared statement yesterday, the Obama campaign portrayed Palin as an ideologue without the experience to govern.
“Today, John McCain put the former mayor of a town of 9,000 with zero foreign policy experience a heartbeat away from the presidency,” said campaign spokesman Bill Burton. “Governor Palin shares John McCain’s commitment to overturning Roe v. Wade, the agenda of Big Oil and continuing George Bush’s failed economic policies – that’s not the change we need, it’s just more of the same.”
To hear McCain’s introduction of Palin, click here:
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‘Accountable America’ goes for the jugular against big GOP donors
The idea is to make fat-cat funders think twice before underwriting attack ads against Democratic candidates and causes.
But whether a new group’s promise to go after such benefactors with legal action and potentially embarrassing publicity will discourage them from signing the big checks remains to be seen.
“We want to stop the Swift Boating before it gets off the ground,” said Tom Matzzie, a liberal political operative who formed Accountable America earlier this month.
The idea of the new nonprofit is to warn donors to conservative groups that they will face legal and even personal consequences, in the form of ads identifying their handiwork if they support such campaigns, and thereby create a chilling effect that will dry up contributions.
Matzzie, who has been involved with numerous progressive causes, from Moveon.com to the Campaign for America’s Future, said his group has already sent out a warning letter to 10,000 of the biggest donors to conservative causes and candidates.
“We aim to educate the public about the connections between these donors, many with unsavory business and personal stories, and lawmakers in Washington,” the group’s website declares.
First up on its program is billionaire Texas developer Harold Simmons, who supports John McCain’s candidacy and who has financed ads attacking Barack Obama for his ties to former anti-war activist Bill Ayers, through a new group called the American Issues Project.
Accountable America describes Simmons as having “a long history of corruption and scandal,” citing among other things, a Washington Post story about how he earned his fortune through hostile takeovers, and how his companies have been charged with raiding their workers pension funds to finance such takeover deals.
It also notes that at least one of Simmons’ daughters, Serena Connolly, has donated the maximum allowable amount to both Sens. Hillary Clinton and Obama. Another daughter, Lisa Epstein, has donated to Democrats in the past.
Besides Simmons, Accountable America lists five “persons of interest,” including casino mogul Sheldon Adelson, developer George Argyros, financier Carl Lindner, real-estate mogul Richard Farmer and Florida developer and former ambassador Mel Sembler.
Conservative activists said they expect the group to have no impact.
Chris LaCivita, a Republican strategist who helped organize the Swift Boat effort, told the New York Times that Matzzie’s group was likely to fire up potential donors, rather than discourage them.
“They’re not going to be intimidated by some pipsqueak on the kooky left,” LaCivita said.
Aaron Sorkin plans Facebook, the movie
More than 100 million people use Facebook, but until recently, Aaron Sorkin was not one of them.
Now Sorkin has a good reason to sign up. Sorkin plans to write the movie version of the popular networking site.
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Click to activate the interactive map (requires Java)MAP HINTS: Click expands a name. Control+Click centers map on a name. Solid lines are current relations. Dotted lines are former relations. For advanced tools choose Tools > Options from the menu at top. More help. Not seeing the maps? Please go here to check for the latest version of Java.Sorkin will team with producer Scott Rudin for the film, which will tell the story of Facebook’s origins, when it was co-founded by Harvard roommates Mark Zuckerberg, Chris Hughes and Dustin Moskovitz.
Facebook was availabe first only to Harvard students, then expanded to accommodate all Ivy League students. Now, anyone can join the site.
Sorkin is best known for writing the films Charlie Wilson’s War and A Few Good Men, as well as the TV show The West Wing.
Before he begins the screenplay, Sorkin is sharpening his internet skills.
On a new Facebook group page, titled “Aaron Sorkin & The Facebook Movie,” Sorkin admits, “I figured a good first step in my preparation would be finding out what Facebook is, so I’ve started this page. (Actually it was started by my researcher, Ian Reichbach, because my grandmother has more Internet savvy than I do and she’s been dead for 33 years.)”
Sorkin has not yet revealed whether the movie will address the controversy concerning the founding of Facebook.
In 2004, identical twins Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss, founders of the social networking site ConnectU, sued Facebook. They claimed that Zuckerberg, their Harvard classmate, stole the idea for Facebook after they had hired him to write code.
The lawsuit was settled in early 2008. It was decided that Facebook would acquire ConnectU, and the founders of ConnectU would receive an undisclosed sum of money and stock in Facebook.
After the ruling, the Winklevoss brothers protested that Microsoft’s October 2007 investment in Facebook proved the company’s value to be $15 billion, not $3-$4 billion, as had been claimed in the lawsuit.
U.S. District Court Judge James Ware ruled that the Winklevoss brothers weren’t allowed to file an appeal until the original settlement goes through.
In the meantime, the Winklevoss twins competed in the Bejing Olympics for the U.S., receiving sixth place in the men’s pairs rowing competition.
Sorkin has asked Facebook users to contribute their stories to aid him in writing the film. He promises, “I’ll try to get better at this as I get more practice.”
Smurfs Promoter Stuart R Ross Charged With Extortion
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Cecile Richards Gives John Mccain a Send Up That Would Make Her Mother Proud
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Smurfs promoter Stuart R. Ross charged with extortion
Stuart R. Ross, the man who brought the Smurfs to America, would seem to be starring in his own made-for-TV production, but it’s hardly a cartoon.
On Friday, Manhattan District Attorney Robert M. Morgenthau accused Ross, 71, and his lawyer of trying to extort up to $11 million from his son-in-law, David S. Blitzer.
Hint: Click in map to explore connectionsStory continues below interactive map

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According to the district attorney’s office, Allison Blitzer and her father have been estranged for approximately six years and he has never met her children.
The arrest marks a fall from grace for Ross, a lawyer and entrepreneur who reportedly spotted the little blue cartoon Smurfs in Belgium while vacationing in 1976.
He purchased the North American distribution rights and then teamed with Wallace Berrie & Co. to distribute Smurfs merchandise.
NBC then created a television cartoon show based on the characters.
According to Morgenthau’s office, Ross began making monetary demands on Blitzer in December 2007 when he asked for money to start a business venture.
Blitzer sent him $15,000 in January. He sent another $50,000 in May, saying that would be the last money he would give.
In June, Ross demanded another $50,000 to $100,000. In one message, he vowed to “commit open warfare” if Blitzer didn’t send money.
He also threatened to go to the media with accusations that he said would “damage Blitzer’s reputation, ruin his career and even lead to his arrest.”
By July, Ross allegedly got help in his efforts from Stuart Jackson, 79, a friend and Manhattan lawyer. Jackson has also been charged with attempted grand larceny in the case.
At one point, Ross berated Blitzer for not cooperating with Jackson.
“David, this is your worst nightmare. Your father-in-law Stuart Ross,” Ross said in a phone call, according to the criminal complaint.
“You have been a discourteous prick to Stuart Jackson. I am going to continue to harass you. I am going to call you every day – four or five times a day – I am going to keep calling – I will continue to harass you.”
On Aug. 5, Ross allegedly told Blitzer that for $5.5 million he would give up any right he had to visit his daughter or grandchildren. And he said he wouldn’t communicate with Blitzer or anyone at Blackstone.
On Aug. 6, in a letter to Roger L. Stavis, Blitzer’s attorney, Jackson allegedly said he wanted twice as much, $11 million.
Stavis contacted the district attorney’s office before getting back to Jackson. On Aug. 21, Jackson and Ross met with Blitzer and Stavis. At that meeting, Blitzer agreed to pay $400,000 to Ross. Blitzer then gave Ross a $50,000 check.
The next day, police arrested Ross and Jackson, who face up to seven years in prison if convicted.
On Aug. 22, Blitzer also filed a civil suit against Ross.
According to Bloomberg.com, the suit states that Ross lost the licensing rights to the Smurfs and then had other setbacks because of “profligate spending, bad business decisions and a drinking problem.”
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Steve Schmidt Aka the Bullet Takes Aim at Obamas Strengths
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