FEC Shoots Down Democrat’s Plan to Target Conservative
Media
by Colin Madine 14 Jul 2017
The Federal Election Commission (FEC) has declined
a proposal by Democrat Commissioner Ellen
Weintraub to undertake new
rulemaking regarding alleged foreign influence in the 2016 election to target
conservative media including the Drudge Report and Breitbart News, stating it
“cannot support proposals that would burden the free speech rights of American
citizens based on incomplete information about foreign activities in the
2016 election.”
The FEC has declined to consider new rulemaking over
alleged foreign influence in the 2016 presidential election that could target
conservative media including InfoWars and Breitbart News. In a statement released
by Vice Chair Caroline Hunter and Commissioners Lee Goodman and Matthew
Petersen, the members state they “cannot support proposals that would burden
the free speech rights of American citizens based on incomplete information
about foreign activities in the 2016 election.”
They further describe Weintraub’s proposal as one that
would “‘blunt’ the Supreme Court’s decision in Citizen’s United.” In the
opinion of three members who wrote the statement, there is no information
currently showing that the FEC’s existing rules that prohibit foreign
involvement in U.S. elections are “inadequate to detect, enforce, and punish
violations.”
The statement was released by the three Republicans
serving as FEC commissioners. Weintraub and Democrat Steven Walther are the
other two current members, meaning there is at least a 3-2 majority in the
Republicans favor on this issue.
The FEC commissioners acknowledge in their statement that
a number of government agencies are currently investigating alleged foreign
interference, and address the FEC’s role, specifically noting the importance of
not taking a position of political bias:
The Federal Election Commission should cooperate with
these other agencies while maintaining necessary confidentiality and decorum in
our own processes. We must resist any efforts to politicize or compromise
the integrity of this agency’s enforcement process or the investigations of
other agencies, for the subject matter at issue implicates profoundly important
national security and foreign policy interests of the United States.
At least in the case of the FEC, leftists seem to be back
to square one in their efforts to shut down conservative media.
Read their entire statement below:
Foreign National Statement
by Breitbart Tech on
Scribd
Ellen Weintraub
Ellen L.
Weintraub is a commissioner for the Federal
Election Commission (FEC), and was an attorney at Cahill Gordon & Reindel.
Note: Trevor Potter
was the chairman for the Federal
Election Commission (FEC), and a fellow at the Brookings Institution (think tank).
Foundation
to Promote Open Society was a funder for the Brookings Institution
(think tank).
George Soros
was the chairman for the Foundation to Promote Open Society.
Bart
Friedman is a trustee at the Brookings
Institution (think tank), and a senior partner at Cahill Gordon
& Reindel.
Steven L. Rattner
a trustee at the Brookings Institution
(think tank), and attended Andrew
Ross Sorkin’s 2009 book party (Too
Big to Fail).
Andrew Ross
Sorkin is the author of Too Big to
Fail, and Laurence T. Sorkin’s son.
Laurence T.
Sorkin is Andrew Ross Sorkin’s
father, and a senior counsel at Cahill Gordon &
Reindel.
Ellen L.
Weintraub was an attorney at Cahill
Gordon & Reindel, and is a commissioner for the Federal Election Commission (FEC).
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