By Matthew Vadum on 10.26.09 @ 6:07AM
ACORN enjoys congressional a congressional investigator's
protection.
Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.), who heads a congressional
subcommittee that may be investigating ACORN in the
not-too-distant future, has been providing advice to ACORN's
lawyer, according to a new report.
Nadler, a longtime ACORN ally, is chairman of the House
Judiciary Committee's subcommittee on the Constitution, civil
rights, and civil liberties.
Lincoln Anderson, a reporter for the
Villager, writes
that earlier this month while he attended at the office of
ACORN's New York-based lawyer Arthur Z. Schwartz to interview
him, a telephone call came in from Nadler:
Midway through the interview with The Villager last
Thursday, Schwartz got a phone call from Congressmember Jerrold
Nadler. The West Side congressmember -- one of only about a
dozen Democrats to oppose the Defund ACORN Act -- was calling
Schwartz's attention to an e-mail that had been forwarded to
him, detailing a directive from two weeks earlier to federal
agencies, implementing the act. The directive not only ordered
agencies to cease funding ACORN and all its subcontractors, but
cancel all funding allocated in previous years. The memo had
been found -- where else? -- on a right-wing blog.
Nadler has branded the Defund ACORN Act a "bill of
attainder," or an unfair, punitive act by Congress; Schwartz
said the congressmember, during the phone call, asked
him why ACORN hasn't sued over this yet.
[emphasis added]
How exactly is it appropriate for the chairman of a
congressional subcommittee to be offering strategic advice to a
group he is now under growing pressure to probe?
A call to Nadler's Capitol Hill office on Sunday seeking
comment was not immediately returned.
In spring Nadler performed a political kabuki dance with
House Judiciary Committee chairman
John Conyers (D-Mich.), promising during a congressional
hearing to probe ACORN if "credible
evidence" of wrongdoing arose.
"It's not our business to say ACORN is terrible or ACORN is
wonderful. That's not a congressional job,"
Nadler said. "The evidence -- I've listened to it -- I think
most of it is nonsense. If it's true, it's a law enforcement
matter."
Weeks later Conyers
mysteriously backed away from his promise to investigate
ACORN, saying "the powers that be" had decided against it. He's
refused to identify "the powers that be."
Like Nadler, Judiciary Committee chairman Conyers is also a
huge fan of ACORN. Conyers received a 100% rating from ACORN in
its 2006 legislative scorecard. He showed how truly in sync he
was with ACORN when he spoke at the group's national convention
last June 22. "I'm through with deregulation," said Conyers. "It doesn't work
because the capitalist predators who are waiting unregulated are
going to take advantage of it."
Of course the Judiciary Committee is doing nothing about
ACORN even as evidence of the group's corruption continues to
pile up. Conyers's press office refuses even to comment on
whether a probe might happen in the future.
Instead of taking decisive action, Conyers and another
longtime ACORN ally, House Financial Services Committee chairman
Barney Frank (D-Mass.),
punted by asking the nonpartisan Congressional Research
Service to provide a "clear and objective analysis" of the
various "charges and countercharges" concerning ACORN. CRS was
also asked to explore Nadler's allegation that an ACORN defunding
bill was an unconstitutional bill of attainder and whether young
reporters violated state wiretapping laws by capturing ACORN
workers on video offering advice in lawbreaking
techniques.
Incidentally, Nadler's newfound interest in the finer
points of constitutional law earned him a leftist fist bump from
the
Village Voice, a sure sign that the
congressman is up to no good.
As
Anita MonCrief has documented, Nadler's ties with ACORN go
way back. Under New York's "fusion" system, Nadler has run on the
tickets of both the Democratic Party and New York's Working
Families Party (WFP).
The WFP is ACORN's political party and a key member of
ACORN's farflung empire of radical activism. ACORN's chief
organizer Bertha Lewis co-founded the party and longtime ACORN
operative
Patrick Gaspard, currently White House political director,
worked for the party.
Meanwhile, in his article Anderson also quotes ACORN lawyer
Schwartz praising Nadler. "One of the things I've come to
appreciate in this is how great Jerry Nadler is," Schwartz is
quoted saying.
Now we know why ACORN holds Nadler in such high
esteem.