By Matthew Vadum on 11.6.09 @ 6:08AM
New evidence of White House political director
Patrick Gaspard's ties to the radical
group.
More proof has emerged of White House political director Patrick
Gaspard's ties to the radical advocacy group
ACORN.
Gaspard, a longtime operative for ACORN and one
of its partisan arms, New York's Working
Families Party, currently holds the title of White House
political affairs director, the same title Karl Rove held in
President Bush's White
House.
Internal ACORN documents show that Gaspard gave
ACORN $40,000 over the past two years. Specifically, while
Gaspard worked as an executive vice president of Service
Employees International Union Local 1199 in New York he gave
ACORN $15,000 in 2007 and $25,000 in
2008.
That's an awfully large tithe for
someone who made $111,894 in 2007 and who has a wife and
two children. The $111,894 figure comes from SEIU
1199's
most recent publicly available tax
return. (If salary and deferred
benefits are combined the total is
$151,869.)
Moreover, Gaspard hails from New York which has
a crushing tax burden, especially for individuals earning
six-figure salaries -- and he lived in the upscale
neighborhood of
Park Slope, Brooklyn.
It was unclear at press time if Gaspard's wife
contributes to the family
fisc.
It is also entirely possible that the $40,000
Gaspard handed over to ACORN was SEIU money.
And in the scheme of things it really
doesn't matter whether the lefty lucre belonged to
Gaspard or SEIU. What matters is the fact that Gaspard handed
over the money to ACORN. This is yet more proof of his closeness
to the radical group.
Gaspard was
previously revealed to
be political director for ACORN's New York operation.
Although the source of this information, ACORN founder Wade
Rathke, has since
feigned senility and
claimed he was mistaken, evidence of Gaspard's ties
to ACORN remains plentiful, as demonstrated by
Stanley Kurtz,
Trevor Loudon,
Erick Erickson, and
Moe
Lane.
When I reported Sept. 28 that
Gaspard was ACORN's
man in the White
House, the Obama administration promptly went into damage control
mode and reflexively denied the report. Although the White House
lied, various
gullible
reporters accepted the
denial at face value, doing little or no research on their
own.
Particularly risible was the research done by
PolitiFact. Its attempt
at debunking the story included information provided by
less than credible Alinskyite sources for whom truth is a
relative concept: ACORN spokesmen Brian Kettenring and Scott
Levenson and disgraced ACORN founder Wade Rathke who covered up
his brother's million-dollar embezzlement from
the group for eight
years.
Incidentally, one thing that journalists
don't get about ACORN, which used to employ President
Obama himself, is that it is a strange, complex creature with
tentacles that reach into the highest levels of the United
States government, the Democratic Party, corporate America, the
labor movement, the nonprofit world, the media, foreign
governments, and
academia.
ACORN has a confusing structure with its
network of who-knows-how-many taxpayer-funded tax-exempt
nonprofit affiliates. As I've written
ad nauseam,
this is deliberate. ACORN identifies its affiliates as ACORN
affiliates when it is convenient and claims the same entities are
not ACORN affiliates when it is not. This game of nonprofit
musical chairs is standard operating procedure at ACORN
whenever things get
hot.
Gaspard previously worked for the Working
Families Party, which is an integral part of ACORN's
far-flung empire of radical activism -- as is SEIU,
although the left-wing union is now trying to
distance itself from ACORN.
ACORN's chief organizer Bertha Lewis co-founded the
Working Families Party. ACORN notes on
its website that in
1998 "ACORN members spearhead[ed] formation of the
Working Families Party, the first community-labor party with
official ballot status in New York state in more than 50 years."
ACORN and the party share office space in
Brooklyn.
Even though he's working in
the White House now,
Gaspard can't tear
himself
away
from New York politics. He reportedly helped
persuade leftist Republican Dede Scozzafava, who had been
endorsed by the Working Families Party in previous elections, to
endorse the Democratic candidate in the special election in New
York's 23rd congressional district after she dropped
out of the race. On Tuesday Democrat Bill Owens beat
Conservative Party candidate Doug
Hoffman.
Given Gaspard's longstanding links
to ACORN, it's not at all surprising that
Scott Levenson, a
lobbyist and spokesman for ACORN, dropped by the White
House in March to visit with his former co-worker. The purpose of
the meeting was not
disclosed.
Levenson is the obnoxious chap Glenn Beck gave
the bum's rush to on May 6 for calling the TV host a
racist off-camera, a standard calumny ACORN hurls at
critics. "You're just afraid of black
people," he reportedly said to
Beck.
Levenson's been helping to
coordinate ACORN's public disinformation strategy
which relies heavily on lies and misdirection.
Gaspard's brother Michael works alongside
Levenson at the Advance Group, ACORN's lobbying and
PR shop in New York
City.
Internal ACORN documents also revealed that
Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.), who heads a congressional
subcommittee that may be investigating ACORN in the
not-too-distant future, gave ACORN $6,000 in
2008.
Under New York's
"fusion" system, ACORN ally Nadler has
run on the tickets of both the Democratic Party and of
ACORN's Working Families
Party.
Not surprisingly, Nadler has been most
reluctant to have his House Judiciary subcommittee on the
Constitution, civil rights, and civil liberties investigate
ACORN. He's even been
providing advice to
ACORN's New York-based lawyer Arthur Z.
Schwartz on how to defend his favorite activist
group.
Another ACORN figure in the news, Peter
Colavito, gave $15,000 to ACORN in 2008, according to internal
ACORN documents.
Colavito, a former New York ACORN official and
a board member of the Working Families Party, is
now political director
of SEIU Local 32BJ, which was active in the recent
gubernatorial race in New
Jersey.
Meanwhile, Congress has extended the ban
on federal funding for ACORN that lapsed at the end of
October.
The ban, part of stopgap spending legislation,
runs out Dec. 18.The ACORN Institute, a part
of ACORN's radical advocacy network,
remains eligible for
the Combined Federal Campaign (CFC), despite the
protests of Sen. Charles Grassley
(R-Iowa).CFC refers to the Combined
Federal Campaign, which bills itself as "the
world's largest and most successful annual workplace
charity campaign." CFC is a federally administered
program that channels donations from federal civilian,
postal and military employees into causes deemed worthwhile. It
is unclear how much money the ACORN network receives through
CFC.
topics:
ACORN, Patrick Gaspard, Service Employees International Union