| INVESTIGATION OF ILLEGAL OR IMPROPER ACTIVITIES IN CONNECTION WITH 1996 FEDERAL ELECTION CAMPAIGNS FINAL REPORT
of the COMMITTEE ON GOVERNMENTAL AFFAIRS SENATE Rept. 105-167 - 105th Congress 2d Session - March 10, 1998 |
The Thirst for Money
The 1994 election results were a major setback for
Democrats. For the first time in 40 years, Republicans
controlled both houses of Congress. The Democrats' loss of
Congress, along with the President's concern that he might face
a primary challenge, fueled an urgent need for political money.
The President and his top advisors decided to raise money early
for his re-election campaign. To accomplish their goal, the
President and his top advisors took control of the DNC and
designed a plan to engage in a historically aggressive fund-
raising effort, utilizing the DNC as a vehicle for getting
around federal election laws. The DNC ran television
advertisements, created under the direct supervision of the
President, which were specifically designed to promote the
President's re-election. To fund this early advertising for the
President's benefit, the DNC had to raise more than three times
what it raised during the 1991-92 election cycle--and nearly
three times what was raised during the 1993-94 cycle.
The panoply of DNC fund-raising irregularities in the 1996
election derived, directly or indirectly, from the
unprecedented need for money to finance this ambitious
advertising strategy.
The President's Precarious Political Position in Late 1994
In the wake of the 1994 congressional elections, the
President was politically vulnerable. The President himself
recognized as much when he was reduced to defending his
``relevance'' in the political process during an extraordinary
prime-time news conference, which was covered by only one
network.1 The President's close political
confidantes were also keenly aware of his weakened political
state.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ See Todd S. Purdum, ``Undertones of Relevance,'' The New York
Times, April 20, 1995, p. A18.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Terence R. McAuliffe, the DNC's National Finance Chairman
from March 1994 to January 31, 1995, and later National Finance
Chairman for Clinton-Gore '96, testified that ``for the
Democrats, it was not a very optimistic time.'' 2
McAuliffe was in a unique position to assess the mood of both
the Democratic Party and its incumbent President. As DNC
Finance Chairman, McAuliffe testified that he ``had a better
feeling for the mood of the donors . . . than anybody else in
the country.'' 3
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Deposition of Terence R. McAuliffe, June 6, 1997, p. 13.
\3\ Id. at pp. 13-14.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
During his deposition, McAuliffe offered a candid
assessment of the President's political position in December
1994:
I had just finished up as Finance Chairman of--told
the President I was leaving the party, and we had just
lost the House and the Senate for the first time in a
long time. So there was a general mood out there that
the President was in serious trouble. A lot of people
wondered if the President was even going to run again.
I can tell you the political mood at the time clearly
was that he had no chance of winning again, clearly
would not win re-election and would have a very tough
time with a primary. And there was a lot of talk that
people would run against him in a primary. It was a
very tough political time.4
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ Id. at pp. 11-12.
McAuliffe's concern was shared by Harold Ickes, the Deputy
Chief of Staff to the President from January 1994 until after
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
the 1996 election:
Q: Now, as we move forward--as you move forward from,
say, November [1994] through early 1995, did you have a
major concern about the ability of the President to be
re-elected for a second term because of what happened
in the November elections?
A: If you're a Democrat, you're always concerned
about primaries, and having played a fairly significant
role in the Kennedy-Carter primary of 1980, I
appreciated what a divisive primary in connection with
a sitting President could do that, even if you were to
win the primaries, i.e., win the nomination--``win the
primaries'' is sort of shorthand for that--y[ou] could
be damaged enough to lose the general election. So the
answer is yes, I was concerned at that time because I
think it was--it's fair to say that there were people
within the party--using the party writ broad now--the
Democratic Party family who were questioning whether
the President could win re-election in a general
election, and there was certainly some loose talk
around about some people mounting a primary against
him. So the answer is--the short answer, after a long
answer, is I was concerned.5
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Deposition of Harold Ickes, June 26, 1997, pp. 21-22; see also
infra, notes 28-29 and accompanying text.
This was the bleak outlook for the President as he contemplated
his re-election campaign.
An Early Emphasis on Money to Stave off Primary Challengers
Two days after Christmas 1994, the President and McAuliffe
ate breakfast in the President's personal study on the second
floor of the White House.6 The breakfast lasted
about two hours.7 The general discussion concerned
what the President and McAuliffe needed to do to get ``ready
for the '96 election.'' 8
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ Deposition of Terence R. McAuliffe, June 6, 1997, pp. 10-11.
\7\ Id. at p. 14.
\8\ Id. at p. 12.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
When asked whether he and the President discussed the
possibility of a primary challenge to the President, McAuliffe
answered:
You know, I can't recall if he talked about a primary
challenge, but, I mean, just pick up the newspapers, I
mean, I don't think we would have had to have talked
about it. I mean, it was evident that the President was
in a very precarious political situation. I think his
poll numbers, he was in the low thirties.9
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ Id. at p. 13.
Nevertheless, McAuliffe, who by his own admission is ``not
negative by nature,'' was ``optimistic and thought [the
President] should be re-elected.'' 10 McAuliffe
testified that he was ``willing to lead that fight.''
11
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ Id. at pp. 12, 13.
\11\ Id. at p. 13.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Of course, the President would require money to wage that
fight, a topic which he discussed with McAuliffe. In his
deposition, McAuliffe tried to downplay the discussion of fund-
raising at the breakfast, stating that ``the fund-raising
discussion probably took 32 seconds.'' 12 When they
first sat down for breakfast, the President and McAuliffe
talked about the mood of the donors. McAuliffe described them
as ``depressed'' and ``demoralized.'' 13
Nonetheless, McAuliffe volunteered to ``put this operation
together,'' telling the President, ``Let's not talk about fund-
raising here, sir, I'll handle all that for you.''
14 McAuliffe continued:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ Id.
\13\ Id. at p. 14.
\14\ Id.
Mr. President, you have broad support out there in
the donor community, which is what I represented as the
Finance Chair of the party. I'm going to be able to put
this operation together for you. The support of the
people will be there for you. Don't worry about it.
I'll handle it.
And he--I think it took a tremendous burden off his
shoulders. I think he was worried. I think he was
probably worried that I wouldn't be his Finance
Chairman. I mean, they worry about--see, what you
worried about at the time is a lot of the donors and
political supporters would leak off and go to other
candidates. That was a big concern.
Q: And when you say other candidates, you mean other
Democratic candidates?
A: Yeah. You know, that potentially--you know, there
was talk out there that Bradley was looking at it, that
Gephardt was looking at it, that Jesse Jackson might
look at it. You know, the names you normally hear, you
hear them again today.
Q: Did you commit to raise a specific amount of money
for the President in that meeting?
A: I said I'd take care of the money, it would be no
problem: Don't you worry about it, sir, I'll take care
of it. I don't think I knew at the time what the limits
were.15
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ Id. at pp. 15-16.
According to McAuliffe, most of the remaining two hours were
devoted to discussing ``issues,'' such as ``where this country
was going.'' 16
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ Id. at p. 14.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
At the end of the breakfast, the topic of fund-raising
arose again. The discussion centered on what the President
needed to do to help raise funds. The conversation helped set
the stage for, among other things, the White House coffees:
Q: Did you discuss with the President what his
involvement would be in the fund-raising operation?
A: The only thing I discussed with him, I think at
the end of the meeting he said, What do I need to do?
And I said, Mr. President, you know, I need to get some
time with you to meet with some of the key supporters
who are demoralized out there so that you can get them
re-energized and ready for the '96
election.17
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ Id. at p. 16; see also the section of this report on White
House coffees.
McAuliffe left the meeting knowing that he would be the Finance
Chairman for the President's re-election effort. As McAuliffe
put it, the President ``never said, Terry, will you be my
Finance Chairman? It was clear that I was going to be the
guy.'' 18
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ Deposition of Terence R. McAuliffe, June 6, 1997, p. 11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
McAuliffe did go on to lead Clinton/Gore's fund-raising
effort; however, Clinton/Gore was limited by law to raising
funds in certain increments (no more than $1,000 from an
individual),19 and there was an overall spending
limit. By the end of the summer of 1995, the re-election
campaign had raised ``a good chunk'' of all the funds it could
legally raise.20 No doubt, a strong motivating
factor in quickly raising this money was the need to discourage
potential primary challengers. Indeed, no additional funds
could be raised for the general election due to federal
restrictions.21 In any event, all of the re-election
campaign's funds were expected to be raised by the end of
1995.22
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ 2 U.S.C. Sec. 441(a)(6).
\20\ Deposition of Terence R. McAuliffe, June 6, 1997, p. 50.
\21\ 26 U.S.C. Sec. Sec. 9003(b)(2) & 9012(b).
\22\ Deposition of Terence R. McAuliffe, June 6, 1997, pp. 50-51.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dick Morris' Early Advertising Blitz--The Need for More Money
Still, a formidable re-election treasury, by itself, would
not resuscitate the President's moribund political position.
After the devastating 1994 mid-term Congressional elections,
the President reached out to his old friend and former
political consultant, Dick Morris, for political advice.
Morris, one of the President's closest political
consultants,23 explained to the President that, even
to consider a chance at re-election in 1996, he must begin in
1995 an advertising campaign unprecedented in scope, timing,
and cost. The President ultimately seized upon Morris's plan,
thereby creating a tremendous need for huge amounts of money to
finance this media crusade.24
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ After Morris graduated from Columbia College, he became
involved in New York politics and worked for the Citizen's Budget
Commission as a research analyst. Deposition of Richard Morris, August
20, 1997, p. 6. His first political consulting company was the Public
Affairs Research Organization, which provided issue consulting for New
York Democrats. Id. at pp. 6-7. In 1977, he began a new political
consulting firm, Dresner, Morris, which later changed names to Dresner,
Morris, Tortorello, and has remained a full time political consultant
since that time. Id. at p. 7.
In 1977, when President Clinton was the Attorney General of
Arkansas, he first engaged Morris to perform a variety of political
consulting tasks, including polling, advertisement design, and speech-
writing. Id. at p. 8. Morris also assisted President Clinton with his
failed 1980 re-election campaign for Governor of Arkansas and his
successful 1982 bid for Governor. Id. at p. 13. Morris consistently
performed consulting work for Governor Clinton from 1982 through
January 1991. Id. at p. 14. In 1991, Morris terminated his consulting
services for Governor Clinton and testified as follows:
I had become more of a Republican at that point, and I
had handled his 1990 campaign as the only Democrat that I
was working for. And I told--I grandfathered him in, in a
sense, because I had a long relationship with him, and he
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
asked me to handle his 1990 campaign.
Id. at p. 14. Morris did not conduct any professional consulting
services for Governor Clinton throughout his 1992 Presidential
campaign. Id. at p. 15.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ Though familiar with the media blitz that gave rise to the
White House's thirst for money, Morris had extremely limited knowledge
of the DNC's and Clinton/Gore's fund-raising activity. He testified as
follows: ``I had no involvement nor have I ever had with fund-raising
for him [the President].'' Id. at p. 8. Morris also denied any
knowledge of John Huang, Charlie Trie or James Riady other than what he
had read in newspaper articles beginning in late 1996. Id. at pp. 8-9.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the spring of 1995, Morris explained to the President
that he needed to advertise early to improve his approval
ratings and give him a chance to win re-election.25
The President agreed to some initial advertisements to
determine if Morris' views were correct. The first ``flight''
of advertising released in July 1995 was paid for by the
Clinton/Gore '96 re-election committee (hereinafter referred to
as ``Clinton/Gore'').26 The results of the July
media ``showed very significant movement'' for the President,
which Morris used to convince the President to undertake the
unprecedented advertising campaign Morris had
proposed.27
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ Id. at pp. 97-98, 271-72.
\26\ Id. at pp. 130-31. These expenditures occurred prior to any
discussions concerning ``the possibility of funding ads or running
specific ads or the text of ads that would be run under the DNC
label.'' Id. at p. 131.
\27\ Id. at p. 132.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As noted, Ickes, the White House deputy chief of staff in
charge of the President's re-election campaign, was concerned
that the President could face a primary contest.28
Ickes believed that the President needed to save Clinton/Gore
funds (which Morris wanted to spend on advertising) in the
event that they were needed for a primary fight.29
For precisely this reason, Ickes opposed Morris' early
advertising campaign. When Ickes was asked whether he and
Morris disagreed about spending money on advertising in 1995--
rather than closer to the election in 1996--Ickes testified:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ Id. at p. 126; see also supra, text accompanying note 5
(quoting from Ickes' deposition before the Committee).
\29\ Morris deposition, p. 126.
There was a debate about that running over a period
of months, and different people had different
positions. My own position was that, depending upon
what money you were talking about--there are different
kinds of money, as I'm sure you know by now--that if it
were going to be Clinton-Gore campaign money, that I
was very reluctant to see that money spent that
early.30
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ Deposition of Harold Ickes, June 26, 1997, p. 31.
Morris, however, was convinced that without a massive
advertising campaign prior to the primaries, the President
would be so weak in the polls that he definitely would face a
primary fight.31
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ Morris deposition, p. 127.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Although Morris was initially unaware of the financial
condition of Clinton/Gore and the DNC at the time he was
pressing for significant advertising expenditures, he learned
that the Clinton/Gore Primary Committee was limited to spending
approximately $30 million.32 Morris shared Ickes'
concern that the media campaign likely would exceed the $30
million limit placed on the Clinton-Gore Primary
Committee.33 Confronted with these funding
limitations, Morris searched for alternative methods to finance
the President's re-election campaign.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ Id. at pp. 129-30.
\33\ See id. at p. 132.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Morris suggested that the President reject federal matching
funds so as to increase the amount of contributions that could
be legally accepted by Clinton/Gore (and provide the
desperately needed additional funds for
advertising).34 Morris presented this concept to the
President and his top advisors in the March 2 and 16, and April
27, 1995 weekly agendas.35 In July 1995, Erskine
Bowles, then Ickes' counterpart as White House deputy chief of
staff, told Morris that the President had decided not to reject
federal matching funds.36 Bowles told Morris to come
up with a ``plan B,'' i.e., a method for accomplishing his
advertising objectives within the limits of the federal
matching funds expenditures.37 Initially, Morris did
not know how he would fund the advertising plan because the
Clinton/Gore funds would have to be used for other campaign
expenditures.38
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\34\ Id. at pp. 97-100, 262-63. A presidential candidate who
accepts federal matching funds agrees in return to limit campaign
expenditures in primaries and in the general election. 2 U.S.C.
Sec. 441a(b)(1).
\35\ Morris deposition, pp. 262-63; see March 2 and 16, and April
27, 1995 agendas (Exs. 1, 2 and 3). Morris produced portions of written
agendas for the weekly strategy meetings beginning in February or March
of 1995. See Morris deposition, p. 256. The meetings were chaired by
Morris, and were regularly attended by the President, the Vice
President, Chief of Staff Leon Panetta, Ickes, Bowles, and other top
White House, Clinton/Gore, and DNC officials. Dick Morris, Behind the
Oval Office, p. 26 (1997) (hereinafter ``Behind the Oval Office''). The
weekly agendas were summaries of the advice Morris gave the President
during those meetings. Morris deposition, p. 258.
\36\ Id. at p. 133.
\37\ Id.
\38\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
hatching a scheme to evade federal election laws
Ultimately, the White House found a ``Plan B'': running the
advertisements through the DNC under the guise of issue
advertising. Unlike Clinton/Gore, the DNC could raise unlimited
amounts of non-federal, ``soft'' money, although such money can
only be spent for ``party-building'' activities, such as voter
registration and ``get out the vote'' efforts.39
During the 1996 federal election cycle, these restrictions on
the use of ``soft'' money were ignored; the DNC became a shadow
re-election campaign, allowing the President to spend more than
the federal limits to which he had agreed in accepting partial
public financing for his campaign. In short, the President used
the DNC for an end-run around restrictive federal campaign
laws. Both Morris and Ickes claimed credit for this idea in
their testimony before this Committee.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\39\ Justice Breyer, writing for the Supreme Court, described the
limited uses of ``soft money'':
We recognize that FECA permits individuals to contribute
more money ($20,000) to a party than to a candidate
($1,000) or to other political committees ($5,000). 2
U.S.C. Sec. 441a(a). We also recognize that FECA permits
unregulated ``soft money'' contributions to a party for
certain activities, such as electing candidates for state
office, see Sec. 431(8)(A)(i), or for voter registration
and ``get out the vote'' drives, see Sec. 431(8)(B)(xii).
But the opportunity for corruption posed by these greater
contributions is, at best, attenuated. Unregulated ``soft
money'' contributions may not be used to influence a
federal campaign, except when used in the limited, party-
building activities specifically designated in the statute.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
See Sec. 431(8)(B).
Colorado Republican Fed. Campaign Comm. v. FEC, ____ U.S. ____, 116 S.
Ct. 2309, 2316 (1996).
Morris testified that he first ``became aware of the
existence of issue advocacy advertising'' in the spring or
summer of 1995.40 Joseph Sandler, the DNC general
counsel, and Lyn Utrecht, counsel for Clinton/Gore, provided
Morris with his understanding of issue advocacy
advertising.41 He testified that ``all the
impressions that [he had] as to what you could or couldn't do
and still qualify for . . . issue advocacy advertising comes
from their legal opinion.'' 42 Morris explained his
understanding of the legal guidelines concerning issue advocacy
advertising as follows:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\40\ Morris deposition, p. 134.
\41\ Id. at pp. 140-41. Morris did not recall who first informed
him of issue advocacy advertising, but he believed it was Utrecht,
Sandler or Bill Knapp, a consultant with the firm Squier Knapp & Ochs.
Id. at p. 134.
\42\ Id. at p. 140.
issue advocacy advertising had to relate to . . . a
legislative issue that was pending before Congress,
that was actively in play and in discussion before
Congress. It had to express a point of view on that
issue which was held by the President, the
administration in general . . . and the leadership of
the Democratic Party; that it had to be an issue
position in which the Republican Party leadership took
a generally different point of view, period. The
advertisement had to be related to the substantive
disagreements between the two camps and had to urge a
substantive point of view in connection--calling for
the adoption of the Presidential/Democratic views on
those issues . . . [t]he advertisements . . . could not
overly [sic] urge the re-election of the President or
the defeat of any particular Republican candidate . . .
that there were constraints on the extent to which the
President's picture could be used in the advertisements
or the picture of possible Republican opponents . . .
that there were restrictions on the proximity to
primary dates that such advertisements could be run in
different states . . . that there was a cut-off date of
Memorial Day '96 after which all advertising . . . had
to come from the campaign.43
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\43\ Id. at pp. 142-43.
Morris did not perform any independent research to determine
the accuracy of Sandler's and Utrecht's advice.44
Indeed, Morris relied heavily upon Sandler's advice regarding
both DNC and Clinton/Gore advertisements, as evidenced by
Sandler's presence during all media planning
meetings.45
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\44\ Id. at p. 145.
\45\ Id. at p. 160. Morris argued that his understanding of one
instance where the RNC may have used issue advocacy advertising created
a ``precedent'' for the DNC to run his massive media campaign. Id. at
p. 298. His knowledge of RNC issue advocacy advertising was limited to
second-hand information that, in 1983, ``the Republican Party ran
extensive ads on its success in combating inflation'' unrelated to
President Reagan's re-election. Id. at p. 296.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Morris provided the following examples of how he used DNC
funded issue advocacy advertising to further his advertising
plan. From January through April 1996, Morris testified that
advertisements concerning family and medical leave had to be
done by Clinton/Gore because the issue currently was not before
Congress.46 Advertisements on Medicare, however,
could be paid for by either the DNC (through issue advocacy
advertising) or Clinton/Gore because ``it was in play before
the Congress.'' 47 Moreover, from August through
December of 1995, all advertising funds came from the DNC
because the advertisements allegedly pertained to the ``budget
fight'' pending before Congress.48 During the period
of the Republican primaries (approximately January through
April of 1996), however, the funds for advertising were split
between the DNC and Clinton/Gore depending upon the
issue.49 Indeed, once Morris understood the concept
of issue advocacy advertising, he regretted ``having spent the
$2.4 million of campaign money on the crime ads'' Clinton/Gore
ran in the spring of 1995.50 Morris admitted,
however, that irrespective of the method of payment for these
different advertisements, their ultimate goal was the
President's re-election.51
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\46\ Id. at p. 158.
\47\ Id. at pp. 158-59.
\48\ Id. at pp. 152, 154.
\49\ Id. at p. 153.
\50\ Id. at pp. 134-35.
\51\ Id. at p. 293.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ickes, however, also wished to claim credit for using DNC
``issue'' advertising to circumvent federal election laws. He
testified that he conceived of financing Morris' advertising
campaign with ``soft'' money to run so-called ``issue ads'' on
which unlimited money could be spent.52 Ickes
volunteered that, ``Basically, it was my idea.'' 53
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\52\ See Deposition of Harold Ickes, June 26, 1997, p. 31.
\53\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Regardless of whether Ickes or Morris deserves the
``credit'' for hatching a scheme to violate the laws, there is
no doubt that this early spending of ``soft'' money was driven
by the President's re-election. In testifying about the purpose
of the early ``soft'' money advertising, Ickes offered another
glimpse into a nervous President's thought process--a President
bent on avoiding a repeat of the 1994 election debacle,
deterring prospective primary challengers, and winning re-
election:
The idea was to try to--to use paid media, in
addition to what the President was saying publicly, to
used paid media to reinforce what he was saying
publicly, and I think that the theory was that through
well-placed, well-designed paid media, that you could
get more--you could educate the public more on what the
President had done and what he was trying to do in an
unfiltered way so that you could have direct contact
with potential voters as opposed to having it filtered
through the media. I think a lesson had been learned--
well. . . .
Q: And was part of the goal of this idea to
successfully avoid a primary in '96, a primary
challenge?
A: I don't think there was a concern at that point,
but it depends what point you're talking about. Where
are we in terms of time frame?
Q: In the '95, say from February through August, time
period.
A: The focus was more--was less on avoiding a
primary, much more on the general election.
Q: The 1996 general election?
A: Yes. The use of--the use of paid media was focused
much more on the '96 general election, but the basic
focus was the President was concerned in '94, he had
not been able to reach, get through, or break through,
to use a campaign term, with the public about the
issues that he had been prosecuting in his agenda in
'93 and '94. He was very concerned about that, and I
think early on the basic thought was that the use of
paid money could help break through and you'd have
direct communication with voters on particular issues,
whether it be crime, welfare reform, or what have
you.54
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\54\ Id. at pp. 36-37 (emphasis added).
To a President wishing to avoid repetition of the 1994 debacle,
the strategy of using unregulated DNC ``soft'' money to ensure
that his re-election message resonated with the voting public
must have been welcome.
The September 10, 1995 White House Meeting: Unveiling the Scheme
The scheme for spending DNC ``soft'' money to run early
advertising in support of the President's re-election under the
control of the White House was unveiled to the DNC's National
Chairman at a significant meeting at the White House. The
meeting took place on Sunday, September 10, 1995, at 9:00
PM.55 Those present included: the President, the
Vice President, White House Chief of Staff Leon Panetta, Ickes,
DNC National Chairman Don Fowler, and one of the President's
pollsters.56 In addition, the First Lady may have
been present.57 DNC General Chairman Christopher
Dodd was supposed to participate by telephone, but did not, as
he could not be located.58
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\55\ Deposition of Donald L. Fowler, May 21, 1997, pp. 290-92.
\56\ Id. at p. 292.
\57\ Id.
\58\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ickes ran the meeting.59 The first topic of
conversation concerned the need to communicate the President's
accomplishments through an advertising campaign.60
The White House's plan was for the DNC to buy this advertising.
The advertising ``was to be funded by the party, but it would
focus on the President's program for the party and what he had
done.'' 61 According to Fowler, ``there was a
general consensus that this was a good idea.'' 62
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\59\ Id. at p. 293.
\60\ Id.
\61\ Id.
\62\ Id. at p. 294.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The meeting then focused on whether there was enough money
to pay for the proposed advertisements. As Fowler put it, ``The
discussion was mostly could we raise enough money to do it, and
the initial plan was 10 weeks at a million dollars a week or
thereabouts, and the discussion was we could raise it.''
63 Everybody in the room discussed whether that
amount of money could be raised.64
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\63\ Id.
\64\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Although no ``serious doubts'' were expressed in the
meeting about the ability to raise the money, ``a number of
people said it was going to take a lot of work and stuff like
that.'' 65 Apparently, the meeting's participants
also discussed the need for the President and Vice President to
devote more time and effort to fund-raising if the plan was to
be fulfilled.66 The meeting concluded sometime
around 10:30 or 11:00 in the evening.67 The strategy
was set in motion.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\65\ Id. at pp. 294-95.
\66\ Id. at p. 295.
\67\ Id. at pp. 295-96.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In His Own Words: The President's Knowing Subversion of Federal
Election Law
Clearly, the President and his aides devised a strategy to
subvert the spending limits imposed by federal law on
presidential candidates who agree to accept public financing.
``Soft'' money was used for the express purpose of promoting
the President's re-election. As documented elsewhere in this
report, the money was raised and spent under the supervision of
White House officials.68 The money was spent on ads
that were produced by the firm handling the re-election
campaign's ads, ads that the President himself edited and
revised.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\68\ See the section of this report on the White House's control of
the DNC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The President knew that he was using DNC ``soft'' money to
support his re-election campaign. He told a group of major
contributors to the DNC:
[W]e even gave up one or two of our fundraisers at
the end of the year to try to get more money to the
Democratic Party rather than my campaigns. My original
strategy had been to raise all the money for my
campaign this year, so I could spend all my money next
year being president, running for president, and
raising money for the Senate and House Committee and
for the Democratic Party.
And then we realized that we could run these ads
through the Democratic Party, which meant that we could
raise money in twenty and fifty and hundred thousand
dollar lots, and we didn't have to do it all in
thousand dollars. And run down--you know what I can
spend which is limited by law. So that's what we've
done. But I have to tell you I'm very grateful to you.
The contributions you have made in this have made a
huge difference.69
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\69\ Transcribed Statement of President Bill Clinton, White House
Communications Agency Videotape, Dec. 7, 1995 (Hay-Adams Dinner).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
the ``bottom line'': pressure on the dnc to satisfy the campaign's need
for money
The President's massive media plan, combined with the DNC's
operating costs, required Democrats to raise an unprecedented
amount of money.70 Morris testified that the media
team constantly needed additional money to fund fully the
planned weekly media purchases. For example, the media team
would plan $1.2 million in paid advertising for a week, but the
DNC would have only $1 million available.71
Consequently, Morris appealed to the President to hold
additional fund-raising events on at least ten occasions, and
to the Vice President on two or three occasions.72
When Morris learned from Doug Sosnik 73 that the
President was not giving fund-raisers enough priority on his
schedule, he made open appeals at the weekly strategy meetings
``for more time to be spent on scheduling fund-raisers.''
74
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\70\ Morris stated in his book that ``[n]o president had ever
advertised even remotely this far in advance of an election. . . . Ten
million dollars was about equal to what most president or candidates
for the presidency spent on media ads for the entire primary season,
from Iowa through the convention--yet here we were spending it on issue
ads more than a year before the election began.'' See Behind the Oval
Office, p. 150.
\71\ Morris deposition, p. 241.
\72\ Id. at pp. 241, 244. Either Marvin Rosen, Democratic Finance
Chairman, or Terry McAuliffe once even asked Morris to meet with a
potential donor. Id. at p. 249.
\73\ Sosnik was the White House political affairs director.
\74\ Id. at pp. 241-42.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In November and December 1995, the DNC ``spent a vast
amount of money'' on advertising to boost the President's poll
numbers during the government shutdown.75 Ickes or
Bowles informed Morris that the extended advertising that fall
had ``functionally cleaned out the DNC money,'' and that there
were insufficient funds to advertise in January.76
In the agenda for the December 7, 1995 White House political
strategy meeting, Morris informed the participants: ``Need to
do phone calls and fund raising to turn around media as soon in
January as possible--or as soon after deal is cut as
possible.'' 77 Morris testified that, in the agenda,
he was requesting the DNC to ``redouble'' its fund-raising
efforts because it was critical that the advertising campaign
on the President's behalf continue.78 Morris'
concern over the lack of funding for advertising is emphasized
in the agenda for the February 22, 1996 White House political
strategy meeting, which warned participants that the
``[f]ailure to advertise is, once again catching up with us.''
79 In the agenda for the March 6, 1996 meeting,
Morris wrote that ``DNC fund raising is not now equipped to
cope with the money needs. . . . We have had trouble getting
this week's DNC money together. . . . Fund raising at DNC level
must be improved.'' 80
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\75\ Id. at p. 324.
\76\ Id. at pp. 324-25.
\77\ See December 7, 1995 agenda, p. 2 (Ex. 4).
\78\ See Morris deposition, p. 324.
\79\ February 22, 1996 agenda, p. 3 (Ex. 5).
\80\ March 6, 1996 agenda (Ex. 6); see Morris deposition, p. 347.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Morris testified that the Vice President ``tended to favor
the advertising that we were doing and . . . worked fairly hard
at trying to raise the money.'' 81 In his book,
however, Morris wrote that the President ``complained
bitterly'' at having to raise the money required to run the
advertisements.82 The fund-raising became so
consuming that the President told Morris:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\81\ Id. at p. 245.
\82\ See Behind the Oval Office, p. 150. Morris testified that all
the statements in his book, Behind the Oval Office, were true;
``everything in the book is, as far as I know, true.'' See Morris
deposition, pp. 28, 36-37.
``I can't think. I can't act. I can't do anything but
go to fund-raisers and shake hands. You want me to
issue executive orders; I can't focus on a thing but
the next fund-raiser. Hillary can't, Al can't--we're
all getting sick and crazy because of it.''
83
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\83\ Behind the Oval Office, p. 151. A recent study of the
President's rigorous fund-raising schedule confirms that the President
was severely taxed by these fund-raising demands. See Glenn F. Bunting,
``A Hard and Fast Ride on Donation Trail,'' Los Angeles Times, December
21, 1997, A1. The President's zeal for fund-raising placed a ``strain .
. . on both the presidency and the operation of the White House.'' Id.
The DNC also felt unprecedented pressure to raise money. As
discussed at some length later in this report, Ickes took
control of the DNC's Finance Division, and held weekly
``Wednesday Money Meetings'' beginning in 1995 to control the
DNC's fund-raising and budgeting.84 In these
meetings, Ickes' emphasis on money was clear. DNC National
Finance Director Richard Sullivan remembered well Ickes'
concern with fund-raising. In discussing the regular money
meetings, Sullivan recalled Ickes' questioning of DNC Chief
Financial Officer Brad Marshall--and even employed some of
Ickes' well-known profanity: ``All Harold cared about was the
bottom line . . . Harold just cared about the bottom line as
they applied to Brad [Marshall]'s numbers of spending
projections. He just cared about what, you know, [`]Goddamn it,
just tell me what's in the bank, Brad.[']'' 85 Ickes
himself agreed that he had a ``bottom line'' focus on the DNC:
``My focus . . . was the bottom line, as they like to say in
the finance business.'' 86
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\84\ See Deposition of Harold Ickes, June 26, 1997, p. 55; see also
the section of this report on White House control of the DNC.
\85\ Deposition of Richard Sullivan, June 4, 1997, p. 90.
\86\ Deposition of Harold Ickes, June 26, 1997, p. 62.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ickes wrote memoranda summarizing what went on at these
``money meetings,'' and these memoranda prove the White House's
intense involvement in all aspects of DNC fund-raising, and
provide some glimpse into the pressure the DNC was under to
raise funds.87
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\87\ See the section of this report on White House control of the
DNC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In fact, the amount raised by the DNC during the 1996
election cycle vastly exceeded that raised in earlier years.
McAuliffe characterized his 1994 DNC fund-raising effort as a
much ``smaller operation'' when compared to the DNC's fund-
raising during the 1996 election cycle.88 The
numbers support McAuliffe's description. In 1994, the DNC
raised approximately $37 million.89 By December
1995, a DNC draft budget for 1996 reflected a revenue
projection of $110 million.90 Revenue from major
donors alone in that draft budget was expected to total $80
million--more than twice the entire amount raised by the DNC
during 1994.91
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\88\ Deposition of Terence R. McAuliffe, June 6, 1997, pp. 20-21.
\89\ Id. See also Deposition of Richard Sullivan, June 5, 1997, p.
147 (estimating amount raised by the DNC in 1994 at $38 million).
\90\ Democratic National Committee Proposed 1996 Budget, December
21, 1995, p. 9 (Ex. 7). When DNC National Chairman Don Fowler first
told Sullivan to plan to raise $120 million, Sullivan told Fowler that
he (Sullivan) ``was expecting a request for a plan of 90 to 100, and I
thought 100 was kind of best case.'' Deposition of Richard Sullivan,
June 5, 1997, p. 154.
\91\ See Ex. 7 at p. 9.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
But even that ambitious draft budget was not enough. In a
February 9, 1996, memorandum from Ickes to the President and
the Vice President, Ickes reported that Marvin Rosen, the DNC's
Finance Chairman, was ``confident that $125 million can be
raised during the first 10 months of 1996.'' 92 By
July 5, 1996, Ickes could report in another memorandum to the
President and Vice President that the DNC's fund-raising was
``on target,'' and that the DNC was projecting revenue of
$136.6 million by the end of October 1996.93
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\92\ Memorandum to The President and The Vice President from Harold
Ickes, February 9, 1996, p. 1 (Ex. 8).
\93\ Memorandum to The President and The Vice President from Harold
Ickes, July 5, 1996, p. 2 (Ex. 9).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The pressure to raise such enormous amounts of money was
pervasive. DNC National Finance Director Richard Sullivan
characterized the DNC in 1996 as engaged in ``an historic
effort in terms of the aggressiveness of the fund-raising.''
94 Sullivan told the Committee that the DNC ``raised
an enormous amount of money,'' adding that, in the 1995-96
period, the DNC ``almost tripled the amount raised in the 1991-
92 election cycle.'' 95 DNC National Chairman Don
Fowler stated that there were ``pressing needs during the
campaign to raise large sums of money. . . .'' 96
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\94\ Deposition of Richard Sullivan, June 25, 1997, p. 120.
\95\ Testimony of Richard Sullivan, July 9, 1997, p. 8.
\96\ Testimony of Donald L. Fowler, Sept. 9, 1997, p. 6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
conclusion
The many scandals that will be chronicled elsewhere in this
report flow, directly or indirectly, from this ``historic
effort in terms of the aggressiveness of the fund-raising.''
97 The coordinated issue advertising campaign
proposed by Dick Morris, managed by the President, and funded
by the DNC to promote the President's re-election, set the
stage for the scandals that became the Committee's
investigatory focus. To promote the President's re-election,
Morris devised the issue advertising scheme. To pay for this
project became the consuming passion of the President, his
staff, and the DNC. Due to the DNC's need to feed the
advertising beast, it dismantled its process for vetting
contributions to ensure their legality. From the thirst for
advertising dollars developed the DNC's search to tap new veins
for money, such as emerging political groups. From the need for
funds to pay for issue advertising arose the willingness to
sell access to senior government officials and to use
government property to raise funds. The White House and the
Presidency were reduced to tools for fund-raising. In sum,
Morris wrote the script. It was now up to the President and his
cast of supporting actors to implement it. Tales from its
implementation follow.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\97\ See Deposition of Richard Sullivan, June 25, 1997, p. 120.