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Crosscut Guvometer - Rossi +2.
 

Move the meter: 'Buildergate' gains media legs

Campaign contributions by a builder association, used to campaign against Gov. Chris Gregoire, have prompted a state attorney general's investigation, and that could mean bad headlines for GOP challenger Dino Rossi.

Take a point away from Dino Rossi on the Govometer, owing to the continuing saga of the building industry's support of Rossi, and possible campaign fundraising violations.

One detail that has not been reported is that the Attorney General's office, which has agreed to prosecute a charge against the Master Builders Association's program for funneling campaign contributions from local building associations, will be able to look back five years for potential violations. A citizens' complaint initiated the investigation by the state Public Disclosure Commission (PDC), which passed on the complaint to the Attorney General's office (AG), led by Republican Rob McKenna, who decided to press the prosecution.

Citizen complaints, owing to a legislative amendment last year, have a statute of limitations of only two years. But the PDC and the AG can look back five years, according to Senior Assistant Attorney General Linda Dalton. The progam in question by the Master Builders Association of King and Snohomish Counties and its Member Services Corporation dates back to the mid-1990s. While the Attorney General's lawsuit won't be settled before the election, the case could bring to light earlier violations and increase the potential penalties for a group strongly supportive of Rossi's campaign.

The more politically charged issue pertains to the Building Industry Association of Washington (BIAW), which is charged with a violation of campaign laws in a 2007 solicitation, rather than for having a program extending back in time. Fuse, a progressive advocacy organization, has charged that Rossi "played an important role in an illegal fundraising campaign orchestrated by" BIAW and powerful developers. Fuse is calling the story Buildergate, hoping to enlarge the investigation to include Rossi's alleged role. The Sierra Club, which has been tracking this story, also chimed in, calling for the Attorney General's investigation to include Rossi's purported role. Here's The P-I's story on the charges.

Rossi gave a quick reply: "This is simply more flailing from a desperate campaign and its allies. Last week it was the silly lawsuit over the use of 'GOP,' and this week it is this frivolous allegation — all in an attempt to distract voters from issues like the $3.2 billion deficit the incumbent has created. I can't wait to see what they will accuse us of next week." Rossi contends that his contacts with the builders' groups predated his decision to run for governor.

Keeping the story alive in the media helps Gregoire's campaign to tie Rossi to developers and the greatly unloved BIAW. In turn, environmentalists and wise-growth advocates will grow more alarmed about a Rossi governorship, and the story will help to give more details to Rossi's relatively unknown activities in the past five years. On the other hand, Rossi's support from builders might not seem such a bad idea as we head into a recession, when construction jobs will be needed to prime the economic pump.

David Brewster is Crosscut's publisher. You can e-mail him at david.brewster@crosscut.com.

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Comments:

Posted Tue, Sep 30, 5:37 p.m. inappropriate

You are quoting FUSE? Please just go to the source, the Washington State DNC: Go ahead and use FUSE as your source, Maybe you can get the Muckelshoots to comment on TRIBE BRIBE while you are at it.

Posted Tue, Sep 30, 9:34 p.m. inappropriate

RE: You are quoting FUSE? Please just go to the source, the Washington State DNC: It's not Brewster's fault that FUSE broke the story. But don't worry, you'll be reading all about in every other news publication in the state soon enough.

Sad. As a pragmatic liberal, I actually believe the country benefits from having rational, pragmatic conservative voices to help check our assumptions. It's a tragedy that the GOP was hijacked by evangelists, con men, and crazy people.

Posted Wed, Oct 1, 8:06 a.m. inappropriate

RE: You are quoting FUSE? Please just go to the source, the Washington State DNC: FUSE didn't break the story, FUSE doesn't really DO anything. Aaron Ostrom called it "Buildergate" and the Media dutifully ran with it. It would have saved time if the Washington State Democratic Party had just handed the press release directly to the Papers and cut out the middleman. Brewster is simply acting as a fax machine for the Democrats on this one.

Posted Thu, Oct 2, 9:59 a.m. inappropriate

So breaking the law = 1 point deduction?: So let me get this straight: Rossi spends 4 years building a campaign slush fund to circumvent campaign finance laws. In addition, he actually violated some of these laws by directly coordinating with this group. A candidate for Governor should be held to a higher standard: breaking our laws is unacceptable. And supreme judge for the punditocracy, David Brewster deducts 1 point from his score. How about a disqualification for unethical behavior?

Posted Thu, Oct 2, 11:43 a.m. inappropriate

RE: So breaking the law = 1 point deduction?: Most Taxpayers would be happy if Gregoire was held to ANY standard. The PDC is made up of 4-1 Democrats appointed by the Governor. Apparently, if you a Democratic Governor or a Democratic Legislature and you refuse to look into things like Tribal Compact negotiations and forbid the legislature from holding any hearings on the process, it's all good. If you kill bills like 1257 in committee that would give teeth to legislative oversight of compact negotiations in the future, it's because everyone should "trust but don't verify" what the Governor says is a good deal for Washington Taxpayers. That's the kind of trust that has given us a 3.2 Billion dollar hole to climb out of.

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