The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee is going on the offensive against Freedom's Watch-- for ads it has run in Louisiana and Mississippi special election House races-->, alleging that the conservative group is illegally coordinating with the National Republican Congressional Committee and violating its tax-exempt status.
With Republicans facing a dire situation -- a slew of open congressional seats combined with lackluster fundraising for the NRCC -- Freedom's Watch has stepped in to fill a hole, running negative ads against Democratic candidates Don Cazayoux in Louisiana and Travis Childers in Mississippi. --Originally appearing on the scene in 2007, Freedom's Watch is a new organization funded by Republican insiders, such as billionaire casino owner Sheldon Adelso, and connected with the Bush White House (former White House press secretary Ari Fleischer is a spokesperson for the group). The group ran several issue ads, mostly related to the war in Iraq, in the lead up Gen. David Petreaus' first appearance on Capitol Hill in September 2007, but has stated that it aims to become the mouth piece for the conservative movement and to work vigorously to elect Republicans in 2008 and future elections.-->
Ads run against Cazayoux in Louisiana's 6th District special election campaign attempted to tie the candidate to Democratic presidential hopeful Barack Obama--, under fire at the time for his relationship with Rev. Jeremiah Wright-->, and to portray Cazayoux as a tax-and-spend liberal. (Despite these efforts, Cazayoux won the election last week.)
Those spots prompted the DCCC to file two complaints with the Federal Election Commission, accusing Freedom's Watch, which it calls "a shadowy outside group," of coordinating with the NRCC in violation of its status as on outside group, and of directly advocating the defeat of a Democratic candidate. "The facts indicate that Freedom's Watch, Inc. is operating in complete violation of federal campaign finance laws," Executive Director Brian Wolff wrote in a letter to the FEC, calling on the --watchdog group-->agency to immediately investigate the situation.
DCCC complaints led at least one Baton Rouge, La., station to pull the ads off air. A Mississippi ad attacking Childers was also pulled less than a week later, and the DCCC filed a third FEC complaint over the Mississippi spot. --"As the NRCC looks to Freedom’s Watch to save them, the NRCC, Republican Members, and Republican candidates need to decide whether it’s worth it to return to the hay days of Republicans’ culture of corruption by being tied to a group that regularly breaks the law," DCCC Communications Director Jennifer Crider charged in a press release.-->
--The DCCC has also asked the IRS to reconsider the group's tax-exempt nonprofit status and to fine Freedom's Watch for violating its standing as a 501(c)4. "Freedom’s Watch is trying to avoid paying taxes by claiming to be tax exempt, while running campaign ads that benefit a Republican candidate and the NRCC," Wolff alleged. -->
The NRCC flatly rejects the notion that it has been inappropriately coordinating with Freedom's Watch. Press Secretary Ken Spain told the Washington Times: "If Democrats want to waste their time and resources on filing politically motivated complaints, then we hope they continue to do so. Their obsession with this conspiracy theory has gone from being ridiculous to the point of sheer lunacy."
--The Times says that the DCCC is "trying to chase" Freedom's Watch "from the political playing field." No doubt such outside groups are the objects of much anxiety heading in to the 2008 general election, as just four years ago a small group, Swift Boats Veterans For Truth, played a large role in sinking the presidential aspirations of John Kerry. -->