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Defense of Democracies

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Right Web News
last updated: March 27, 2008

 

Defense of Democracies was created in February 2008 as a spin-off organization of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD) to undertake advocacy campaigns that FDD cannot participate in as a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt organization. Defense of Democracies’ first undertaking was an ad campaign in late February 2008 aimed at pressuring the House of Representatives to pass legislation that would extend a controversial warrantless wiretap program and give impunity to telecommunications corporations that had complied with Bush administration surveillance policy.

A 501(c)(3) organization is disallowed from political activity, but Defense of Democracies has 501(c)(4) status; it is a nonprofit that is permitted to lobby and engage in other forms of political action, as long as they are not its primary activity. 1 The group calls itself an action fund and says its mission is “to support and encourage policies, procedures and laws necessary to defeat terrorism.” 2

Defense of Democracies’ spokesman, Brian Wise, distinguished between the FDD and its spin-off, telling Washington Independent reporter Spencer Ackerman that, “‘Defense of Democracies [provides] issue advocacy, whereas the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies is a policy institute and academic institution.’” Wise also acknowledged that FDD created Defense of Democracies “for tax purposes.” 3

Defense of Democracies’ first action was to run a series of television ads in 15 different congressional districts. The campaign of what Newsweek called “secretly financed political attack ads” accused the House of Representatives of allowing an intelligence-gathering law to lapse, thereby impeding the hunt for Osama bin Laden. 4 The final moments of the 30-second spots were tailored to the particular districts in which they ran. An ad that ran in Connecticut concluded with the following appeal: “Tell Chris Murphy that Congress must do its job and pass the Senate’s Terror Surveillance Bill,” referring to the first-term Connecticut representative. Ads in other districts targeted Reps. Nancy Boyda (D-MO), Joe Courtney (D-CT), Carol Shea-Porter (D-NH), and Tim Walz (D-MN), all of whom are freshmen representatives.

A Hartford, Connecticut news station ran a segment on the attack ads in which Murphy told WTNH’s political correspondent that, “This is a Republican group that is running ads only against targeted Democratic freshmen; these are political ads that really grossly misstate the truth.” 5 Courtney told the station he was angered by the ads’ implication that somehow the House had crippled intelligence collection. “The notion that somehow the system went dark, or that we can’t act quickly to put new taps, is false. The fact of the matter is under the preexisting law, which is in place now, we can put taps on with a three-day window to get court approval after the fact,” he said. 6

The ads angered several Democrats who sat on the advisory board of Defense of Democracies’ supposedly bipartisan parent group, FDD, leading to their resignation from the board. Among the departed board members was Donna Brazile, former campaign advisor to Al Gore. She issued a statement on February 25, 2008, severing her ties from FDD, saying,  “I strongly condemn [FDD’s] misleading and reckless ad campaign. The organization is using fear mongering for political purposes and worse, their scare tactics have the effect of emboldening terrorists and our enemies abroad by asserting our intelligence agencies are failing to do their job. I am deeply disappointed they would use my name since no one has consulted me about the activities of the group in years.

“When I first joined the foundation several years ago, it was a bi-partisan organization that was committed to defending democratic values and protecting the nation against threats posed by radical Islamic terrorism. Unfortunately, due to the influence of their funders, in the last few years, FDD has morphed into a radical right wing organization that is doing the dirty work for the Bush Administration and Congressional Republicans.” 7

According to a March 2008 Newsweek report, Clifford May, FDD president and past spokesman of the Republican National Committee, said that he planned “to spend $2 million on the ads, but declined to identify who is financing the effort, saying he set up the group [Defense of Democracies] as a tax-exempt nonprofit.” 8

Although its spate of television ads pivoted on the implication that some officials were soft on terrorism, the ads did not mention the issue of giving immunity to the telecommunications companies that complied with Bush administration warrantless wiretap programs. Yet the issue seems important to DD, which links to a National Review Online article by Andrew C. McCarthy, director of FDD’s Center for Law and Counterterrorism, in which he delivers an impassioned plea for the telecoms to be given immunity so they will cooperate; without them, he argues, “we lose our technological edge over enemies who are bent on killing Americans.” 9 (His wife, he disclosed, works for Verizon.)

Contact Information

Defense of Democracies
1718 M St., NW #245 Washington, DC, 20036 Phone: (202) 375-8027 Email: media@defenseofdemocracies.org http://defenseofdemocracies.org


Sources

1 Internal Revenue Service, U.S. Department of the Treasury, Social Welfare Organizations, http://www.irs.gov/charities/nonprofits/article/0,,id=96178,00.html; IRS, “Political Campaign and Lobbying Activities of IRC 501 (c)(4), (c)(5), and (c)(6) Organizations,” http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-tege/eotopicl03.pdf.
2 Defense of Democracies, “About,” http://defenseofdemocracies.org/.
3 Spencer Ackerman, “‘Bipartisan’ Think Tank Attacks Democrats,” Washington Independent, February 26, 2008.
4 Michael Isikoff, “Periscope,” Newsweek, March 10, 2008.
5 WTNH News Channel 8, Chief Political Correspondent Mark Davis, February 2008, http://youtube.com/watch?v=9esytwNknws.
6 Ibid.
7 Donna Brazile, “Statement by Donna Brazile on Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD) Misleading Attacks on Members of Congress’ Patriotism,” February 25, 2008, http://www.donnabrazile.com/viewBlog.cfm?id=82.
8 Isikoff, Newsweek, March 10, 2008.
9 Andrew C. McCarthy, “The Case for Telecom Immunity,” National Review Online, March 4, 2008.


 

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Published by the Political Research Associates (PRA, online at http://www.publiceye.org). Copyright © 2008, Political Research Associates. All rights reserved.

Recommended Citation:
"Defense of Democracies," Right Web Profile (Somerville, MA: Political Research Associates, March 27, 2008).

Web location:
http://rightweb.irc-online.org/profile/4775.html

Production Information:
Author(s): Right Web
Editor(s): Right Web
Production: Political Research Associates

 
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