Thursday, November 03, 2011

Nast Corrects Reuters ....



Jon Who?

If Thomas Nast knew Jon Corzine



  1. WASHINGTON, Nov 2 (Reuters) - President Barack Obama's re-election campaign would return the donations made by embattled MF Global chief Jon Corzine if he were charged with any wrongdoing, a campaign official said on Wednesday.

  2. Corzine, who is at the center of a storm over the securities company's bankruptcy this week, has been a major fundraiser for Obama. The former Goldman Sachs chief has raised or "bundled" donations of at least $500,000 so far for Obama's 2012 re-election effort.

  3. Corzine himself has donated the maximum that an individual can give for a presidential campaign, according to campaign finance records. He held a lavish $35,800-a-head fundraising dinner for Obama at his home in April.

  4. A campaign official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Obama's campaign would return the donations from Corzine as an individual if civil or criminal charges are brought against him.

  5. "Politicians, like business people, are risk averse," said Jim Kessler, a policy analyst at the Democratic-leaning think tank Third Way. "Until people know more of what is going on they will distance themselves from Jon Corzine."

          LIMITED WASHINGTON TIES (LOL)

  1. (of 18 ¶ )   Corzine has also donated $15,000 to the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee this year and $25,000 to Senate Democrats in 2010, according to regulatory filings.

The point being that even Garden-staters must  wonder by this point in  Reuters' story if there's another Jon Corzine?  Just as slimy as thier former US Senator and erstwhile Governor?  That's because it's not until paragraph 13 that they will find any clues to that effect.  Just three of  20 paragraphs do.

Elected to the Senate in 2000, Corzine's status as a junior senator and his short tenure in Washington limited his impact on the political circuit.

He served on the Senate Banking Committee and was a vocal advocate for the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, which tightened U.S. accounting rules after the Enron scandal.

In 2005 he won election as New Jersey's governor and resigned from the Senate a year before the end of his term.

It's become something of a national joke how the Democrat Monkey Media avoid labeling caught canker-blossoms with the (D).  Here Reuters very nearly fails to mention the perp's key bona fides.  Ain't they precious?



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