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hk March 30th 10 11:57 AM

Cha-ching!
 
RNC expense report renews criticism about Steele's spending

By Dan Eggen
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, March 30, 2010; A01

The Republican National Committee and its chairman, Michael S. Steele,
were engulfed in controversy again Monday after new financial reports
showed that the party used tens of thousands of donor dollars for luxe
hotels, private jets and other questionable expenditures.

The disclosures, some of which stem from Steele's travels to California
in January and a subsequent RNC retreat to Hawaii, reignited criticism
from fellow Republicans who are troubled by the chairman's financial
stewardship of the GOP's main committee since he took over more than a
year ago.

Although it is not unusual for either party to spend money in tony
settings to cater to wealthy donors, the RNC's latest filings captured
widespread attention for one expenditure at a risque nightclub:
$1,946.25 for "meals" at Voyeur in West Hollywood, which features
topless dancers wearing horse bridles and other bondage gear while
mimicking sex acts.

The committee fired an unidentified staff member as a result of the
disbursement and emphasized Monday that Steele had not visited the club
and was not aware of the expenditure. The reimbursement went to Erik
Brown, a Southern California GOP donor who has spent time with Steele in
the past and whose marketing firm has earned more than $160,000 from the
RNC and other Republican committees, according to campaign disclosure
records.

The RNC's expenses, first highlighted by the Daily Caller, set off
another round of GOP infighting over Steele, whose combative style and
frequent pratfalls have earned him friends and enemies. The chairman
angered many party insiders by releasing a book this year without
notifying Republican leaders; he stumbled into another controversy this
month after the leak of an RNC fundraising document featuring crude
caricatures of President Obama and other Democratic leaders.

Steele also has come under fire for his management of the organization's
finances. The RNC had more than $22 million on hand when he arrived last
year, but is down to less than $10 million, despite raising a record $96
million during that time, records show.

The February report to the Federal Election Commission lists $17,000 for
private jet service; more than $35,000 for upscale hotels; and more than
$43,000 in expenses, not including airfare, for the committee's winter
meeting in Hawaii. Such reports include a range of spending, including
Steele's airfare as well as expenses incurred by staff members and
outsiders.

"The RNC's role, and thus the chairman's role, is to raise money, fund
candidates, recruit candidates and voters into our cause," said John
Weaver, a GOP strategist and former adviser to Sen. John McCain
(R-Ariz.). "Setting policy, choosing sides and crazy spending does not
fall under his job description."

Mark DeMoss, a major RNC donor during George W. Bush's presidency who
heads a Christian public-relations firm in Atlanta, said that spending
so lavishly during an economic downturn is "mind-boggling." "Virtually
the entire country -- from big businesses to small business -- had to
make cutbacks," he said. "To think the Republican Party wouldn't do the
same thing, I think, suggests either a tone-deafness or just that they
don't care, which would maybe be worse."

But others defended Steele and his financial record and pointed to GOP
success in recent elections in Massachusetts, New Jersey and Virginia.
"You do have to spend money to raise money," said Dick Wadhams, chairman
of the Colorado GOP. "I'll give Chairman Steele the benefit of the doubt
on spending on major donors."

An RNC investigation of the incident found that the Voyeur party was
attended by a group of young Republicans who had been at an official
party "Young Eagles" event at the Beverly Hills Hotel the same night,
according to an internal memo obtained by The Washington Post. The Young
Eagles is an RNC program to cultivate 30-to-40-year-olds as major future
donors.

The request for reimbursement was then submitted on behalf of Brown by
an unidentified RNC staffer who "was aware that this activity was not
eligible for reimbursement and had been previously counseled on this
very subject," according to the memo, which was written by the committee
chief of staff, Ken McKay. The staffer was fired because of the
incident, the memo said.

RNC spokesman Doug Heye said Monday night that "appropriate personnel
actions have been taken, and accounting and reimbursement processes are
being revised to ensure that such an action cannot reoccur." He also
said Brown would return the payment. "We recognize the difficulty this
incident has caused and assure our members and supporters that any
necessary and proper remediation is being implemented immediately," Heye
said.

The Democratic National Committee said that its chairman, Timothy M.
Kaine, usually travels on commercial flights and does not generally use
limousine or town-car services.

"We think their extravagant spending and their high burn rate speaks for
itself," spokesman Brad Woodhouse said.

But Heye noted that paying for high-end hotels and other accoutrements
is standard practice for both political parties when wooing wealthy
donors. He said most of the expenses for the private jets and car
services for Steele detailed in the February reports were related to the
start of television advertisements in the South and Midwest.

Brown, the chief executive of Dynamic Marketing, which has offices in
California and the District, did not respond Monday to telephone and
e-mail messages. He has contributed $10,000 to GOP candidates and
committees since 2007, and wrote on Twitter last Oct. 26 about attending
a Monday-night football game at FedEx Field with Steele.

Voyeur attracted celebrities such as Lindsay Lohan and Leonardo DiCaprio
to its fall opening. Club managers did not respond to telephone messages
left Monday.


***

Article is funny enough, but this line cracks me up:

"Mark DeMoss, a major RNC donor during George W. Bush's presidency who
heads a Christian public-relations firm in Atlanta..."


Jesus has a PR man!CGOPG



--
Conservatives - just pretend Obama's health care legislation is another
unnecessary war and you'll feel better about it.

hk March 30th 10 12:00 PM

Cha-ching!
 
hk wrote:


Article is funny enough, but this line cracks me up:

"Mark DeMoss, a major RNC donor during George W. Bush's presidency who
heads a Christian public-relations firm in Atlanta..."


Jesus has a PR man!CGOPG



Cracked up?

Loogypicker[_2_] March 30th 10 01:50 PM

Cha-ching!
 
On Mar 30, 6:57*am, hk wrote:
RNC expense report renews criticism about Steele's spending

By Dan Eggen
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, March 30, 2010; A01

The Republican National Committee and its chairman, Michael S. Steele,
were engulfed in controversy again Monday after new financial reports
showed that the party used tens of thousands of donor dollars for luxe
hotels, private jets and other questionable expenditures.

The disclosures, some of which stem from Steele's travels to California
in January and a subsequent RNC retreat to Hawaii, reignited criticism
from fellow Republicans who are troubled by the chairman's financial
stewardship of the GOP's main committee since he took over more than a
year ago.

Although it is not unusual for either party to spend money in tony
settings to cater to wealthy donors, the RNC's latest filings captured
widespread attention for one expenditure at a risque nightclub:
$1,946.25 for "meals" at Voyeur in West Hollywood, which features
topless dancers wearing horse bridles and other bondage gear while
mimicking sex acts.

The committee fired an unidentified staff member as a result of the
disbursement and emphasized Monday that Steele had not visited the club
and was not aware of the expenditure. The reimbursement went to Erik
Brown, a Southern California GOP donor who has spent time with Steele in
the past and whose marketing firm has earned more than $160,000 from the
RNC and other Republican committees, according to campaign disclosure
records.

The RNC's expenses, first highlighted by the Daily Caller, set off
another round of GOP infighting over Steele, whose combative style and
frequent pratfalls have earned him friends and enemies. The chairman
angered many party insiders by releasing a book this year without
notifying Republican leaders; he stumbled into another controversy this
month after the leak of an RNC fundraising document featuring crude
caricatures of President Obama and other Democratic leaders.

Steele also has come under fire for his management of the organization's
finances. The RNC had more than $22 million on hand when he arrived last
year, but is down to less than $10 million, despite raising a record $96
million during that time, records show.

The February report to the Federal Election Commission lists $17,000 for
private jet service; more than $35,000 for upscale hotels; and more than
$43,000 in expenses, not including airfare, for the committee's winter
meeting in Hawaii. Such reports include a range of spending, including
Steele's airfare as well as expenses incurred by staff members and
outsiders.

"The RNC's role, and thus the chairman's role, is to raise money, fund
candidates, recruit candidates and voters into our cause," said John
Weaver, a GOP strategist and former adviser to Sen. John McCain
(R-Ariz.). "Setting policy, choosing sides and crazy spending does not
fall under his job description."

Mark DeMoss, a major RNC donor during George W. Bush's presidency who
heads a Christian public-relations firm in Atlanta, said that spending
so lavishly during an economic downturn is "mind-boggling." "Virtually
the entire country -- from big businesses to small business -- had to
make cutbacks," he said. "To think the Republican Party wouldn't do the
same thing, I think, suggests either a tone-deafness or just that they
don't care, which would maybe be worse."

But others defended Steele and his financial record and pointed to GOP
success in recent elections in Massachusetts, New Jersey and Virginia.
"You do have to spend money to raise money," said Dick Wadhams, chairman
of the Colorado GOP. "I'll give Chairman Steele the benefit of the doubt
on spending on major donors."

An RNC investigation of the incident found that the Voyeur party was
attended by a group of young Republicans who had been at an official
party "Young Eagles" event at the Beverly Hills Hotel the same night,
according to an internal memo obtained by The Washington Post. The Young
Eagles is an RNC program to cultivate 30-to-40-year-olds as major future
donors.

The request for reimbursement was then submitted on behalf of Brown by
an unidentified RNC staffer who "was aware that this activity was not
eligible for reimbursement and had been previously counseled on this
very subject," according to the memo, which was written by the committee
chief of staff, Ken McKay. The staffer was fired because of the
incident, the memo said.

RNC spokesman Doug Heye said Monday night that "appropriate personnel
actions have been taken, and accounting and reimbursement processes are
being revised to ensure that such an action cannot reoccur." He also
said Brown would return the payment. "We recognize the difficulty this
incident has caused and assure our members and supporters that any
necessary and proper remediation is being implemented immediately," Heye
said.

The Democratic National Committee said that its chairman, Timothy M.
Kaine, usually travels on commercial flights and does not generally use
limousine or town-car services.

"We think their extravagant spending and their high burn rate speaks for
itself," spokesman Brad Woodhouse said.

But Heye noted that paying for high-end hotels and other accoutrements
is standard practice for both political parties when wooing wealthy
donors. He said most of the expenses for the private jets and car
services for Steele detailed in the February reports were related to the
start of television advertisements in the South and Midwest.

Brown, the chief executive of Dynamic Marketing, which has offices in
California and the District, did not respond Monday to telephone and
e-mail messages. He has contributed $10,000 to GOP candidates and
committees since 2007, and wrote on Twitter last Oct. 26 about attending
a Monday-night football game at FedEx Field with Steele.

Voyeur attracted celebrities such as Lindsay Lohan and Leonardo DiCaprio
to its fall opening. Club managers did not respond to telephone messages
left Monday.

***

Article is funny enough, but this line cracks me up:

"Mark DeMoss, a major RNC donor during George W. Bush's presidency who
heads a Christian public-relations firm in Atlanta..."

Jesus has a PR man!CGOPG

--
Conservatives - just pretend Obama's health care legislation is another
unnecessary war and you'll feel better about it.


Man, now there are liberals pretending to be Chairman of the RNC just
to make the conservatives look bad?

I am Tosk March 30th 10 03:08 PM

Cha-ching!
 
In article 013359d4-37ba-4331-a09c-
,
says...

On Mar 30, 6:57*am, hk wrote:
RNC expense report renews criticism about Steele's spending

By Dan Eggen
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, March 30, 2010; A01

The Republican National Committee and its chairman, Michael S. Steele,
were engulfed in controversy again Monday after new financial reports
showed that the party used tens of thousands of donor dollars for luxe
hotels, private jets and other questionable expenditures.

The disclosures, some of which stem from Steele's travels to California
in January and a subsequent RNC retreat to Hawaii, reignited criticism
from fellow Republicans who are troubled by the chairman's financial
stewardship of the GOP's main committee since he took over more than a
year ago.

Although it is not unusual for either party to spend money in tony
settings to cater to wealthy donors, the RNC's latest filings captured
widespread attention for one expenditure at a risque nightclub:
$1,946.25 for "meals" at Voyeur in West Hollywood, which features
topless dancers wearing horse bridles and other bondage gear while
mimicking sex acts.

The committee fired an unidentified staff member as a result of the
disbursement and emphasized Monday that Steele had not visited the club
and was not aware of the expenditure. The reimbursement went to Erik
Brown, a Southern California GOP donor who has spent time with Steele in
the past and whose marketing firm has earned more than $160,000 from the
RNC and other Republican committees, according to campaign disclosure
records.

The RNC's expenses, first highlighted by the Daily Caller, set off
another round of GOP infighting over Steele, whose combative style and
frequent pratfalls have earned him friends and enemies. The chairman
angered many party insiders by releasing a book this year without
notifying Republican leaders; he stumbled into another controversy this
month after the leak of an RNC fundraising document featuring crude
caricatures of President Obama and other Democratic leaders.

Steele also has come under fire for his management of the organization's
finances. The RNC had more than $22 million on hand when he arrived last
year, but is down to less than $10 million, despite raising a record $96
million during that time, records show.

The February report to the Federal Election Commission lists $17,000 for
private jet service; more than $35,000 for upscale hotels; and more than
$43,000 in expenses, not including airfare, for the committee's winter
meeting in Hawaii. Such reports include a range of spending, including
Steele's airfare as well as expenses incurred by staff members and
outsiders.

"The RNC's role, and thus the chairman's role, is to raise money, fund
candidates, recruit candidates and voters into our cause," said John
Weaver, a GOP strategist and former adviser to Sen. John McCain
(R-Ariz.). "Setting policy, choosing sides and crazy spending does not
fall under his job description."

Mark DeMoss, a major RNC donor during George W. Bush's presidency who
heads a Christian public-relations firm in Atlanta, said that spending
so lavishly during an economic downturn is "mind-boggling." "Virtually
the entire country -- from big businesses to small business -- had to
make cutbacks," he said. "To think the Republican Party wouldn't do the
same thing, I think, suggests either a tone-deafness or just that they
don't care, which would maybe be worse."

But others defended Steele and his financial record and pointed to GOP
success in recent elections in Massachusetts, New Jersey and Virginia.
"You do have to spend money to raise money," said Dick Wadhams, chairman
of the Colorado GOP. "I'll give Chairman Steele the benefit of the doubt
on spending on major donors."

An RNC investigation of the incident found that the Voyeur party was
attended by a group of young Republicans who had been at an official
party "Young Eagles" event at the Beverly Hills Hotel the same night,
according to an internal memo obtained by The Washington Post. The Young
Eagles is an RNC program to cultivate 30-to-40-year-olds as major future
donors.

The request for reimbursement was then submitted on behalf of Brown by
an unidentified RNC staffer who "was aware that this activity was not
eligible for reimbursement and had been previously counseled on this
very subject," according to the memo, which was written by the committee
chief of staff, Ken McKay. The staffer was fired because of the
incident, the memo said.

RNC spokesman Doug Heye said Monday night that "appropriate personnel
actions have been taken, and accounting and reimbursement processes are
being revised to ensure that such an action cannot reoccur." He also
said Brown would return the payment. "We recognize the difficulty this
incident has caused and assure our members and supporters that any
necessary and proper remediation is being implemented immediately," Heye
said.

The Democratic National Committee said that its chairman, Timothy M.
Kaine, usually travels on commercial flights and does not generally use
limousine or town-car services.

"We think their extravagant spending and their high burn rate speaks for
itself," spokesman Brad Woodhouse said.

But Heye noted that paying for high-end hotels and other accoutrements
is standard practice for both political parties when wooing wealthy
donors. He said most of the expenses for the private jets and car
services for Steele detailed in the February reports were related to the
start of television advertisements in the South and Midwest.

Brown, the chief executive of Dynamic Marketing, which has offices in
California and the District, did not respond Monday to telephone and
e-mail messages. He has contributed $10,000 to GOP candidates and
committees since 2007, and wrote on Twitter last Oct. 26 about attending
a Monday-night football game at FedEx Field with Steele.

Voyeur attracted celebrities such as Lindsay Lohan and Leonardo DiCaprio
to its fall opening. Club managers did not respond to telephone messages
left Monday.

***

Article is funny enough, but this line cracks me up:

"Mark DeMoss, a major RNC donor during George W. Bush's presidency who
heads a Christian public-relations firm in Atlanta..."

Jesus has a PR man!CGOPG

--
Conservatives - just pretend Obama's health care legislation is another
unnecessary war and you'll feel better about it.


Man, now there are liberals pretending to be Chairman of the RNC just
to make the conservatives look bad?


Yup, everythigng repub bad, everything dem good.. But still you won't
answer three simple questions because you don't like the answer...

Scotty

--
For a great time, go here first...
http://tinyurl.com/ygqxs5v

hk March 30th 10 03:58 PM

Cha-ching!
 
On 3/30/10 10:56 AM, wrote:
On Tue, 30 Mar 2010 06:57:14 -0400,
wrote:

RNC expense report renews criticism about Steele's spendin


Look at the bright side. Every dollar they squander on titty dancers
and 4 star hotels can't be used to buy anti Obama ads.



Andy Borowitz sez:



March 30, 2010
In Turnabout, Michael Steele Calls Same-sex Unions “Incredibly Hot”
GOP Chairman Changes Positions

WASHINGTON (The Borowitz Report) - In what appears to be a reversal of a
long-standing GOP position, RNC chair Michael Steele said today that he
considered same-sex unions "incredibly hot, especially when the girls
are getting it on in a glass case."

When asked if his comment meant that the GOP now favored same-sex
marriage, Mr. Steele clarified his position: "If we're talking about two
hot lesbian girls simulating marriage in a glass case, yes, I am very
much into that sort of thing."

Mr. Steele denied that he had changed positions on same-sex union issue,
but added, “There’s nothing wrong with changing positions if you like
the new one better.”

The GOP chairman could not be reached for further comment, as a
spokesman for Mr. Steele said he was all tied up.

Other Republicans were critical, however, about the GOP chairman’s
authorizing close to $2000 for a night out at a Los Angeles sex club,
including Sen. John Ensign (R-Nevada): "Why spend that kind of money for
something you can see in my office for free?"


--
Conservatives - just pretend Obama's health care legislation is another
unnecessary war and you'll feel better about it.

Loogypicker[_2_] March 30th 10 04:05 PM

Cha-ching!
 
On Mar 30, 10:08*am, I am Tosk
wrote:
In article 013359d4-37ba-4331-a09c-
,
says...







On Mar 30, 6:57*am, hk wrote:
RNC expense report renews criticism about Steele's spending


By Dan Eggen
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, March 30, 2010; A01


The Republican National Committee and its chairman, Michael S. Steele,
were engulfed in controversy again Monday after new financial reports
showed that the party used tens of thousands of donor dollars for luxe
hotels, private jets and other questionable expenditures.


The disclosures, some of which stem from Steele's travels to California
in January and a subsequent RNC retreat to Hawaii, reignited criticism
from fellow Republicans who are troubled by the chairman's financial
stewardship of the GOP's main committee since he took over more than a
year ago.


Although it is not unusual for either party to spend money in tony
settings to cater to wealthy donors, the RNC's latest filings captured
widespread attention for one expenditure at a risque nightclub:
$1,946.25 for "meals" at Voyeur in West Hollywood, which features
topless dancers wearing horse bridles and other bondage gear while
mimicking sex acts.


The committee fired an unidentified staff member as a result of the
disbursement and emphasized Monday that Steele had not visited the club
and was not aware of the expenditure. The reimbursement went to Erik
Brown, a Southern California GOP donor who has spent time with Steele in
the past and whose marketing firm has earned more than $160,000 from the
RNC and other Republican committees, according to campaign disclosure
records.


The RNC's expenses, first highlighted by the Daily Caller, set off
another round of GOP infighting over Steele, whose combative style and
frequent pratfalls have earned him friends and enemies. The chairman
angered many party insiders by releasing a book this year without
notifying Republican leaders; he stumbled into another controversy this
month after the leak of an RNC fundraising document featuring crude
caricatures of President Obama and other Democratic leaders.


Steele also has come under fire for his management of the organization's
finances. The RNC had more than $22 million on hand when he arrived last
year, but is down to less than $10 million, despite raising a record $96
million during that time, records show.


The February report to the Federal Election Commission lists $17,000 for
private jet service; more than $35,000 for upscale hotels; and more than
$43,000 in expenses, not including airfare, for the committee's winter
meeting in Hawaii. Such reports include a range of spending, including
Steele's airfare as well as expenses incurred by staff members and
outsiders.


"The RNC's role, and thus the chairman's role, is to raise money, fund
candidates, recruit candidates and voters into our cause," said John
Weaver, a GOP strategist and former adviser to Sen. John McCain
(R-Ariz.). "Setting policy, choosing sides and crazy spending does not
fall under his job description."


Mark DeMoss, a major RNC donor during George W. Bush's presidency who
heads a Christian public-relations firm in Atlanta, said that spending
so lavishly during an economic downturn is "mind-boggling." "Virtually
the entire country -- from big businesses to small business -- had to
make cutbacks," he said. "To think the Republican Party wouldn't do the
same thing, I think, suggests either a tone-deafness or just that they
don't care, which would maybe be worse."


But others defended Steele and his financial record and pointed to GOP
success in recent elections in Massachusetts, New Jersey and Virginia..
"You do have to spend money to raise money," said Dick Wadhams, chairman
of the Colorado GOP. "I'll give Chairman Steele the benefit of the doubt
on spending on major donors."


An RNC investigation of the incident found that the Voyeur party was
attended by a group of young Republicans who had been at an official
party "Young Eagles" event at the Beverly Hills Hotel the same night,
according to an internal memo obtained by The Washington Post. The Young
Eagles is an RNC program to cultivate 30-to-40-year-olds as major future
donors.


The request for reimbursement was then submitted on behalf of Brown by
an unidentified RNC staffer who "was aware that this activity was not
eligible for reimbursement and had been previously counseled on this
very subject," according to the memo, which was written by the committee
chief of staff, Ken McKay. The staffer was fired because of the
incident, the memo said.


RNC spokesman Doug Heye said Monday night that "appropriate personnel
actions have been taken, and accounting and reimbursement processes are
being revised to ensure that such an action cannot reoccur." He also
said Brown would return the payment. "We recognize the difficulty this
incident has caused and assure our members and supporters that any
necessary and proper remediation is being implemented immediately," Heye
said.


The Democratic National Committee said that its chairman, Timothy M.
Kaine, usually travels on commercial flights and does not generally use
limousine or town-car services.


"We think their extravagant spending and their high burn rate speaks for
itself," spokesman Brad Woodhouse said.


But Heye noted that paying for high-end hotels and other accoutrements
is standard practice for both political parties when wooing wealthy
donors. He said most of the expenses for the private jets and car
services for Steele detailed in the February reports were related to the
start of television advertisements in the South and Midwest.


Brown, the chief executive of Dynamic Marketing, which has offices in
California and the District, did not respond Monday to telephone and
e-mail messages. He has contributed $10,000 to GOP candidates and
committees since 2007, and wrote on Twitter last Oct. 26 about attending
a Monday-night football game at FedEx Field with Steele.


Voyeur attracted celebrities such as Lindsay Lohan and Leonardo DiCaprio
to its fall opening. Club managers did not respond to telephone messages
left Monday.


***


Article is funny enough, but this line cracks me up:


"Mark DeMoss, a major RNC donor during George W. Bush's presidency who
heads a Christian public-relations firm in Atlanta..."


Jesus has a PR man!CGOPG


--
Conservatives - just pretend Obama's health care legislation is another
unnecessary war and you'll feel better about it.


Man, now there are liberals pretending to be Chairman of the RNC just
to make the conservatives look bad?


Yup, everythigng repub bad, everything dem good.. But still you won't
answer three simple questions because you don't like the answer...

Scotty

--
For a great time, go here first...http://tinyurl.com/ygqxs5v- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


You think the above is a GOOD thing?

I am Tosk March 30th 10 04:13 PM

Cha-ching!
 
In article ,
says...

On Tue, 30 Mar 2010 06:57:14 -0400, hk
wrote:

RNC expense report renews criticism about Steele's spendin


Look at the bright side. Every dollar they squander on titty dancers
and 4 star hotels can't be used to buy anti Obama ads.


I saw some poor sucker on MSNBC this morning trying to be fair and ask
if both sides do this. Poor guy, bet he doesn't have a job next week...

Scotty

--
For a great time, go here first...
http://tinyurl.com/ygqxs5v

hk March 30th 10 04:15 PM

Cha-ching!
 
On 3/30/10 11:13 AM, I am Tosk wrote:
In ,
says...

On Tue, 30 Mar 2010 06:57:14 -0400,
wrote:

RNC expense report renews criticism about Steele's spendin


Look at the bright side. Every dollar they squander on titty dancers
and 4 star hotels can't be used to buy anti Obama ads.


I saw some poor sucker on MSNBC this morning trying to be fair and ask
if both sides do this. Poor guy, bet he doesn't have a job next week...

Scotty


Both sides do what, Snotty? Go to titty bars or get reimbursed for doing
same?




--
Conservatives - just pretend Obama's health care legislation is another
unnecessary war and you'll feel better about it.

hk March 30th 10 04:56 PM

Cha-ching!
 
On 3/30/10 11:44 AM, wrote:
On Tue, 30 Mar 2010 11:15:08 -0400,
wrote:

On 3/30/10 11:13 AM, I am Tosk wrote:
In ,
says...

On Tue, 30 Mar 2010 06:57:14 -0400,
wrote:

RNC expense report renews criticism about Steele's spendin

Look at the bright side. Every dollar they squander on titty dancers
and 4 star hotels can't be used to buy anti Obama ads.

I saw some poor sucker on MSNBC this morning trying to be fair and ask
if both sides do this. Poor guy, bet he doesn't have a job next week...

Scotty


Both sides do what, Snotty? Go to titty bars or get reimbursed for doing
same?


If you are Rangel you just get comped at the titty bar.

BTW I am surprised nobody here said anything about the TSA appointee
that has suddenly withdrawn his name form consideration over fraud
charges., Maybe Demint was right to ask questions.


Fraud? I thought the guy had accessed a database to check out the
criminal record of an ex-wife's new guy?


--
Conservatives - just pretend Obama's health care legislation is another
unnecessary war and you'll feel better about it.

Loogypicker[_2_] March 30th 10 05:44 PM

Cha-ching!
 
On Mar 30, 10:56*am, wrote:
On Tue, 30 Mar 2010 06:57:14 -0400, hk
wrote:

RNC expense report renews criticism about Steele's spendin


Look at the bright side. Every dollar they squander on titty dancers
and 4 star hotels can't be used to buy anti Obama ads.


The RNC says no most of the time, wonder if any of them said no when
Steele decided to take them to the boob bar?


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