Jeb Bush’s admission that he is running for
president while heading up a superPAC means that Bush is breaking the
law, and the federal government must immediately investigate his illegal
fundraising operation.
Video:
Bush said, “I’m running for president in 2016, and
the focus is going to be about how we, if I run, how do you create high
sustained economic growth.”
Jeb Bush didn’t just let the cat out of the bag. He
broke the law. Jeb Bush is listed as the founder of the superPAC Right
to Rise. Candidate Bush can not legally be involved or coordinating with
any superPACs. The second that Jeb Bush admitted that he was running
for president, he was in violation of the law.
However, as Reuters reported,
Bush’s entire fundraising structure appears to be an illegal operation
that is violating the Bipartisan Campaign Finance Reform Act of 2002,
“Under a little-noted provision of the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of
2002, if a candidate or officeholder or their proxies is directly or
indirectly involved in “establishing, financing, maintaining or
controlling” an outside entity, like an individual-candidate super PAC,
it is illegal for the super PAC to receive or spend contributions that
exceed the limit on contributions to a federal PAC of $5,000 per donor
per year.”
On the surface, this appears to be silly. Jeb Bush
is running for president. Everybody knows that Jeb Bush is running for
president. Bush has done everything but declare his candidacy. The
reality is that Jeb Bush is running an illegal fundraising operation the
scope of which has never been seen in American politics before.
The mainstream media is too afraid to say it, but
Bush’s statement that he is running for president was more than a slip
of the tongue. It was an admission of illegal activity.
IF
the American people want their representative democracy back, they must
call on the FEC to immediately investigate the fundraising activities of
Jeb Bush.
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