*http://wnd.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=56177

World Net Daily

ELECTION 2008*
John McCain funded by Soros since 2001
Candidate's Reform Institute also accepted funds from Teresa Kerry
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted: February 12, 2008
1:00 am Eastern

By Jerome R. Corsi
© 2008 WorldNetDaily


As Sen. John McCain assumes the GOP 
<http://wnd.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=56177#> front-runner 
mantle, his long-standing, but little-noticed association with left-wing 
donors such as George Soros and Teresa Heinz Kerry is receiving new 
attention among his Republican critics.

In 2001, McCain founded the Alexandria, Va.-based Reform Institute 
<http://www.reforminstitute.org/> as a vehicle to receive funding from 
George Soros' Open Society Institute and Teresa Heinz Kerry's Tides 
Foundation and several other prominent non-profit organizations.

McCain used the institute to promote his political agenda and provide 
compensation to key campaign operatives between elections.

In 2006, the Arizona senator was forced to sever his formal ties with 
the Reform Institute after a controversial $200,000 contribution from 
Cablevision came to light. McCain solicited the donation for the Reform 
Institute using his membership on the Senate 
<http://wnd.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=56177#> Committee on 
Commerce, Science, and Transportation. In a letter to the Federal 
Communications Commission, he supported Cablevision's push to introduce 
the more profitable al la carte pricing, rather than packages of TV 
programming.

Yet, the Reform Institute still employs the McCain campaign's Hispanic 
outreach director, Juan Hernandez, as a senior fellow of its 
Comprehensive Immigration Reform Initiative 
<http://www.reforminstitute.org/about/AboutHernandez.aspx>.

As WND reported <http://www.wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=59890>, 
Hernandez serves as a non-paid volunteer for the McCain campaign. A dual 
Mexican-U.S. citizen, he was a member of former President Vicente Fox's 
cabinet, representing an estimate 24 million Mexicans living abroad. 
Hernandez, with a "Mexico first" message, has argued aggressively 
against building a fence on the Mexican border, insisting the frontier 
needed to remain wide open so illegal immigrants 
<http://wnd.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=56177#> could easily enter 
the U.S.

The July 6, 2001, homepage of the Reform Institute archived on the 
Internet lists founder McCain as chairman of the group's advisory 
committee. 
<http://web.archive.org/web/20010706025618/http://www.reforminstitute.org/>

Prominent senior officials on the McCain 2008 presidential campaign 
<http://wnd.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=56177#> staff found 
generously paid positions at the Reform Institute following the 
senator's unsuccessful run for the White House in 2000.

Rick Davis, McCain's current campaign manager, was paid $110,000 a year 
by the Reform Institute for a consulting position, according to the 
group's 2003 Form 990 filing with the IRS.

In 2004, Davis advanced to the position of Reform Institute president, 
with an annual salary of $120,000, according to the group's 2004 Form 990.

In 2005, Davis remained president, but his salary dropped back to 
$45,000 a year, with a time commitment of five hours per week, according 
the 2005 Form 990.

Carla Eudy, a senior advisor on McCain's 2008 presidential campaign who 
until recently headed fundraising, was paid $177,885 in 2005 to serve as 
the Reform Institute's secretary-treasurer.

Other McCain presidential campaign staffers who have found employment at 
the Reform Institute include Trevor Potter, McCain's 2000 legal counsel, 
and Crystal Benton, the senator's former press secretary, who served as 
institute's communications director in 2005 for an annual salary of $52,083.

The Reform Institute regularly has supported McCain in various 
legislative efforts, including on campaign finance reform, global 
warming and "comprehensive immigration 
<http://wnd.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=56177#> reform," all 
efforts widely opposed by many in the party's conservative base.

Arianna Huffington, syndicated columnist and creator of the 
HuffingtonPost.com, has served on the Reform Institute's advisory 
committee since the group's inception. 
<http://www.reforminstitute.org/about/AboutAdvisory.aspx>

According to FrontPage Magazine, Teresa Heinz Kerry has provided more 
than $4 million to the Tides Foundation <http://www.tides.org/>, a 
non-profit organization founded by anti-war activist Drummond Pike in 
1976 with a history of funding causes such as abortion, 
homosexual-rights activism and open borders.

Financial contributors while McCain was chairman of the Reform Institute 
also have included the Educational Foundation of America 
<http://www.efaw.org/>, a group that supports abortion and opposes 
drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Reserve.

The Soros-Kerry funding connection with McCain was first exposed by Ed 
Morrissey at the Captains Quarters blog in 2005. 
<http://www.captainsquartersblog.com/mt/archives/004026.php>

Subsequently, David Horowitz's DiscoverTheNetworks.org website 
<http://www.discoverthenetworks.org/moonbatcentral/2005/03/john-mccain-gets-soros-cash.html>
 
and Michelle Malkin's blog 
<http://michellemalkin.com/2008/01/25/meet-the-open-borders-family-mccain-hernandez-soros-and-the-reform-institute/>
 
gave renewed attention to the Reform Institute's funding ties.

*/Media wishing to interview the author of this article, please e-mail 
Tim Bueler. <mailto:[&#1045;-&#1055;&#1054;&#1064;&#1058;&#1040; 
&#1047;&#1040;&#1064;&#1058;&#1048;&#1035;&#1045;&#1053;&#1040;]>/*


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