Lou Dobbs reports on ACORN corruption and ties to Obama, including Obama Campaign paying ACORN $800,000 for voter registration activities.
http://www.cnn.com/video/#/video/bestoftv/2008/10/09/ldt.tucker.acorn.under.fire.cnn
The link below describes how some in Congress tried to use the original version of the bailout bill to divert money eventually recovered to groups like ACORN, a group Obama has a long association with. See: Wall Street Journal
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122247015469280723.html?mod=googlenews_wsj
Losing Your Head Over Your House
Whether it's McCain's seven houses or Obama's one, politicians aren't the only ones with shaky judgment about home-buying.
Presidential Pads
How can any house compare to 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue? A look at the current homes of presidents, including the new Dallas home that President Bush is set to buy.
Email To A Friend
Please fill in the following information and we'll email this link.
A few years ago, I was interviewing the former chief executive of a large U.S. company, when our discussion turned to the housing market. I knew that he, like many people who measure their wealth in the tens or hundreds of millions, had at least a couple of vacation homes. He also had a New York City apartment, along with a place in the country. He seemed to have more riding on the housing market than most of us do, so in the course of our conversation I asked him in passing: exactly how many houses do you own? He looked puzzled for a second. Then, after a pause, he yelled out to the hallway for his executive assistant to come in for a second. "How many houses do I own?" he asked her.
In his defense, this was something of a tricky question. At least one of his residences was for sale, and since he'd already moved out of it, he'd skipped over it in his initial count. He also rented at least one of his houses, further muddying the tally. The correct number, if I'm recalling it correctly, was that he owned five homes. Still, there's something disconcerting about someone who can't remember how many houses he owns. It's a reminder of just how big the wealth gap is between the have-somes and the have-a-lots.
I've been recalling this conversation ever since John McCain's housing gaffe back in late August. As first reported by Politico, a reporter asked McCain how many houses he had. His reply: "I think—I'll have my staff get to you." The Obama campaign quickly hit the airwaves with an ad proclaiming the correct number—McCain owns seven homes, worth a total of $13 million—which it used in an attempt to highlight just how out-of-touch McCain is with ordinary Americans.
In a year in which the falling housing market and the resulting crisis on Wall Street have emerged as the major campaign issues, McCain's outsized appetite for homeownership isn't the only mini-scandal involving the candidates' homes. Barack Obama lives in a large, classic Greek revival home on Chicago's South Side worth more than $1.5 million. To buy it, he appeared to have accepted help from Tony Rezko, who helped facilitate the Obamas' home purchase and later sold the family a piece of a side lot that allowed them to expand their back yard. (Rezko, a real-estate developer, was later convicted on bribery and fraud charges.) The deal is arguably the biggest ethical blight on Obama's record, and nearly two years ago, in an interview with the Chicago Sun Times, Obama admitted that although he believes he handled the deal ethically, he failed to appreciate the appearance it created, and he regards it as a mistake that he regrets.
Last week came the third mini-scandal. On Thursday, the New York Times reported on its front page that Joe Biden lives in a 6,800-square-foot lakefront home that's worth nearly $3 million, and that some of the deals he cut to build the home created some appearance problems of their own. According to the Times, "the acquisition of [Biden's] waterfront property a decade ago involved wealthy businessmen and campaign supporters, some of them bankers with an interest in legislation before the Senate, who bought his old house for top dollar, sold him four acres at cost and lent him $500,000 to build his new home." The story further alleged that Biden has used campaign funds to landscape the property, which he has used to hold fund-raisers.
There's an old saying among reporters that three examples of something constitute a trend. To me, the three stories of these candidates and their houses are an interesting reminder of just how passionate people can be about their homes. Obama, McCain and Biden are all savvy, ambitious politicians who realized their finances would be scrutinized as they ran for the White House, but even knowing that, they put themselves in vulnerable positions in able to live in a really nice home (or, in McCain's case, seven of them).
- 1
- 2
- Next Page »










Discuss