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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

GOP event in Capitol draws fire

New congressman accused of illegally raising funds

 U.S. Reps. Pete Sessions, R-Texas, left, and Mike Fitzpatrick, R-Pa., recite the oath of office as they watch a broadcast of Speaker of the House John Boehner administering the oath from the House.  (Associated Press)
Alan Fram Associated Press

WASHINGTON – Democrats and congressional watchdog groups accused Republicans on Friday of illegally holding a campaign fundraiser in the Capitol complex during this week’s swearing-in ceremonies for lawmakers.

One group said it would ask House ethics officials to investigate, but there were no immediate indications that they would take formal action.

A spokesman for the GOP congressman who sponsored the event denied that he had used it to raise campaign money, and said funds collected were for the costs of buses that ferried people to the reception. While at the reception, the two Republican lawmakers – Mike Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania and Pete Sessions of Texas – missed their swearing-in ceremony on the House floor. They subsequently cast six votes each that House Republicans later had to nullify.

Fitzpatrick held an event on Wednesday in the Capitol Visitor Center that his campaign called “Mike Fitzpatrick’s Swearing In Celebration,” according to copies of the announcement provided to the Associated Press by the Sunlight Foundation, which favors open government. Also attending the event was Sessions, who heads the House GOP’s campaign arm.

The invitations said buses would provide round-trip transportation from Pennsylvania and cited a price of $30 per person. An accompanying form repeatedly describes the money as a “contribution,” and attendees are asked to write their checks to Fitzpatrick’s campaign committee.

“The $30 was for the cost of the bus, that’s it,” Fitzpatrick spokesman Darren Smith said in an e-mail. “The reception in the CVC was free and open to anyone who showed up, including over 100 constituents who drove down on their own.”

Melanie Sloan, executive director of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, said that holding a fundraiser in the Capitol Visitor Center violates the law banning campaign fundraising on federal property. Sloan said her group would ask the Office of Congressional Ethics to look into the reception.

The law allows members to hold swearing-in receptions in House offices, paid for by campaign contributions, but not fundraisers.

The ethics office can conduct preliminary reviews of potential ethics problems and make nonbinding recommendations to the House ethics committee about whether it should pursue a formal investigation.

Meredith McGehee, policy director for the nonpartisan Campaign Legal Center, which monitors campaign finance practices in Washington, said Fitzpatrick seemed to have broken campaign finance laws. She said the ethics office should examine the congressman’s reception to spell out for lawmakers what types of events they can hold on congressional property.

“I don’t look at this and say, ‘My God, how venal,’ ” she said. “I say, ‘Here’s a guy who misses his own swearing-in and then goes and reads the Constitution.’ How ironic. It does show how much the money system has become wrapped up in being a member of Congress.”