(Later that evening, a producer with the radio show Democracy Now
sought to question Adelson — being accompanied by Karl Rove — while he
was being taken by wheel chair to a fourth floor corporate skybox at the
convention. In an incident
caught on videotape here,
the producer, Mike Burke, reported that a woman identified as Adelson’s
daughter grabbed his camera, took it into the skybox and threw it on
the ground. Burke said the daughter later apologized.)
i
Lior Mizrahi / Getty Images
U.S.
gaming tycoon Sheldon Adelson and his wife Miriam arrive to hear
Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney
delivers foreign policy remarks on July 29,
2012 in Jerusalem, Israel.
The
brief appearance by Adelson came at a spirited event where top members
of Congress rubbed elbows with wealthy GOP donors and “Obama ... Oy
Vey!” buttons were freely distributed to attendees. At the same time,
new details emerged about Adelson’s role in
steering supersize checks to groups working to defeat the president and elect Republican members of Congress.
Shortly
before Adelson arrived, celebrity rabbi Shmuley Boteach, author of
“Kosher Sex” and a one-time spiritual adviser to Michael Jackson who is
now running
as a Republican candidate for Congress from New Jersey, boasted that
Adelson and his wife had recently given $500,000 to “my super PAC” and
that they were “heroes of our community.”
Boteach later told
reporters that he had then dined with Adelson this week during the RNC
convention. “Well, I mean, look they’re friends,” he said of Adelson and
his wife. “They don’t need me to tell them where to give their money.
They’re very savvy political donors.”
As for the super PAC, called
“Patriot Prosperity PAC,” Boteach at first said that, while “we
obviously don’t have any contact with them,” it was “set up by the
professionals who run my campaign.”
NBC's
Michael Isikoff reports on Republican VP pick Paul Ryan's meeting last
night in Las Vegas with some big-dollar GOP donors, including casino
tycoon Sheldon Adelson, for a private talk about the campaign.
Although the half-million dollar donation by Adelson and his wife to the “Patriot Prosperity PAC” had already been
reported,
Boteach’s reference to “my super PAC” and his reference to it being
“set up” by his campaign “professionals” seemed to raise fresh
questions about whether the donations complied with federal election
laws. Those laws bar campaign committees from coordinating their
activities with supposedly independent super PACs -- which are allowed
to take unlimited donations.
But when pressed by reporters about his comments about the origins of the group, the rabbi corrected himself.
“No, no, no, no, no, no, no,” he said when asked if his campaign
staff had set up the super PAC donations. “Let’s not pull me into
something that I am not -- I said the people who run my campaign are the
ones who tell me what we’re allowed to do and what we’re not allowed to
do. And we are allowed to tell the people who support us that if they
want to support us, there was a super PAC. And that’s what we did.
That’s exactly what I meant.”
Adelson’s
contributions
in the 2012 election --- now, combined with those of his wife, total
more than $40 million -- have stirred controversy, in part because of
his hardline views on Israel (he is a close friend of Israeli prime
minister Benjamin Netanyahu) but also because of
ongoing federal investigations into his gambling empire over allegations that it has paid bribes to Chinese officials.
Rabbi
Shmuley Boteach, a candidate for U.S. Congress from New Jersey,
discusses Sheldon Adelson's gift to the Super PAC supporting Boteach's
campaign.
Also this week, Bloomberg News
reported
that Adelson’s Sands Corp. -- which generates more than half of its
multibillion-dollar revenues from four casinos in Macau -- could see its
profits soar if Romney were elected and fulfills his pledge to demand
that China loosen currency restrictions, allowing the value of the yuan
to rise against the dollar.
Adelson’s appearance was the highlight
of the RJC event -- partly sponsored by Comcast (owner of NBC News) --
which was attended by other big GOP donors such as hedge fund
billionaire Paul Singer. Also present: GOP Sens. John Thune of South
Dakota and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, House Majority Leader Eric
Cantor, and Reps. Michele Bachmann of Minnesota, Allen West of Florida,
Ed Royce of California and Renee Ellmers of North Carolina.
The
event -- briefly interrupted by two protesters who loudly denounced
Israeli policies towards the Palestinians and were quickly evicted --
was marked by multiple denunciations of Obama’s policies to Israel.
“I
don’t know how there are any Democratic Jews,” said GOP Rep. Billy Long
of Missouri. “The way the president has treated [Israeli Prime
Minister] Bibi Netanyahu and the land of Israel, I don’t know how any
Democratic Jew can still be a Democrat.”
NBC’s Jamie Novogrod also contributed to this story.
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