Tuesday, September 9, 2014

Lamest Man in Massachusetts New Hampshire

Scott Brown, of course, who, after losing to Elizabeth Warren, went to work for a law and lobbying firm, got his tits in a bundle with Lawrence Lessig who put out a flyer that criticized Brown as a lobbyist.

The Scott Brown campaign sent a cease and desist letter to Lessig's campaign finance reform PAC:
Former Massachusetts Senator Scott Brown has attempted to revive his political career by running for Senate in New Hampshire. But in the final days before his September 9 primary, he's squaring off against another opponent — Harvard professor Lawrence Lessig, who advocates against money in politics. Lessig's Mayday PAC endorsed Brown's GOP primary challenger Jim Rubens, and is now sending out a mailer calling Brown a "Washington lobbyist."

The mailer led to an angry response from the Brown campaign. "This is a flat-out lie. Scott Brown is not nor has he ever been a lobbyist. Ever," campaign manager Colin Reed wrote, calling on Lessig to "immediately cease and desist with the mailer in question."

In response, Lessig posted the letter on his blog, and linked to an article from The Hill about Brown joining the Boston office of "Nixon Peabody, a law and lobby firm." The firm itself said Brown would work on "business and governmental affairs," including those related to "the financial services industry." Lessig writes:
Yes, according to the Senate, Scott Brown isn't a "lobbyist." But I submit to anyone else in the world, a former Senator joining a "law and lobbying firm" to help with Wall St's "business and governmental affairs" is to make him a lobbyist. Because to anyone else in the world, when you sell your influence to affect "business and governmental affairs," you are a lobbyist.
You would think that a man who is a lawyer who has spent much of his life as a public figure would understand just what it means to be a public figure after New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, which required actual malice or a reckless disregard for the truth for libel and defamation suits.

Of course, in the process of making this demand, the hapless former Cosmo centerfold has served to generate publicity for the flyer.

See, "Streisand Effect, The".  (Heh)

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