WHAT THE BUDDHIST BUST SAYS ABOUT GORE
March 2, 2000
Maria Hsia was found guilty today on all
five counts charging her with arranging more than $100,000 in
illegal contributions during the 1996 presidential campaign. Hsia,
who has been a fund-raiser for Vice President Al Gore since the
1980s, helped arrange the Buddhist temple fund-raiser.
Gore initially claimed that he did not know that the event was
a fund-raiser but then later changed his characterization.
Buddhist nuns and monks wrote individual checks and were then
reimbursed by the Hsi Lai Temple. That event raised $65,000 in
illegal contributions.
Catholic League president William Donohue spoke for the league
today:
"From the beginning, there have been two issues involved in
the Buddhist temple fund-raising event. One is now concluded:
the host is a criminal. What remains unclear is the status of
the guest.
"In recent weeks Governor George Bush and Senator John McCain
have been the target of much criticism for the way they have
handled the delicate issue of religion and politics. But their
errors pale in significance to what is at stake in the Buddhist
bust: what is at stake is an outrageous violation of the
principle of separation of church and state coupled with
gangsterism.
"Just imagine the outcry if Jack Kemp, running with Bob Dole,
had gone to a fund-raiser at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in 1996,
organized by one of his long-time buddies. Imagine further the
spectacle of nuns and priests writing checks to the Republican
party and then getting reimbursed by the Archdiocese of New
York. Is there any doubt what would have been the fate of Kemp,
to say nothing of Cardinal O’Connor? The fact that Gore is
apparently getting away with this is emblematic of a sickening
double standard. The Bob Jones fiasco is bad, but check-writing
clergymen being hustled in a house of worship makes that look
positively angelic by comparison."
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