“Progressive” Nonprofit Repped by Bush-Cheney Vet

Well, I think we have our answer as to who is behind the Progressive Policy Council, the phony group behind a mailer that’s gone out to an untold number of Pennsylvania voters in an apparent attempt to sour liberal voters on Democrat Bob Casey.

Records with the Virginia State Corporation Commission show that the group’s charter was filed by a man named Jason Torchinsky of Holtzman Vogel. And who is he?

His bio at his law firm gives a good idea:

Jason Torchinsky recently joined Holtzman Vogel PLLC with a primary focus on campaign finance and election law. During the 2004 election cycle, Jason served as Deputy General Counsel to Bush-Cheney ’04 and Deputy General Counsel to the 2005 Presidential Inaugural Committee.

Immediately before joining the firm, Jason was Counsel to the Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division at the United States Department of Justice. Jason has also served in other positions at the White House and at the United States Department of Justice. At the White House, he worked for now-Attorney General Alberto Gonzales in the Counsel’s Office. At the Department of Justice, Jason served as a Special Assistant to the Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division and in the Eastern District of Wisconsin as a Special Assistant United States Attorney….

Jason’s prior political experience includes the Republican National Committee Counsel’s Office, the Dole-Kemp campaign, the 1996 Republican National Convention, and Congressman Herb Bateman’s re-election campaign.

Actually, it turns out that diminishing voter turnout is somewhat of a hobby for Torchinsky. Torchinsky is also affiliated with the American Center for Voting Rights, a conservative organization working to pass Voter ID laws in several states.

TPM readers might recall that this is not the first time that Republicans have mustered their resources to attack Bob Casey from the left. They even went so far as to fund Green candidate Carl Romanelli’s Senate bid. That effort was derailed, however, when a judge ruled that Romanelli did not have enough valid signatures to qualify for the ballot.

My call to Torchinsky wasn’t immediately returned.

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