Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

DNC helped pay Biden’s legal bills in probe

- REID J. EPSTEIN

WASHINGTON — Even as some of President Joe Biden’s top campaign officials were attacking Donald Trump’s campaign for soliciting donations to pay his legal fees, the Biden-aligned Democratic National Committee was helping pay for lawyers in the special counsel investigat­ion into Biden’s handling of classified documents.

The DNC has directed at least $1.7 million to lawyers since July to cover the president’s representa­tion in the documents inquiry, a figure that pales in comparison to Trump’s use of supporters’ donations to pay his hefty legal fees. The former president has spent more than $100 million on legal bills since leaving office, relying almost entirely on donations.

Federal Election Commission records show that since the investigat­ion began last year, the DNC has paid $1.05 million to Bob Bauer, the president’s lawyer. The party committee has also paid $905,000 to Hemenway & Barnes, a Boston firm that employs Jennifer Miller, a lawyer whom the special counsel’s report identified as a “personal counsel” for Biden.

The party’s payments to cover Biden’s lawyers — first reported by Axios on Friday — are roughly in line with amounts donors spent to pay for legal defenses for President Barack Obama during his first term.

The Biden campaign has repeatedly amplified the Trump campaign’s use of donor money to pay the former president’s legal bills in his four criminal cases.

As recently as last weekend, top Biden campaign officials celebrated their fundraisin­g prowess with jabs at Trump for asking donors to subsidize his lawyers.

“Every single dime that you give to the Biden-Harris reelection campaign, we spend talking to voters,” Rufus Gifford, the campaign’s finance chair, said during a Saturday interview on MSNBC. “We are not spending money on legal bills.”

In an April 5 interview with The New York Times, Jeffrey Katzenberg, the Hollywood mogul who is a Biden campaign co-chair, also brought up how Trump is paying his legal fees.

“I’ll take our hand that we are playing, as opposed to hosting a bunch of fat-cat billionair­es hanging out at Mara-Lago, plotting how to pay his legal bills and buy political favor,” Katzenberg said as he discussed the Biden operation’s fundraisin­g in March, when the campaign, together with the DNC and affiliated committees, brought in $90 million.

Gifford and a representa­tive for Katzenberg did not respond to messages on Friday morning.

Kevin Munoz, a Biden campaign spokespers­on, said the Biden campaign used money raised from its small-dollar solicitati­ons to spread its message directly to voters. “That’s a stark contrast to Trump, who is begging retirees and hardworkin­g Americans to pay off his legal fees,” he said.

Officials with the Biden campaign and the DNC sought to draw a distinctio­n between money raised from small donors to the Biden campaign and the typically larger contributi­ons to the party committee, which was the vehicle used to pay Biden’s personal legal fees.

“The DNC does not spend a single penny of grassroots donors’ money on legal bills, unlike Donald Trump, who actively solicits legal fees from his supporters and has drawn down every bank account he can get his hands on like a personal piggy bank,” said Alex Floyd, a DNC spokespers­on.

Officials with the Biden campaign and the DNC have for nearly a year made no distinctio­n between the organizati­ons when boasting about their fundraisin­g. In numerous instances — such as when Biden’s team raised $25 million at a single event with former President Bill Clinton and Obama — they have cast the campaign, the party and its affiliated committees as a single “Team Biden-Harris” to create a more impressive overall fundraisin­g total.

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