Morning Sun

Watchdog: Trump ’16 campaign, PAC illegally coordinate­d

- By Garance Burke

New documents from a former Cambridge Analytica insider reveal what an election watchdog group claims was illegal coordinati­on between Donald Trump’s 2016 presidenti­al campaign and a billionair­e-funded proTrump super PAC. The legal complaint touches on some of the same people involved in today’s hotly contested presidenti­al race and provides a detailed account alleging that Trump’s last campaign worked around election rules to coordinate behind the scenes with the political action committee.

The now-defunct British data analytics firm violated election law by ignoring its own written firewall policy, blurring the lines between work created for Trump’s 2016 campaign and the Make America Number 1 super PAC, according to an updated complaint the nonpartisa­n campaign Legal Center filed Friday with the Federal Election Commission.

The complaint also alleges that Cambridge Analytica— which improperly acquired and used 87 million Facebook users’ profiles to predict their behavior — had a shared project calendar for both entities, among other evidence.

“The idea that this spending was at all independen­t is farcical and these emails underscore that,” said Brendan Fischer, an attorney for the government oversight group, whose new filing supplement­s a complaint filed four years ago. “Cambridge Analytica not only misused people’s personal data, but it was a conduit for the wealthy family that owned it to unlawfully support the Trump campaign in 2016.”

The super PAC created a plethora of “crooked Hill-ary” memes that circulated widely on social media, and was financed largely by conservati­ve billionair­e Robert Mercer, who also founded, owned and managed Cambridge Analytica. Kellyanne Conway led an earlier incarnatio­n of the PAC when it supported Texas GOP Sen. Ted Cruz before she resigned to advise Trump’s 2016 campaign.

Under federal law, a super Pac may raise and spend unlimited amounts of money, including from corporatio­ns and unions, to support candidates for federal office — but it’s illegal for themto coordinate with political campaigns.

The complaint alleges that Cambridge Analytica used informatio­n it gained from working with Trump’s campaign to develop and target ads for the super PAC supporting his candidacy, “constituti­ng unreported in-kind contributi­ons to Donald J. Trump for President, Inc. in the form of coordinate­d communicat­ions .”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FIL PHOTO ?? Alexander Nix, chief executive of Cambridge Analytica, leaves his offices in central London in March 2018.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FIL PHOTO Alexander Nix, chief executive of Cambridge Analytica, leaves his offices in central London in March 2018.

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