As I've said many times, sometimes the jokes write themselves. And I've also said many times that Ben Carson's campaign resembles a grift more than a political campaign. Talking to CNN, Carson admits that his campaign either didn't understand what they were doing when it came to finances or they did it on purpose.
For months, reporters and political operatives (including me) have been pointing out that Ben Carson’s campaign bears many of the hallmarks of a political scam operation. Now Carson seems to agree. On CNN on Tuesday, Carson discussed his year-end staff shake-up:
“We had people who didn't really seem to understand finances," a laughing Carson told CNN's Poppy Harlow on "CNN Newsroom," adding, "or maybe they did—maybe they were doing it on purpose."
It’s a remarkable statement—especially because he’s so blithe about it.
Carson has taken in incredible amounts of money during the race. His campaign has raised more than any other Republican presidential rival, though they’ve raised more when super PACs are included. But he’s also spent more than any of them, so that despite his prolific fundraising, he has barely $4 million in cash on hand.
That’s because Team Carson has been plowing a huge portion of the money it raises back into fundraising, using costly direct-mail and telemarketing tactics. Pretty much every campaign uses those tools, but the extent to which Carson was using it raised eyebrows around politics. First, many of the companies being paid millions and millions of dollars are run by top campaign officials or their friends and relations, meaning those people are making a mint. Second, many of the contributions are coming from small-dollar donors. If that money is being given by well-meaning grassroots conservatives for a campaign that’s designed not to win but to produce revenue for venders, isn’t it just a grift?
Yes, it is, but for Carson to not understand what was going on around him, if indeed that's what happened, shows he's just another con man in the GOP, ripping off his supporters. You know, the poorer ones.
And it's pathetic that he keeps right on chugging, appearing in debates, messing up the primary and collecting money from average Americans who think he's that guy who wrote "Healing Hands" instead of the creepy weirdo he is today. The good news is that the money is no longer flowing. His marks seem to have wised up.
By the way, he raised over 60 million dollars. Yes, you read that right.