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Post-election Obama backers hitting donors

WASHINGTON, Feb. 23 (UPI) -- A leading government watchdog says the transition of U.S. President Barack Obama's re-election team into an advocacy group to promote his agenda "just smells."

Obama for America, which has become Organizing for Action, is trying to raise $50 million from a small group of elite donors, The New York Times reported Saturday.

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Those involved in the effort say at least half of OFA's budget will come from donors who give at least $500,000. Donors' names will be voluntarily disclosed every few months, OFA officials said.

The money will be used for salaries, rent and advertising to drive support for Obama's second-term priorities -- gun violence, climate change and immigration reform.

OFA is set up as a 501(c)(4), a "social advocacy group" -- like the Sierra Club or the National Rifle Association -- so it is not bound by federal contribution limits. But its legal framework puts it in an uncharted landscape without a clear political map, the newspaper said.

Bob Edgar, president of Common Cause -- a non-partisan organization that advocates for campaign finance reform -- said Obama "is setting a very bad model setting up this organization."

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"It just smells," Edgar told the Times.

Those who contribute $50,000 will be invited to a "founders summit" next month near the White House, where they will mingle with former Obama White House aides. Giving or raising at least $500,000 will put donors on a national advisory board and the privilege to attend quarterly meetings with the president.

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