British Agent, FDR-Hater Mark Penn Ousted from Clinton Campaign
April 7, 2008 (LPAC)--Don't believe a word of the press garbage that the firing of British agent, ``strategist,'' Mark Penn hurts the Hillary Clinton campaign. Penn, a Trojan Horse, and hater of FDR policies, was lead adviser in Hillary Clinton's campaign until Sunday, April 6, is an ``acquired'' British commodity, belonging to the ``WPP Group,'' the British advertising-company monopoly.
WPP acquired his company, Burson-Marsteller company, along with some half-dozen other American (in name only) public relations companies since 2000. These WPP Group acquisitions give London powerful control over the U.S. Presidential elections. WPP also owns the Nielsen TV ratings agency, which can eliminate TV shows, and candidates who run TV ads with its reports.
LPAC first identified Penn as a Trojan Horse when his long relationship with Bloomberg promoter Doug Schoen was uncovered.
Then, as Tony Chaitkin first exposed in February, the WPP Group could manipulate--from London--Presidential campaigns in the U.S.: Mark Penn as lead adviser to Clinton; Charles Black of Black Manafort (now BKSH) the lead adviser to John McCain; and Doug Schoen, partners with Penn in the company, Penn Schoen, the leading promoter/adviser to Michael Bloomberg.
On April 6, Penn was canned from the Clinton campaign for lobbying for the Free Trade Pact with Colombia--the White House/British policy, which Hillary Clinton opposes--getting paid at least $700,000 from the Colombian government. When it turned out that he was not representing the Clinton campaign when he met the Colombian officials, Colombia was angry, because they expected that Penn could deliver the Democrats.
Penn is also well-known to be an opponent to Clinton's emphasis on economic policies directed to the lower 80% and the forgotten man. In February, ABC News reported that Penn threw a fit over the Clinton campaign "Free Fall" ad that said the U.S. economy is in a free fall in foreclosures, job losses, spiraling interest rates and healthcare, yelling at ad's producer and driving other campaign officials out of the office.