Politics | Stephen Colbert Colbert's PAC Less Silly Than Real Ones Dana Milbank on just how ridiculous campaign finance is now By Kevin Spak Posted Jul 1, 2011 1:52 PM CDT Copied Comedian Stephen Colbert speaks to supporters on the sidewalk in front of the Federal Election Commission in Washington, Thursday, June 30, 2011. (AP Photo/Cliff Owen) Stephen Colbert went to some lengths to create a SuperPAC parodying the nation’s campaign-finance laws. “But there was a flaw in his plan,” writes Dana Milbank in the Washington Post: “The campaign-finance system already is a parody.” Indeed, as ridiculous as Colbert’s unlimited donations vehicle might sound, it “isn’t nearly as abusive as what’s already going on.” Heck, Colbert’s SuperPAC is so limited that experts said he didn’t really need FEC permission. “Alas, when it comes to making a mockery of campaign-finance law, American Crossroads is way ahead of Colbert Nation,” Milbank laments. Whereas Colbert must disclose any donations over $200, Karl Rove’s outfit accepts millions in utterly anonymous largesse. The Supreme Court “has largely wiped out post-Watergate campaign finance reforms,” and even if you violate what’s left of them, the FEC is too paralyzed by partisanship to punish you. “That’s the trouble: The real campaign-finance abuses are more horrible than Colbert’s fiction.” Read These Next 11 people hurt in a "brutal act of violence" in Michigan. We knew Letterman would pipe up about Colbert eventually. A parent's nightmare, in a white cardboard box. The humans survived this flight; the deer on the ground didn't. Report an error