The crew room notice board

The idea for Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) was conceived by Norman Eisen and Louis Mayberg, two lawyers who often donated to Democrat causes. Eisen and Mayberg decided they needed a government watchdog to mirror the conservative ethics groups that successfully battled Bill Clinton during the 1990s. Their idea blossomed into CREW, which was born in 2003.

They tapped former Democrat Senate aide Melanie Sloan to run the new organization. Sloan built the group into a major player in the progressive movement, filing numerous charges against the George W. Bush administration and Republicans in Congress. In 2015, she yielded control of CREW to another former Senate Democrat aide, Noah Bookbinder.

In 2014, Clinton machine fixer David Brock was elected chair of the CREW board. Brock runs several SuperPACs and 527 groups with close ties to Hillary Clinton. After the 2016 election cycle, Brock ceded control of the board to Norman Eisen, ostensibly to “ensure [CREW’s] public reputation for non-partisanship.” But a leaked memo published in the Washington Free Beacon detailed Brock’s continued influence over the organization and its role in his network of liberal attack organizations.

One Republican that often signs his name to CREW actions is Vice Chair Richard Painter. However, in August of 2016, he endorsed Hillary Clinton in a much-touted New York Times op-ed.

CREW’s founders were wealthy Democrats

To head up CREW, Eisen and company tapped Melanie Sloan. She was the face of the organization until 2015 when she left CREW to found a public affairs firm alongside liberal activist and ProgressNow founder Michael Huttner. Sloan has a long history of working in Democrat politics.

Sloan served as Minority Counsel for the House Judiciary Committee under Rep. John Conyers (D-MI), and as Nominations Counsel for then-Sen. Joe Biden’s (D-DE) Senate Judiciary Committee. She also worked for then-Rep. Charles Schumer (D-NY), on the House Judiciary Committee.

Sloan was confronted about her Democrat activism during an interview on C-SPAN’s “Q&A.” She confessed that she’d been a Democrat in the past, but claimed her time at CREW had reformed her and made her an independent. Sloan is a registered Democrat.

Today’s CREW Looks As Liberal As Ever

Coming back to CREW in December of 2016, Norman Eisen is now the chair of the CREW board. He’s joined by nine others who have all worked for, donated to, or endorsed Democrats or liberal causes. To date, the current board has donated over $6 million to Democrats and liberal PACs. In the 2016 election cycle, the CREW board donated over 200 times more money to the left than to the right. Below are some highlights from the careers of CREW’s board:

As of October 2017, 19 of 23 employees listed on CREW’s website have previously worked for Democrat campaigns, administration, or other left-wing groups. Below are some highlights from the highest ranks of CREW’s staff:

Many CREW alumni were also culled from left-wing organizations and offices: