Accusation by Ralph Nader of use of "racial epithet" In 2004,
Ralph Nader attended a meeting with the
Congressional Black Caucus, at which Nader clashed with members of the caucus over his presidential bid. After the meeting, Nader alleged that Watt twice uttered an "obscene racial epithet" towards him. It was alleged that Watt said: "You're just another arrogant white man — telling us what we can do — it's all about your ego — another fucking arrogant white man." Although Nader (who is of Lebanese descent) wrote a letter to the Caucus and to Watt asking for an apology, none was offered.
Opposition to Federal Reserve auditing In 2009, fellow congressman
Ron Paul reported to Bloomberg that while Paul's bill
HR 1207, which mandates an audit of the
Federal Reserve, was in subcommittee, Watt had substantially altered the substance of the bill, a move which had "gutted" the bill's protections. According to Bloomberg News, on October 20, 2009, "The bill, with 308 co-sponsors, has been stripped of provisions that would remove Fed exemptions from audits of transactions with foreign central banks, monetary policy deliberations, transactions made under the direction of the
Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) and communications between the Board, the reserve banks and staff, Paul said today." Paul said there is "nothing left" in the bill after Watt's actions. The country's largest bank
Bank of America is headquartered in Charlotte in Watt's congressional district and has threatened to leave. The
Sunlight Foundation reported that 45% of Watt's campaign contributions for 2009 are from corporations in the real estate, insurance and finance industries, the seventh-highest percentage of any member of Congress. Watt's largest contributors included
American Express,
Wachovia, Bank of America and the
American Bankers Association.
Support of SOPA Congressman Watt ardently supports the
Stop Online Piracy Act, stating that it is "beyond troubling to hear hyperbolic charges that this bill will open the floodgates to government censorship".
Ethics investigation Congressman Watt was formally investigated by the
Office of Congressional Ethics over a series of fundraising events he was involved in. On December 9, 2009, Watt held a fundraiser and soon after withdrew a proposal he had introduced to subject auto dealers to more stringent regulations. The fundraiser brought donors mainly from large finance companies such as
Goldman Sachs. Watt was later cleared of charges or wrongdoing. In what the nonpartisan
Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) called "disgraceful", Watt introduced legislation to slash funding for the Office of Congressional Ethics.
Racial gerrymandering In 1993, the design of his district was challenged as an instance of racial
gerrymandering. The Supreme Court held in
Shaw v. Reno that the unusual shape of the district required strict scrutiny of its racial purpose. Although it is rare for a law to survive strict scrutiny, the districting plan was upheld on remand as "narrowly tailored to further the state's compelling interest in complying with the
Voting Rights Act". ==Political campaigns==