Graffiti and politics don’t usually mix well.

That didn't matter to the unknown illustrator who defaced the brick wall surrounding the Governor's Residence during the weekend.

The doodle in question on the wall facing Front Street read: “Wolf Pack” (the “A” was spelled with the symbol for anarchy).

Underneath, it said freedom is greater than government.

Police are investigating the defacement, but were not releasing details Tuesday. State officials say the cleanup won’t cost taxpayers a dime unless it requires special treatment from a private service.

And an Occupy Harrisburg spokesman condemned the graffiti, arguing that the Occupy movement is peaceful and law-abiding.

None of them had heard of Wolf Pack — with or without the anarchy symbol — and no wonder.

The group goes by the name Wolf PAC, and was just born last week, according to founder and online talk show host Cenk Uygur, who denounced the graffiti as “unacceptable.”

“I want to make it clear to the people who care about this movement that it’s enormously important we are peaceful and legal, and have the moral high ground,” Uygur said Tuesday in a telephone interview from Los Angeles.

The Wolf PAC movement aims to pass a constitutional amendment banning corporate financial influence in government, he said. The amendment would outlaw corporate donations to politicians and political causes.

“Every single issue comes back to the same problem,” Uygur said. “What the voters want, whether they be liberal or conservative, is irrelevant because of money.”

By getting two-thirds of the 50 U.S. state legislatures to approve of the measure, Uygur aims to force a gathering not seen since the birth of the nation — a constitutional convention.

“We’ve only had one in this country, and it produced the greatest document known to man,” he said. “We’re one-for-one, and I’m hoping we go two-for-two.”

Uygur, who hosts the daily YouTube show "The Young Turks," is under no illusion about how difficult his quest will be.

The last constitutional convention took place in 1787. There have been only 27 amendments to the Constitution. And the last constitutional amendment, which delays any change to congressional salaries from taking effect until the next session of Congress — was proposed in 1789 and enacted in 1992.

“Every stage of this is going to be exceedingly difficult,” he said, noting that in five days he had accumulated nearly 3,000 volunteers across all 50 states.

He’s particularly aware that delegates to a congressional convention would likely be Democrat and Republican stalwarts who have long-standing ties to corporate interests.

“It’s important to have dedicated people on the state level to make sure this process does not get corrupted,” Uygur said. “Delegates to convention will be an issue we will definitely address.”

Uygur, a native of East Brunswick, N.J., earned his bachelor’s degree from the Wharton School of business at the University of Pennsylvania in 1992. He followed that up with a law degree from Columbia University, and boasts an unconventional political background.

According to a biography in the Wharton alumni magazine, Uygur has practiced law in Washington. He has been a guest host on CNN, briefly hosted a talk show on MSNBC, and co-hosted a show on Sirius Satellite Radio.

During that 20-year span, Uygur has transformed from “a liberal Republican in the Northeast,” to a “progressive independent” on the West Coast.

“On some issues, like the death penalty, I’ve had a change of mind, but on most issues, I’ve stayed where I was,” he said, adding that Washington has moved dramatically to the right.

In about a month, Uygur’s online show will make its own dramatic move to cable, where it will be seen on former Vice President Al Gore’s Current network as the lead-in show for Keith Olbermann’s relaunched “Countdown” program, he said.

Meanwhile, Uygur said he will denounce the Harrisburg graffiti on his online show.

“I’m disappointed at the graffiti and sad that it happened,” Uygur said. “I’m going to make sure on the air ... that people know that’s not the direction we want to go.”