August 1, 2025 •
News You Can Use Digest – August 1, 2025
National/Federal
AOC’s Met Gala Appearance Violated House Gift Rules, Ethics Panel Says
MSN – Maegan Vazquez (Washington Post) | Published: 7/25/2025
The House Committee on Ethics determined U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez failed to comply with the chamber’s gift rule as part of her appearance at the 2021 Met Gala, determining she improperly accepted free admission to the gala for her partner and failed to pay full fair market value for some of the items she wore at the event. Ocasio-Cortez and her counsel, the report states, sought to comply with ethics requirements, but found she accepted more than $3,700 in rented apparel but paid less than $1,000.
Ethics Panel: Pennsylvania Republican violated code of conduct with spouse’s stock trades
MSN – Mychael Schnell (The Hill) | Published: 7/25/2025
The House ethics committee “found substantial evidence” that U.S. Rep. Mike Kelly violated the chamber’s code of conduct when his wife profited off stock trades for a company he was focusing on in Washington. The panel found Kelly breached the code of conduct “by failing to meet his duty of candor.” The committee ordered he and his wife to divest their investments in Cleveland-Cliffs, the steel manufacturer at the center of the report.
Democrats Desperately Look for a Redistricting Edge in California, New York and Maryland
MSN – Liz Crampton, Jeremy White, and Nick Reisman (Politico) | Published: 7/26/2025
Democratic leaders are feeling pressure to join a brewing redistricting battle that is threatening to upend the midterms landscape, an effort that is likely to slam into legal and political reality. As Texas Republicans pressed forward with redistricting designed to increase the number of red seats in the state, officials in the biggest Democratic states scrambled for a response.
Justice Dept. Escalates Attacks on U.S. Judge Handling Deportation Cases
MSN – Jeremy Roebuck (Washington Post) | Published: 7/29/2025
The Justice Department is escalating its attacks on the federal judge whom it has repeatedly clashed with during the Trump administration’s efforts to deport accused Venezuelan gang members under a rarely invoked wartime law. Attorney General Pam Bondi announced her office filed a misconduct complaint against James Boasberg, the chief judge of the U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C.
Senate Confirms Controversial Trump Nominee Emil Bove as Federal Judge
MSN – Perry Stein and Theodoric Meyer (Washington Post) | Published: 7/29/2025
The Senate approved the nomination of Emil Bove, President Trump’s former defense lawyer, to serve on a U.S. appeals court, confirming the controversial nominee to a lifetime appointment on the federal bench. Bove has been the most controversial of the 15 judges whom Trump has nominated to date in his second term, with Senate Democrats and three whistleblowers saying he is unfit for a job in which he would be expected to make judicial rulings without consideration of politics.
Senate Democrats Try to Force Release of Epstein Files Using Arcane Law
MSN – Lauren Fox and Katelyn Polantz (CNN) | Published: 7/30/2025
Senate Democrats are using an arcane procedural tool to try to force the Department of Justice to release additional files from the Jeffrey Epstein case, the latest gambit to keep the issue front-and-center as lawmakers prepare for their August recess. Democrats are basing their request on a nearly 100-year-old law that allows five or more members of the Senate Homeland Security Committee to request information from the administration even when they are in the minority and lack subpoena power. The law has not been regularly used, nor is it clear whether it would yield the documents Democrats are seeking.
How Trump’s Personal Attorney Wound Up Investigating the Epstein Case at DOJ
MSN – Shayna Jacobs and Michael Kranish (Washington Post) | Published: 7/31/2025
Todd Blanche was asked at his Senate confirmation hearing whether being President Trump’s lawyer in his hush money trial and other cases meant he would have a “continuing duty of loyalty and confidentiality” to his former client even after becoming deputy attorney general. Now that loyalty, and the question of a potential conflict-of-interest, has become a key component of the questions swirling about Trump’s friendship with Jeffrey Epstein, who was charged with sex trafficking and died in prison in 2019.
Gluesenkamp Perez Wants Cognitive Standards in Congress; Colleagues Disagree
Seattle Times – Annie Karni (New York Times) | Published: 7/26/2025
U.S. Rep. Marie Gluesenkamp Perez offered an amendment to the federal spending bill that aimed to create basic guidelines in Congress to ensure that members were able to do their jobs “unimpeded by significant irreversible cognitive impairment.” Her amendment was rejected in a committee. But Perez does not plan to drop the issue, which she said is a major concern for voters. Democrats have been grappling with generational tensions since Joe Biden’s forced exit from the presidential race last year.
Donor Who Fooled Investors She Had Access to Trump Pleads Guilty in $31.5M Scam
Yahoo News – John Annese (New York Daily News) | Published: 7/30/2025
Sherry Xue Li, a Donald Trump donor who once rubbed elbows with the president at a 2017 fundraiser, admitted to running a $31.5 million scam, falsely promising foreigners they would get green cards and a back channel to Trump for investing in an upstate New York real estate project. Li and an accomplice donated $600,000 to the Trump Victory Fund to get a dozen people from China and Singapore into a fundraiser at Trump’s Washington hotel. The money came from the foreign nationals’ wallets, and they served as straw donors.
From the States and Municipalities
Arkansas – Court Restricts Who Can Bring Voting Rights Challenges in a Case Involving Voters with Disabilities
MSN – Gary Fields (Associated Press) | Published: 7/28/2025
A federal appeals court panel ruled private individuals and organizations cannot bring voting rights cases under a section of the law that allows others to assist voters who are blind, have disabilities, or are unable to read. It is the latest ruling from the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals, saying only the government can bring lawsuits alleging violations of the Voting Rights Act. The findings upend decades of precedent and will likely be headed to the U.S. Supreme Court.
California – Disneyland Resort Interests Face Off in Lawsuit After Corruption Scandal
Voice of OC – Hosam Elattar | Published: 7/30/2025
The Anaheim Chamber of Commerce is suing the controversial tourism bureau, Visit Anaheim, for ending a contract state auditors concluded was entered into improperly. The chamber, which almost shuttered its doors earlier this year, demanded over $7 million dollars from Visit Anaheim, alleging they wrongfully ended their contract because of political pressure amid fallout in a corruption scandal.
Connecticut – Ex-Bridgeport Official Gets Time Served for Lying Under Oath About Political Fundraiser
MSN – Alex Wood (Journal Inquirer) | Published: 7/29/2025
Former Bridgeport Board of Education Chair Jessica Martinez was sentenced to time already spent in federal custody for lying to a federal grand jury about her knowledge of a campaign fundraiser for former state Sen. Dennis Bradley. The false testimony occurred in 2020 when a grand jury was investigating the possibility that Bradley’s campaign defrauded Connecticut’s system for public funding of campaigns by providing false information about fundraising.
Florida – Hope Florida Charity Says DeSantis Officials Didn’t Need to Report Gifts
Yahoo News – Lawrence Mower (Tampa Bay Times) | Published: 7/29/2025
Gifts over $100 from state-created charities, such as the Hope Florida Foundation that sponsored a fundraiser attended by lawmakers and executive branch officials, must be reported to the state ethics commission. But after the media wrote about the vent and the free hotel rooms and other swag that attendees received, the president of the Hope Florida Foundation instructed attendees not to report anything to the commission because these were not gifts. The attendees’ “assistance” at the event was worth more than any gifts they received, Foundation President Joshua Hay wrote.
Georgia – First Liberty-Connected PAC Is Accused of Illegally Influencing Elections in Ethics Complaint
Yahoo News – Ross Williams (Georgia Recorder) | Published: 7/30/2025
A conservative political action committee associated with the family at the heart of the ongoing First Liberty Building & Loan scandal illegally influenced elections in Georgia to the tune of more than $220,000, according to a complaint filed by the State Ethics Commission. The complaint alleges the Georgia Republican Assembly PAC failed to register as an independent committee before making expenditures to affect the outcome of recent elections. The complaint also alleges the PAC failed to file 24 required disclosure reports.
Georgia – State Election Board Accuses Lyft of Violating the Law by Offering Discounted Rides to the Polls
Yahoo News – Maya Homan | Published: 7/30/2025
The State Election Board accused Lyft of violating Georgia’s election law by offering discounted rides to users who were heading to the polls. The board alleges the rideshare company violated a provision of the election code that prohibits “giving or receiving, offering to give or receive, or participating in the giving or receiving of money or gifts for registering as a voter, voting, or voting for a particular candidate.”
MSN – Kaitlyn Hart (East Idaho News) | Published: 7/30/2025
Multiple people say Butte City Mayor Kevin Turner pointed a gun at them during a city council meeting after they brought up issues about cyberbullying from a public official. Turner was arrested and charged with misdemeanor exhibition or use of a deadly weapon. Police reports state that during a council meeting, Turner slammed his holstered gun on the table “like a gavel” while attempting to fire Councilperson Steven Avery. As Avery is an elected official, he cannot be fired; he would have to be recalled by voters in an election.
Illinois – Ex-Worth Township Supervisor Gets Probation in Oak Lawn Red-Light Camera Bribery Case
Yahoo News – Jason Meisner (Chicago Tribune) | Published: 7/30/2025
John O’Sullivan, a onetime Worth Township supervisor and Illinois lawmaker, was sentenced to 18 months of probation for his role in a scheme to pay bribes to get lucrative red-light cameras installed in a Chicago suburb. O’Sullivan pleaded guilty more than four years ago to conspiring with longtime political operative Patrick Doherty and an executive representing red-light camera company SafeSpeed to pay bribes in exchange for the official support of an Oak Lawn trustee to put the ticketing cameras at additional intersections.
Illinois – 2 Years Probation for Former Assessor’s Employee Who Pleaded Guilty to Bribery
Yahoo News – Sam Charles (Chicago Tribune) | Published: 7/29/2025
A former employee in the Cook County assessor’s office was sentenced to two years of probation after a federal judge credited his extensive cooperation with investigators. Francisco Perez pleaded guilty to one count of bribery conspiracy after federal authorities accused him of accepting low-level bribes from employees of three local law firms in return for lowering property value assessments.
Indiana – Five-Star Stays and Michelin-Starred Meals: Interest groups foot the bill for congressional travel
Yahoo News – Arnolt Center for Investigative Journalism staff | Published: 7/29/2025
Members of Indiana’s U.S. House delegation and their staffers accepted roughly $640,000 in privately sponsored international travel since 2020. House rules prohibit representatives from knowingly accepting privately funded travel or gifts from registered lobbyists or foreign agents, but interest groups commonly create charitable nonprofit arms to continue sponsoring congressional travel.
Kentucky – Grossberg Drops Lawsuit vs. KY Ethics Commission – but Plans to Take Case to Federal Court
MSN – Lucas Aulbach (Louisville Courier Journal) | Published: 7/30/2025
Embattled state Rep. Daniel Grossberg is dropping the lawsuit he filed against the Kentucky Legislative Ethics Commission. But the case is not over. Grossberg, who sought to stop the commission from continuing its misconduct investigation into complaints made against him, plans to file a separate lawsuit in federal court instead.
Maine – Maine’s Democracy Is Strong Despite Socioeconomic Barriers to Access, Report Finds
Yahoo News – Eesha Pendharkar (Maine Morning Star) | Published: 7/25/2025
Maine’s democracy remains among the most accessible and resilient in the nation, with strong voter turnout, a largely representative state Legislature, and an increased shift toward clean elections, despite some socioeconomic inequities in voting. That is according to the 2025 State of Democracy in Maine report, which offers an assessment of several areas of the state’s democratic health – voter turnout, clean elections, campaign finance, government transparency, and accountability.
Maryland – Out of Jail, Ex-Pr. George’s Council Member Becomes Another’s Chief of Staff
MSN – Lateshia Beachum (Washington Post) | Published: 7/30/2025
Former Prince George’s County council member Mel Franklin landed a county job just weeks after his release from incarceration for stealing more than $100,000 from his campaign fund and then lying about it. Franklin will be chief of staff for at-large Councilperson Calvin Hawkins II, who served nearly six years in prison after being convicted of armed robbery at 21.
Maryland – McKay Session-in-Review Books Face Critical Ethics, Campaign Finance Reviews
Yahoo News – Bryan Sears (Maryland Matters) | Published: 7/25/2025
“The 90 Day Report,” a paperback by Maryland Sen. Mike McKay and available on Amazon, provides a detailed look at every bill the veteran lawmaker sponsored or cast a final vote on during the 2024 and 2025 legislative sessions. McKay sees the print-on-demand books as a cost-efficient modernization of the traditional lawmaker practice of informing constituents of their doings during the 90-day legislative session. But ethics and campaign officials are looking at it against a tangle of ethics rules. Even if strictly legal, it could run afoul of ethics laws warning of the “appearance” of an ethics issue.
Massachusetts – Amid Criticism, Healey Names Hospitals’ Top Lobbyist to State Health Policy Board
WBUR – Chris Lisinski (State House News Service) | Published: 7/25/2025
After several days of fielding criticism about the move behind the scenes, Gov. Maura Healey named the state’s top hospital lobbyist to a position at the regulatory agency that oversees virtually all major health care decisions, including those directly affecting his clients, in Massachusetts. The Healey administration defended the selection of Massachusetts Health and Hospital Association President Steve Walsh, saying he fulfills a statutory requirement for a member of the Health Policy Commission’s board to come from a hospital background.
Michigan – Subpoena Targets Michigan AG Dana Nessel Over Stalled ‘Dark Money’ Probe
Bridge Michigan – Simon Schuster | Published: 7/24/2025
More than two years after state campaign finance officials said a dark money group likely violated Michigan law by raising money for a ballot committee without disclosing donors, Republicans are questioning why the criminal referral went nowhere under Democratic Attorney General Dana Nessel. The House Oversight Committee authorized a subpoena for related communications within Nessel’s office, citing her wife’s role as co-chair for the ballot committee to which the funding ultimately flowed.
Michigan – Michigan Ballot Initiative Aims to Reveal ‘Dark Money’ Donors Behind Political Ads
Bridge Michigan – Simon Schuster | Published: 7/30/2025
A potential ballot proposal to change Michigan’s campaign finance law could upend political giving and advertising in the state, hamstringing prolific political donors and revealing major sources of dark money spending. Michiganders for Money Out of Politics is seeking to put a proposal on the 2026 ballot that would ban regulated utilities and state government contractors from making contributions to state candidates and a broad array of other political spending. It would also require any outside spending group making even tangential reference to a candidate or ballot issue to report their spending totals and donors to the state.
Missouri – Grand Jury Indicts Top Democrat in St. Louis County Government on Felony Charges
Yahoo News – Rudi Keller (Missouri Independent) | Published: 7/30/2025
The top elected official in Missouri’s largest county was indicted on four criminal charges for allegedly misusing public money to oppose passage of an April ballot measure. The indictment accuses St. Louis County Executive Sam Page of spending public funds on a flyer and direct mail postcard for the vote on a proposal that would have curbed his power.
Missouri – Missouri Ethics Panel Dismisses Complaint Involving Republican State Senator
Yahoo News – Jason Hancock (Missouri Independent) | Published: 7/29/2025
A complaint alleging state Sen. Joe Nicola was using his church as a PAC was formally dismissed by the Missouri Ethics Commission. The complaint alleged New Covenant Ministries, where Nicola serves as president and pastor, should have registered as a PAC because it raised money to boost Nicola’s campaign for state Senate last year.
New Jersey – Alina Habba’s Future as New Jersey’s Top Federal Prosecutor Faces Legal Test
MSN – Jeremy Roebuck (Washington Post) | Published: 7/29/2025
President Trump’s effort to keep Alina Habba in charge of the U.S. attorney’s office in New Jersey is facing a legal challenge that could influence his ability to extend terms for some of his other controversial picks to lead prosecutor’s offices across the country. Defendants in a drug and gun case set to go to trial in New Jersey are urging a federal court to toss the charges, arguing that Habba, a former Trump defense lawyer, has no legal standing to exercise prosecutorial powers.
New York – All in the Family: Relatives helped NY candidates garner public funds
Albany Times Union – Emilie Munson | Published: 7/27/2025
Fifty-eight candidates for the Senate and Assembly in New York donated to their own campaigns and then filed claims for matching state funds to amplify their platforms in 2024. At least 113 candidates claimed matching funds for contributions they, their spouses, or their family members made. The practice is allowed by state Election Law. Assembly Minority Leader William Barclay said rules like matching funds for candidates’ own contributions are exactly why many Republicans, like him, opposed implementation of the program.
North Dakota – Supreme Court Pauses Ruling That Weakens Voting Rights Act in Some States
MSN – Justin Jouvenal (Washington Post) | Published: 7/24/2025
The Supreme Court paused a lower court ruling that bars individuals in seven Midwestern states from bringing racial discrimination lawsuits under the Voting Rights Act. The justices sided with Native American tribes that sought the emergency stay, arguing the decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit gutted a powerful tool that helps ensure voting maps are drawn equitably.
North Dakota – ND Ethics Commission OKs Lawmakers’ Expenses-Paid Trip to Israel as ‘Educational’
Yahoo News – Mary Steurer (North Dakota Monitor) | Published: 7/30/2025
At least one North Dakota lawmaker has been invited to an all-expenses-paid trip to meet with Israel leaders in September, and the state Ethics Commission says he can accept. The five-day trip would be paid for by Israel’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which pitches the tour as an opportunity for U.S. lawmakers to learn about the nation’s culture, heritage, and government. The Ethics Commission determined the trip is fair game because the organizers say it is purely educational and no lobbying will take place.
Ohio – Despite Trump Pardon, Cincinnati Dem Pushes Appeal That Could Have Major Ramifications
MSN – Jeremy Pelzer (Cleveland Plain Dealer) | Published: 7/25/2025
Despite a pardon form President Trump, Former Cincinnati City Council member PG Sittenfeld is trying to get his corruption conviction overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court. His appeal, which legal experts say might be the first of its kind, could have ramifications far beyond his case. Sittenfeld was convicted of bribery after accepting $20,000 from undercover FBI agents in exchange for lining up votes for a development project. The appeal asks the Supreme Court to more clearly draw a line between a legal campaign contribution and a bribe.
Oklahoma – Board Members Say Naked Women on TV in Ryan Walters’ Office During Closed Session
Yahoo News – Murray Evans (Oklahoman) | Published: 7/25/2025
An executive session of the Oklahoma State Board of Education was interrupted when images of naked women were seen on a television screen in the office of state schools Superintendent Ryan Walters, where the session was held, two board members said. Board members had been meeting behind closed doors to discuss teacher licensing, student attendance appeals, and other sensitive issues. Walters chairs the board. It is unclear who was responsible for the images or why they were broadcast. Walters was seated with his back to the television screen, which would not have been in Walters’ direct view.
MSN – Owen Dahlkamp (Texas Tribune) | Published: 7/29/2025
As Republicans in Texas move ahead with a plan to redraw the state’s congressional districts, Democrats are privately mulling their options, including an expensive and legally dicey quorum break. If they go that route, it appears they will have the backing of wealthy donors. By fleeing the state to deprive the Legislature of enough members to function, Democrats would each incur a fine of $500 per day and face the threat of arrest. Donors within the party appear ready to cover these expenses.
Texas – Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, a Senate Hopeful, Claimed 3 Homes as His Primary Residence
MSN – Brian Slodysko (Associated Press) | Published: 7/24/2025
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and his wife are longtime owners of a $1.5 million house in a gated community outside Dallas. In 2015, they snapped up a second home in Austin, then another. But mortgages signed by the Paxtons contained inaccurate statements declaring that each of those three houses was their primary residence, enabling the now-estranged couple to improperly lock in low interest rates. The mortgage revelations are likely to become fodder in the Republican primary for a U.S. Senate seat. The situation is further complicated by the Trump administration’s criminal pursuit of Democrats over similar issues.
Texas – Texas Senate Passes Bill to Bar Local Government like Dallas from Hiring Outside Lobbyists
MSN – Karen Brooks Harper and Devyani Chhetri (Dallas News) | Published: 7/30/2025
Texas lawmakers moved a notch closer in their quest to bar local governments from using public dollars on outside lobbyists. The GOP-dominated Texas Senate approved the bill amid a debate that has largely focused on whether the state was reforming where taxpayer dollars are spent or whether it was eroding local influence.
Utah – Utah Nonprofit Spent Millions of Taxpayer Funds on Private Company, Vacations, State Auditor Finds
MSN – Brigham Tomco (Deseret News) | Published: 7/29/2025
The president of a Utah nonprofit manufacturing consultant misused millions of dollars of public funds meant for a federal and state manufacturing program, according to a state audit. The review revealed iMpact Utah spent between $1.8 and $2.8 million in transfers to a for-profit company where the president is a majority shareholder, as well as political donations, personal trips, and “excessive” executive compensation in a three-year span.
Cardinal News – Elizabeth Beyer | Published: 7/28/2025
A federal PAC was one of the largest donors to Virginia Sen. Aaron Rouse’s campaign for lieutenant governor. Where that money came from will not be known until months after the primary election. A difference in reporting requirements between the FEC and the State Board of Elections has created a loophole that allows federal PACs to temporarily shield the source of their money, even as they contribute to state candidates in Virginia’s off-year elections.
Virginia – Is It Time for Virginia to Stop Holding Elections Every Year? Lawmakers Are Taking a Serious Look
Virginia Mercury – Markus Schmidt | Published: 7/31/2025
The Joint Subcommittee to Study the Consolidation and Scheduling of General Elections met for the first time to begin exploring whether Virginia, one of just a handful of states with statewide elections in odd-numbered years, should sync up with the federal calendar and move all general elections to even-numbered years. The idea may seem like a bureaucratic scheduling tweak. But in practice, it would touch nearly every aspect of Virginia politics, from voter turnout and local governance to campaign finance and the nationalization of state issues.
Search
State and Federal Communications, Inc. provides research and consulting services for government relations professionals on lobbying laws, procurement lobbying laws, political contribution laws in the United States and Canada. Learn more by visiting stateandfed.com.