News You Can Use Digest - October 18, 2024 - State and Federal Communications

October 18, 2024  •  

News You Can Use Digest – October 18, 2024

National/Federal

Trump Leans on Creative Bookkeeping to Keep Up in Cash Race

DNyuz – Shane Goldmacher and Maggie Haberman (New York Times) | Published: 10/15/2024

Donald Trump’s political operation has been taking extraordinary measures in a bid to stay financially competitive with Vice President Kamala Harris, deploying aggressive and creative accounting strategies that test the legal limits of how far a candidate can go to offload the core costs of running for president. The most startling example is the official payroll of the former president’s campaign committee. Trump has only 11 people on the official payroll of his campaign committee. The reason is he is shuffling costs from his campaign committee to other accounts allied or shared with the Republican Party.

‘I Will Stand My Ground’: Election officials are prepared for attempts to ‘find’ votes

MSN – Erin Mansfield and Sarah Wire (USA Today) | Published: 10/14/2024

When Donald Trump lost Georgia by just under 12,000 votes in 2020, he went to the two people with the most power over the state’s elections, the governor and the secretary of state, and asked for help overturning the results. Both resisted the effort. Trump in September claimed without evidence that Democrats are “cheating,” laying the groundwork to challenge the results again if he loses. But Trump would be unlikely to find state officials willing to try to block their state’s electoral votes from going to Vice President Kamala Harris.

Ethics Committee Subpoenas Documents from Lawsuit Brought by Gaetz’s Friend: Sources

MSN – Will Steakin (ABC News) | Published: 10/15/2024

As part of its ongoing investigation into Rep. Matt Gaetz, the House Committee on Ethics issued a subpoena for documents from a civil lawsuit brought by one of Gaetz’s longtime friends against several third parties. The subpoena requests all documents related to Gaetz that are part of a lawsuit by Florida lobbyist Chris Dorworth, who alleged he was defamed by several third parties over the course of the yearslong sex trafficking probe into Gaetz. The documents from the lawsuit could provide Congress with new details regarding allegations that have dogged Gaetz for years, including the allegation he had sex with a minor.

The Senate GOP Found a Campaign Finance Loophole. It’s About to Save Them Millions of Dollars.

MSN – Ally Mutnick, Jessica Piper, and Madison Fernandez (Politico) | Published: 10/10/2024

Republicans have been employing a new election strategy: running campaign ads for a candidate, framed as a fundraising plea, to get cheaper ad rates and avoid content restrictions. Democrats, furious at what they saw as the crossing of ethical and legal lines, asked the FEC to weigh in. The FEC deadlocked on whether these joint fundraising ads should be permitted, effectively allowing the practice to continue. It could have implications beyond this election cycle as campaigns and their joint fundraising committees get more creative. Those were among the concerns of campaign finance advocates ahead of the FEC’s decision.

Eight Years Ago, Trump Vowed to ‘Drain the Swamp.’ Now He Swims in It.

MSN – Isaac Stanley-Becker and Josh Dawsey (Washington Post) | Published: 10/11/2024

Eight years after Donald Trump entered politics promising to reduce the influence of Washington lobbyists – to “drain the swamp,” as he put it – advocates for corporate interests, including companies based in China and other foreign countries denounced by Trump, now sit at virtually every level of his campaign. Lobbyists are represented among high-level staff, informal advisers, and party faithful who planned the summer convention in Milwaukee, as people with access to Trump or insight into his at-times erratic decision-making turn that knowledge into moneymaking opportunities.

This Could Have Been a Year of a Federal Court Reckoning for Trump. Judges Had Other Ideas

Yahoo News – Eric Tucker and Alanna Durkin Richer (Associated Press) | Published: 10/14/2024

A year that began with the prospect of a federal court reckoning for Donald Trump will end without any chance of a trial, leaving voters without the finality of a jury verdict in the two most consequential cases against the presidential nominee. Yet both cases still loom over the election, their potential resurgence in the coming months making clear that at stake on November 5 is not only the presidency but also possibly Trump’s liberty.

From the States and Municipalities

Alaska – How a Man Imprisoned in New York Could Sway a Key House Race in Alaska

DNyuz – Corey Kilgannon (New York Times) | Published: 10/15/2024

In the race for Alaska’s sole seat in the U.S. House, the leading candidates are defined by credentials specific to the state. Then there is Inmate 00932-005, campaigning from the Otisville Federal Correctional Institution in New York, some 4,000 miles from Alaska. He is Eric Hafner, running in a state he has never set foot in and cannot visit soon. Hafner is serving 20 years for threatening public officials in New Jersey, where he grew up. Now in his dubious quest to become one himself, he has emerged as an unlikely factor in the fight for control of Congress.

Arizona – Arizona Counties Won’t Be Forced to Do Citizenship Checks Before the Election, a Judge Rules

MSN – Associated Press | Published: 10/15/2024

A judge rejected a request to require Arizona’s 15 counties to verify the citizenship of some 42,000 voters registered only to vote in federal elections in the presidential battleground state, concluding those who sought the checks made their request too close to the November 5 election and did not have legal standing. Arizona requires voters to prove their citizenship to participate in local and state races. Voters who do not provide proof of citizenship yet still swear they are U.S. citizens are allowed to vote only for president, the U.S. House, or Senate.

California – Did Waymo Violate Ethics Rules in Lobbying SFO for Airport Access? The Teamsters Say So

MSN – Chase DiFeliciantonio (San Francisco Chronicle) | Published: 10/10/2024

The Teamsters union filed an ethics complaint against autonomous driving company Waymo, alleging some of the company’s employees failed to register as lobbyists while pushing San Francisco International Airport executives to allow their cars to map its property. The complaint claims multiple contacts in May between senior Waymo product, policy, and government affairs staff and top airport officials crossed the legal line for when the Waymo workers should have registered as lobbyists but did not.

California – ‘Notoriously Slow:’ Lengthy investigations into California politicians leave voters in the dark

MSN – Yue Stella Yu and Jeremia Kimelman (Cal Matters) | Published: 10/14/2024

Historically plagued by what some staff called an “enormous” backlog, The California Fair Political Practices Commission has sometimes taken years to resolve cases, exposing violations or exonerating politicians only after they left office or won an election. While the agency has worked to expedite enforcement, advocates, officials, and past and current commissioners say delayed actions can diminish public trust in the state’s ability to prosecute corruption effectively.

District of Columbia – D.C. Violence Intervention Programs Scrutinized Amid Bribery Probe

MSN – Meagan Flynn (Washington Post) | Published: 10/8/2024

District of Columbia Deputy Mayor of Public Safety and Justice Lindsey Appiah told lawmakers the city has completed a review of grants and contracts in the violence-intervention space, a review prompted by bribery allegations against Councilperson Trayon White Sr. and did not find evidence of wrongdoing. The hearing concerned the Office of Neighborhood Safety (ONSE) and whether oversight needs to be strengthened. It was sparked by allegations White took bribes to pressure city officials to extend an associate’s violence-intervention contracts at ONSE, sparking broader concerns about the impact on the agency.

District of Columbia – In D.C. Election, Initiative 83 Push for Voting Changes Is Biggest Wild Card

MSN – Meagan Flynn (Washington Post) | Published: 10/12/2024

With Democrats expected to coast to victory in deep-blue District of Columbia, the biggest wild-card contest this November is instead a citywide ballot measure. Initiative 83 would allow independents to vote in primary elections and bring ranked choice voting to the city. The changes could open up the primary elections to roughly 76,000 registered independents, and significantly impact how votes are counted and potentially how candidates campaign.

Florida – DeSantis-Backed Report Accuses Abortion Amendment Backers of Signature Gathering Fraud

MSN – John Kennedy (USA Today) | Published: 10/14/2024

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’s latest attempt to defeat an abortion rights ballot measure, known as Amendment 4, emerged in a report from the office of the state elections chief, alleging a host of violations involving the campaign’s petition signature-gathering. Secretary of State Cord Byrd’s report includes allegations of fraudulent signatures and petition-gatherers being paid illegally per signature. Floridians Protecting Freedom  Floridians Protecting Freedom, the Amendment 4 campaign, was recently fined $328,000 for the alleged violations. The civil fine has not been paid.

Florida – Broward Ethics Rules May Be Relaxed on Accepting Gifts of Food and Drinks

MSN – Lisa Huriash (South Florida Sun-Sentinel) | Published: 10/13/2024

Broward County commissioners will consider relaxing the rules surrounding accepting gifts of food and drinks when they are on the job. The idea is to prohibit “sizable gifts that may invite actual or perceived impropriety,” according to county records. But Broward’s ethics code takes the spirit of the law further, and it prohibits elected officials from accepting any gift with a value that exceeds five dollars from a lobbyist, vendor, or contractor. There is, however, an exception for soft drinks.

Georgia – Right-Wing Site Gateway Pundit Acknowledges Inquiry Cleared Two Georgia Election Workers

MSN – Maegan Vasquez (Washington Post) | Published: 10/12/2024

The Gateway Pundit, a far-right website, published a note from its editor acknowledging that two election workers in Georgia did not engage in ballot fraud in 2020, days after the publication settled a lawsuit brought against it for falsely reporting they had tampered with election results. The site recently settled with Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss, two former Georgia election workers. The terms of the settlement have not been disclosed.

Georgia – Georgia Judge Rules That Counties Must Certify Election Results

MSN – Amy Gardner (Washington Post) | Published: 10/15/2024

A Georgia judge ruled state law does not give county officials discretion to withhold certification of election results, a defeat for allies of Donald Trump, who sought to empower local leaders to hold up the outcome of the vote. Fulton County Superior Court Judge Robert McBurney said certification of election results is a mandatory duty irrespective of any concerns a county election board may have about the accuracy of the count. Such concerns are the domain of prosecutors and state election officials, he ruled, and local boards are expected to relay any evidence of irregularity to their local district attorney.

Illinois – Report: Illinois gets failing grade for its lobbyist disclosure system

MSN – Kevin Bessler (Center Square) | Published: 10/10/2024

A new report says Illinois is one of 27 states that received a failing grade for its lobbyist disclosure system. The organization F Minus gives Illinois a grade of “F” for its lobbyist system, citing several failures. “Lobbyists don’t have to disclose the numbers of the bills they’re working on or the positions they are taking, or the compensation they are receiving from each of their clients,” said Executive Director James Browning.

Kansas – Who Pays for Wichita Officials’ Trips? They Now Must Tell Public, but How Is Unclear

MSN – Chance Swaim (Wichita Eagle) | Published: 10/11/2024

Three Wichita City Council members have accepted expensive gifts since creating a carve-out that allows them to exceed the city’s $150 annual gift limit with a majority vote of the council. But in the council’s agenda packets, the gifts are packaged as travel requests alongside trips that are funded by the city, with no stated outside funding sources, no donor names, no estimated value, and no list of what expenses are included in the travel request. There is also no mention that a vote for the travel is a vote to allow council members to exceed the gift limit set in an ethics ordinance they passed in September.

Maryland – Larry Hogan Approved Millions for His Firm’s Listed Clients as Governor

MSN – Eric Cortellessa (Time Magazine) | Published: 10/10/2024

Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan is president and principal owner of HOGAN, a real estate brokerage firm in Annapolis. When he became governor, Hogan entered into a trust agreement he said would prevent conflicts-of-interest. But it was not a blind trust. He put his brother in charge of the firm and made several executives at the firm trustees. Hogan said the agreement would allow him to remain apprised of his firm’s investments, investors, and other matters including the location of its real estate projects. The State Ethics Commission approved the arrangement. If Hogan hoped the agreement would prevent the appearance of a conflict, it did not.

Michigan – Michigan GOP Candidate’s Ad Aimed at Black Voters Has Wrong Election Date

MSN – María Luisa Paúl (Washington Post) | Published: 10/14/2024

Tom Barrett, a Republican vying for a Michigan congressional seat, is facing calls for an investigation after an ad from his campaign incorrectly listed Election Day as November 6 in a Black-owned newspaper. In a complaint filed with the state attorney general, the Legislative Black Caucus accused Barrett’s campaign of misleading Black voters to suppress turnout, something that could violate a state law prohibiting intentionally spreading misinformation about the election process to deter an individual from voting.

Nebraska – Wealthy Governor, Billionaire Family Changed Nebraska Elections

Governing – Sara Gentzler and Alex Richards (Flatwater Free Press) | Published: 10/16/2024

In the years before U.S. Sen. Pete Ricketts, the eldest so of a billionaire businessperson, ran for governor of Nebraska, his family never spent more than $400,000 in any state campaign cycle. Then, in the decade he was running for and serving as governor, the Ricketts family spent at least $9.8 million on state political campaigns and causes. That spending spiked when Ricketts first ran for the state’s top job, jumping to five percent of all recorded political giving in Nebraska.

New Jersey – ‘He’s Taken on Everybody in New Jersey’ – and Angered the Political Class

Yahoo News – Matt Friedman (Politico) | Published: 10/12/2024

State Comptroller Kevin Walsh has applied the same zeal from his attorney days to hunting down fraud, waste, and abuse inside some 2,000 government entities and angered some of the most powerful people in New Jersey while doing so. Walsh is an especially intriguing figure not only for his aggressive approach but also because New Jersey politics as a whole is changing.

New York – New Adams Administration Inquiry Focuses on City Leases

DNyuz – William Rashbaum, Dana Rubinstein, and Michael Rothfeld (New York Times) | Published: 10/9/2024

As federal prosecutors scrutinize New York City Mayor Eric Adams and his top aides, the Manhattan district attorney’s office opened yet another corruption investigation into City Hall, this one involving the city’s leasing of commercial properties, people with knowledge of the matter said. As part of the inquiry, investigators have seized the phones of at least five people, including Adams’ chief adviser, a top New York City real estate official, and a broker involved in city leases, the people said. The investigation has focused at least in part on possible bribery, money laundering, and other crimes, one of the people said.

New York – NYC Council Tightens Process Around City Vendors as Accusations of Corruption Swirl Around Mayor Adams

Gothamist – Michelle Bocanegra | Published: 10/10/2024

The New York City Council is setting its sights on reforming the city’s process for hiring vendors, as Mayor Eric Adams faces questions around the city’s business dealings along with his own indictment on federal bribery and fraud charges. Council members unanimously passed a package of bills that aims to increase transparency around what city vendors have for years called an opaque procurement process for contracts.

North Carolina – North Carolina Authorities Arrest Armed Man After Threats Against FEMA Workers

MSN – Brianna Sacks and Dan Lamothe (Washington Post) | Published: 10/14/2024

Threats against federal emergency response personnel have hampered relief work in parts of western North Carolina hard hit by Hurricane Helene, prompting disaster workers to relocate because of safety concerns and feeding a cycle of fear and anxiety. Some of the misinformation swirling around federal responders have been amplified by Donald Trump as he seeks to return to the White House. Trump has alleged the federal government was “going out of their way to not help people in Republican areas” and repeatedly claimed the Federal Emergency Management Agency was diverting disaster relief money for migrants.

Ohio – Justice Dept. to Monitor Voting in Ohio County Over Intimidation Concerns

MSN – Praveena Somasundaram (Washington Post) | Published: 10/15/2024

The U.S. Justice Department will monitor voting in Portage County, Ohio, during the November election, after the county sheriff posted on Facebook urging residents to write down the addresses of people displaying yard signs for Vice President Kamala Harris. The announcement follows the county’s elections board decision to bar the sheriff’s office from providing security during early voting. The board acted one week after Sheriff Bruce Zuchowski made the Facebook posts, sparking complaints about voter intimidation.

Ohio – King Joins Long List of East Cleveland Officials Who Have Faced Corruption or Misconduct Allegations

MSN – Lucas Daprile (Cleveland Plain Dealer) | Published: 10/11/2024

Mayor Brandon King became the latest East Cleveland official in a long list of city leaders to face criminal charges or be accused of misconduct. A grand jury indicted King on charges involving his interest in city contracts that prosecutors say earned him more than $75,000 over the span of several years. He is the impoverished city’s third current or former mayor in 20 years to face criminal charges. “Everyone who gets in that seat loses their damn mind,” East Cleveland Council President Twon Billings said of the mayor’s job.

Ohio – House GOP Owes $1.6M for Lease Arranged by Convicted Ex-Speaker Householder, Court Rules

MSN – Jake Zuckerman and Jeremy Pelzer (Cleveland Plain Dealer) | Published: 10/14/2024

A Franklin County magistrate pinned a contested, $1.67 million debt stemming from a defaulted office lease on the Ohio House Republicans’ political arm, just weeks before Election Day. The decision imposes significant financial uncertainty unto the Ohio House Republican Alliance, which assists with campaigning for the slate of GOP House candidates. It could end up being a costly addition to the already tarnished legacy of ex-House Speaker Larry Householder, whose political operation arranged the lease in the first place shortly before he was arrested on federal bribery related charges in 2020.

Oklahoma – Oklahoma Changes Ryan Walters’ Proposal to Supply 55,000 Bibles to Public Schools

MSN – M. Scott Carter (Oklahoman) | Published: 10/9/2024

A request issued by the Oklahoma State Department of Education to purchase thousands of bibles for public schools was significantly changed after questions arose surrounding its legality. The vendor requirements underwent at least two major changes: the delivery date and a provision that now allows the vendor to provide Bibles and other documents such as copies of the U.S. Constitution and the Bill of Rights separately. Unbundling the Bible and the set of historical documents appears to expand the number of possible vendors.

Pennsylvania – The (Basically) Secret List of Campaign Donations by No-Bid Contractors

MSN – Angela Couloumbis (Spotlight PA) | Published: 10/11/2024

Every year, government agencies in Pennsylvania award contracts, sometimes worth millions of dollars, without going through the traditional bidding process meant to ensure taxpayers get the best price for the work. The companies that benefit from this arrangement, in turn, are required to report campaign contributions by owners and employees. The requirement is buried deep in Pennsylvania’s Election code and might be one of the best-kept secrets in the Capitol. The annual reports produced by the Pennsylvania Department of State are not easily accessible or well-known by the public.

Texas – Federal Judge Dismisses Lawsuit over Austin’s Campaign Finance Rule

KUT – Luz Moreno-Lozano | Published: 10/15/2024

A federal judge dismissed a lawsuit filed against Austin’s campaign finance rule that says a candidate cannot raise more than $47,000 from outside the city limits during an election. U.S. District Court Judge Robert Pitman dismissed the case saying the cap could be unconstitutional, but that is up to the city’s Ethics Review Commission to decide.

Washington – Initiative Backers Hit with $20,000 Fine by WA Campaign Finance Watchdog

Yahoo News – Jerry Cornfield (Washington State Standard) | Published: 10/9/2024

The Public Disclosure Commission (PDC) handed a $20,000 fine to the conservative organization behind the slate of initiatives appearing on the ballot this November. The PDC concluded Let’s Go Washington violated Washington’s campaign finance laws by not obtaining and disclosing information on payments to sub-vendors used by signature-gathering firms. It also found Let’s Go Washington did not hand over financial records in a timely fashion as it took a July subpoena before it produced 9,000 pages of materials.

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