June 7, 2024 •
News You Can Use Digest – June 7, 2024
National/Federal Multiple Trump Witnesses Have Received Significant Financial Benefits from His Businesses, Campaign MSN – Robert Faturechi, Justin Elliott, and Alex Mierjeski (ProPublica) | Published: 6/3/2024 Nine witnesses in the criminal cases against Donald Trump have received significant financial benefits, including large […]
National/Federal
Multiple Trump Witnesses Have Received Significant Financial Benefits from His Businesses, Campaign
MSN – Robert Faturechi, Justin Elliott, and Alex Mierjeski (ProPublica) | Published: 6/3/2024
Nine witnesses in the criminal cases against Donald Trump have received significant financial benefits, including large raises from his campaign, severance packages, new jobs, and a grant of shares and cash from Trump’s media company. Defense lawyers say Trump’s dual role of defendant and the boss of many of the people who are witnesses to his alleged crimes is not uncommon. Even if the perks were not intended to influence witnesses, they could prove troublesome for Trump in any future trials. Prosecutors could point to the benefits to undermine the credibility of those aides on the witness stand.
Billions in Taxpayer Dollars Now Go to Religious Schools Via Vouchers
MSN – Laura Meckler and Michelle Boorstein (Washington Post) | Published: 6/3/2024
Billions in taxpayer dollars are being used to pay tuition at religious schools throughout the country, as state voucher programs expand dramatically and the line separating public education and religion fades. School vouchers can be used at almost any private school, but most of the money is being directed to religious schools. The growth follows a string of victories in the Supreme Court and state Legislatures by religious conservatives who have campaigned to tear down what once were constitutional prohibitions against spending tax money directly on religious education.
At Center of Alito Controversy, a Flag Celebrated by Extremists
MSN – Hannah Allen (Washington Post) | Published: 6/2/2024
From the earliest days of the republic, American radicals have drawn inspiration from a white flag emblazoned with a green pine tree and the words, “An Appeal to Heaven.” Extremism monitors say the self-styled revolutionaries of today’s Christian far right are reviving the idea that drastic action is again required to save the republic, and they have adopted the flag as their own. They say the “Appeal to Heaven” banner has taken on apocalyptic overtones that are increasingly present in the centers of American power.
Lawmakers Expensed Millions in 2023 Under New Program That Doesn’t Require Receipts
MSN – Jacqueline Alemany, Clara Ence Morse, and Liz Goodwin (Washington Post) | Published: 6/4/2024
A program started last year was intended to make it easier for members of Congress to cover the cost of maintaining separate homes in the District of Columbia and their home districts. But critics argue its reliance on the honor system and lack of transparent record-keeping makes it ripe for abuse. Lawmakers were reimbursed at least $5.2 million for food and lodging while on official business in Washington. The reimbursement scheme’s lack of receipt requirements is a “ridiculous loophole,” said Craig Holman, a lobbyist for Public Citizen.
Investors, Worried They Can’t Beat Lawmakers in Stock Market, Copy Them Instead
MSN – Jacqueline Alemany (Washington Post) | Published: 6/1/2024
Watchdog groups have long believed that some lawmakers use confidential information to make money in the stock market. Now a loose alliance of traders, analysts, and advocates is trying to let Americans mimic the trades elected officials make, offering tongue-in-cheek financial products that track purchases and sales after lawmakers disclose them. Collectively, these investment vehicles have attracted hundreds of millions of dollars. At times, congressional investigators have used them to keep tabs on suspicious trading activity.
As a Congressman Defended Trump, His 6-Year-Old Son Stole the Spotlight
MSN – Kyle Melnick (Washington Post) | Published: 6/4/2024
When U.S. Rep. John Rose approached the lectern on the House floor, he said he was going to “address the terrible precedent” set by Donald Trump’s criminal conviction. But only a few seconds into his speech, he no longer had everyone’s attention. Rose’s six-year-old son, Guy, smiled and leaned closer into C-SPAN’s camera shot while sitting behind his dad. As Rose called Trump the victim of a “politically driven” conviction, Guy stuck out his tongue with wide eyes and shook his head – a clip that has turned into a meme.
Judge Cannon Expands Hearing on Trump’s Request to Declare Special Counsel’s Appointment Invalid
MSN – Dan Berman and Katelyn Polantz (CNN) | Published: 6/5/2024
U.S. District Court Judge Aileen Cannon is planning on holding a sprawling hearing on Donald Trump’s request to declare Jack Smith’s appointment as special counsel invalid, signaling the judge could be more willing than any other trial judge to veto the special prosecutor’s authority. Cannon said a variety of political partisans and constitutional scholars not otherwise involved with the case can join in the oral arguments on June 21.
Ethics Panel Probes Rep. Spartz Over Staff Abuse Claims
MSN – Daniel Lippman and Adam Wren (Politico) | Published: 6/4/2024
The House Committee on Ethics has made preliminary inquiries into U.S. Rep. Victoria Spartz’s treatment of staff in response to multiple complaints filed about her alleged “abuse,” “general toxicity,” and “rage,” according to a current aide and a former aide who made complaints. She recently imposed pay cuts reaching into the tens of thousands of dollars for some staffers, which came amid her ongoing complaints about her staff’s performance. In April, Spartz sent a note to staffers forbidding them to talk to Politico reporters who were pursuing tips about her office.
Even as the Judicial System Finds Trump Guilty, His Attacks Take a Toll
MSN – Sarah Ellison and Josh Dawsey (Washington Post) | Published: 5/30/2024
Donald Trump and his team waged an all-out war against the judicial system before the expected guilty verdict in his New York trial was announced, hoping to blunt the political damage and position him as a martyr. The jury’s verdict upheld the democratic principle that no one is above the law. But amid the offensive by Trump and his allies on the legal infrastructure holding him accountable, the trial came with a substantial cost, according to those who study democracy, with the ultimate impact likely to be measured in November.
Chief Justice Robert Declines to Meet with Democrats on Court Ethics
MSN – Ann Marimow (Washington Post) | Published: 5/30/2024
Chief Justice John Roberts turned down an invitation to meet with Senate Democrats to discuss what the lawmakers called an “ethics crisis” at the Supreme Court following reports of two politically charged flags displayed outside the homes of Justice Samuel Alito. In a letter to Sens. Dick Durbin and Sheldon Whitehouse, Roberts said such a meeting would be “inadvisable” in part because of the importance of preserving judicial independence.
PAC Run by Mark Meadows’ Wife Fined, Closing After Campaign Finance Violation
Yahoo Finance – Danielle Battaglia (Raleigh News & Observer) | Published: 5/31/2024
A PAC run by the wife of Mark Meadows, former President Trump’s last chief of staff, plans to close and faces a nearly $10,000 fine over accusations of violating federal election law. Brett Kappel, an attorney who focuses on campaign fiancé, lobbying, and government ethics law cases, said it is not unusual to see a super PAC terminate itself after paying a significant FEC penalty. “In fact, the commission sometimes makes termination a condition of settling the case for a lower penalty than the FEC would normally seek,” Kappel said.
Departing House Members Ask: ‘Why am I here?’
Yahoo News – Robert Draper (New York Times) | Published: 5/30/2024
A total of 54 U.S. House members will not be seeking another term this November. As a matter of numbers, the exodus is not history-making. What is striking are the names on the list. There are rising stars, seasoned legislators, and committee chairs. If anything, the malaise encompassing the House extends beyond those who have chosen not to serve another term. “You look around that chamber, there’s just a look of despair,” said Rep. Brian Higgins. “… I think a lot more members would be leaving if they had alternatives.”
Judge Rules Bannon Must Go to Prison by July 1 While Appealing Contempt Case
Yahoo News – Spencer Hsu (Washington Post) | Published: 6/6/2024
A federal judge ordered former Trump political adviser and right-wing podcaster Stephen Bannon to report to prison by July 1 to begin serving a four-month prison term for contempt of Congress after an appeals court upheld his conviction. Prosecutors had asked the judge to lift the hold on the sentence, arguing that no substantive legal questions remain over Bannon’s conviction for refusing to provide documents or testimony to a House committee probing the insurrection.
From the States and Municipalities
Arizona – 2 Democrats Who Yelled Were Disorderly in AZ Abortion Debate, Panel Says
Arizona Daily Star – Bob Christie (Capitol News Services) | Published: 6/4/2024
Two Democratic lawmakers who yelled at Republican House members after GOP legislators used a procedural maneuver to recess rather than allow a vote to repeal Arizona’s near-total abortion ban are guilty of disorderly conduct, the House ethics panel said. But any punishment Minority Whip Oscar De Los Santos and Rep. Analise Ortiz face for breaking internal House rules will be up to the entire House, and the report by the ethics committee did not recommend what action is merited.
Arkansas – U.S.Supreme Court Sends Arkansas Redistricting Case Back to Judges after South Carolina Ruling
Yahoo News – Andrew DeMillo (Associated Press) | Published: 6/3/2024
The U.S. Supreme Court sent a lawsuit challenging Arkansas’ 2021 congressional map back to a three-judge panel, ordering it to review the suit in light of the high court’s decision against similar claims of bias in a redistricting case from South Carolina. The ruling is a setback for the lawsuit challenging the way Arkansas’ Republican Legislature redrew the lines for a Little Rock-area congressional district.
California – Ethics Probe Hangs Over Campaign to Recall Oakland Mayor as it Files Signatures
KQED – Annelise Finney | Published: 6/5/2024
As the campaign to recall Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao submitted signatures to put a recall on the ballot, the city agency tasked with enforcing campaign finance laws is investigating how the campaign handles donations. Simon Russell, the Public Ethics Commission’s enforcement chief, alleges Oakland United to Recall Sheng Thao is using Foundational Oakland Unites, a recently formed nonprofit and PAC, to hide the source of some contributions.
Colorado – Campaign Finance Reform Could Be Coming Next Election Cycle
Denverite – Rebecca Tauber | Published: 6/4/2024
The Denver Clerk and Recorder’s Office hopes to strengthen its ability to investigate campaign finance violations and make campaign contributions more transparent in the next election cycle. The ordinance would give the office authority to dismiss uncredible complaints, among other changes. It would also standardize reporting requirements, so any group that receives at least $50 from a donor must report that donor’s name, address, and employer.
District of Columbia – D.C. Ethics Board Recommends Rudy Giuliani Be Disbarred
MSN – Alexandra Marquez (NBC News) | Published: 6/2/2024
The District of Columbia Bar’s Board on Professional Responsibility recommended Rudy Giuliani be banned from practicing law in the nation’s capital. In their report, the Board cited Giuliani’s work in Pennsylvania following the 2020 presidential election, where he sought to have the results of the election there thrown out in favor of his former client Donald Trump.
Florida – Alex Díaz de la Portilla Under Investigation for Alleged Witness Tampering in Bribery Case
Yahoo News – Tess Riski (Miami Herald) | Published: 6/3/2024
Law enforcement is investigating possible witness tampering by former Miami City Commissioner Alex Diaz de la Portilla in a bribery and money laundering case against him after his former chief of staff reported he had sent her text messages about her testimony. The former City Hall staffer, Karla Fortuny, alleged in a petition that Díaz de la Portilla’s messages were “intimidating and obviously meant to tamper with my presentation of complete and truthful testimony regarding my time as an employee of the City of Miami.”
Georgia – Georgia Appeals Court Pauses Lower-Court Proceedings in Trump Election Case
MSN – Amy Gardner (Washington Post) | Published: 6/5/2024
The Georgia Court of Appeals ordered a halt to the proceedings in the election interference case against Donald Trump and eight other defendants pending the outcome of their appeal seeking to disqualify Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis. The order means the case will almost certainly not be scheduled for trial before the fall election or even the new year. It remains unclear if the case against the six remaining co-defendants who did not sign on to the appeal will proceed.
Illinois – Judge Tosses Out Illinois Ban on Drafting Legislative Candidates as ‘Restriction on Right to Vote’
MSN – John O’Connor (Associated Press) | Published: 6/5/2024
A judge rejected a law that Illinois Democrats adopted in May that prohibits political parties from drafting candidates when no one was on the party primary ballot. Sangamon County Circuit Judge Gail Noll ruled the law, passed to protect vulnerable Democrats in November’s general election, is unconstitutional. It improperly interferes with a person’s right to see access to the ballot and that, Noll wrote, “places a severe restriction on the fundamental right to vote.”
Kansas – Kansas Voters Have No Fundamental Constitutional Right to Vote, Supreme Court Rules
Yahoo News – Jason Alatidd and Jack Harvel (Topeka Capital-Journal) | Published: 5/31/2024
Voters have no fundamental right to vote under the bill of rights in the state constitution, the Kansas Supreme Court ruled. Because voting is not considered a fundamental right, it means that courts will not use strict scrutiny when analyzing the impact of election laws. That will make it more difficult for plaintiffs to argue that a law affecting voting is unconstitutional.
Michigan – 2024 Michigan Elections: Nessel opinion tightens financial disclosure rules
Bridge Michigan – Lauren Gibbons | Published: 6/5/2024
State elections officials can require officeholders to provide more than the bare minimum on new personal financial disclosure forms, Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel determined in a formal legal opinion. Lawmakers who finalized the rules last fall extended disclosure requirements to candidates for governor, lieutenant governor, secretary of state, attorney general, and state Legislature but left what critics called loopholes allowing filers to obscure monetary values and other information about income sources, and assets held by spouses.
Michigan – Michigan Lawmaker Wants to Pay Reporters to Uncover Corruption
MSN – J.D. Davidson (Center Square) | Published: 5/30/2024
A Michigan lawmaker wants to pay reporters and news organizations to expose public corruption and save taxpayers money. Rep. Joseph Aragona developed the idea after The Detroit News recently exposed questionable spending surrounding a $20 million grant to businessperson Fay Beydoun. She was an executive committee member of the Michigan Economic Development Corporation. Spending included a $4,500 coffee maker, $11,000 for a plane ticket, $100,000 for a sponsorship, and $9,400 for annual membership dues in the Detroit Regional Chamber of Commerce.
Missouri – After Investigation, Top MO House Republican Now Faces Scathing Whistleblower Lawsuit
Yahoo News – Kacen Bayless (Kansas City Star) | Published: 5/31/2024
Dana Miller, chief clerk of the Missouri House since 2018, filed a whistleblower lawsuit alleging Speaker Dean Plocher and his chief of staff, Rod Jetton, retaliated against her after she reported policy violations and wastes of public money. Miller’s suit paints a damning portrait, showing the lengths that Plocher and Jetton went to allegedly threaten and retaliate against Miller and other House staffers amid a slew of scandals Plocher faced in his final session as speaker that resulted in a months-long investigation.
Nevada – A Republican Election Clerk vs. Trump Die-Hards in a World of Lies
DNyuz – Eli Saslow (New York Times) | Published: 6/6/2024
Ever since Donald Trump lost the 2020 election, his denials and distortions spread outward from the White House to even the country’s most remote places, like Esmeralda County, Nevada. Trump won the county with 82 percent of the vote despite losing Nevada. In the days after the election, some county residents parroted Trump’s talking points and brought their complaints to the monthly commissioner meetings. When County Clerk Cindy Elgan continued to stand up at each meeting to dispute and disprove those accusations, they began to blame her, too.
New Jersey – Gov. Murphy Signs Legislation That Dismantles Access to Public Records in NJ
MSN – Katie Sobko (Bergen Record) | Published: 6/5/2024
New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy signed legislation overhauling access to the state’s public records, likely making it harder for the public and media to access some documents, according to critics. One provision permits officials to charge commercial interests as much as twice the cost of producing records. Other language authorizes agencies to sue requesters they accuse of interrupting “government function.” The new law also ends a requirement for towns to pay attorneys’ fees in court cases they lose over records requests.
New York – How Top N.Y. Officials Helped a Lobbyist Cash in on State Government
DNyuz – Jay Root (New York Times) | Published: 6/5/2024
In the midst of the pandemic in early 2021, New York state officials were hashing out how to build a mobile app to display users’ vaccination status when an unfamiliar face suddenly started joining the conference calls. The new participant, Michael Balboni, was a former state lawmaker and more recently had been working as a lobbyist in Albany. He was also a close friend of a top official in the budget office, the agency overseeing the app’s rollout. Soon after, one of the contractors overseeing the app’s development, Deloitte Consulting, signed Balboni as a consultant, then as a lobbyist.
New York – NYC Council Eyes Stricter Fundraising Rules Amid Legal Probes into Mayor Adams’ Campaign
Gothamist – Brigid Bergin | Published: 6/5/2024
New York City Councilperson Lincoln Restler will introduce legislation to give new power and added responsibilities to the watchdog agency running the city’s public campaign finance system. Restler’s package would empower the Campaign Finance Board to withhold matching money to campaigns that do not respond to the agency’s requests for information about their donors within 30 days. Another bill would impose stiffer restrictions on how much lobbyists and other individuals listed in the city’s Doing Business Database can raise as an intermediary on behalf of a candidate.
New York – Trump Verdict Vindicates N.Y. Prosecutor Who Quietly Pursued a Risky Path
MSN – Shayna Jacobs (Washington Post) | Published: 6/1/2024
Donald Trump was found guilty in New York on 34 counts for falsifying business records related to a hush money payment ahead of the 2016 election. Alvin Bragg, the Manhattan district attorney, had weathered a tide of criticism for bringing charges against the former president. Those who know Bragg said he was undeterred by the constant political attacks and committed to pursuing a novel legal theory he believed made sense.
New York – Ethics Commission Subpoenaed Hochul Administration Over Bills Box Seats
New York Focus – Chris Bragg | Published: 5/31/2024
The New York Commission on Ethics and Lobbying in Government issued a subpoena to the state’s economic development agency for records related to state officials’ use of a Buffalo Bills luxury suite. Gov. Kathy Hochul, Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie, Assembly Majority Leader Crystal Peoples-Stokes, and others gained exclusive access to the state-owned suite. The officials brought several guests. A complaint argued attendees got premium tickets at a bargain price because of their close relationships to politicians. The complaint claimed the politicians did not have valid governmental reasons to attend the game.
Ohio – Ohio Senate Approves Fix Assuring President Biden Is on Fall Ballot
MSN – Bruce Shipkowski (Associated Press) | Published: 5/31/2024
A temporary fix allowing President Biden to appear on this fall’s ballot in Ohio cleared the Republican-dominated Legislature as it concluded a rare special session. Lawmakers also approved a ban on foreign nationals contributing to state ballot campaigns. Gov. Mike DeWine signed both bills.
Ohio – FirstEnergy, the Center Point of a Bribery Plot, Could Officially Beat the Rap This Summer
MSN – Jake Zuckerman (Cleveland Plain Dealer) | Published: 6/2/2024
Federal prosecutors are set to release FirstEnergy, the utility at the center of intersecting dollar bribery schemes, from a special cooperation agreement that offered prosecutors a roadmap of a compromised state government. Prosecutors charged the company with conspiracy in its efforts to bribe government officials in exchange for favorable treatment. But in exchange for FirstEnergy’s cooperation, payment of a $230 million fine, forfeiture of another roughly $7 million, some corporate reforms, and its issuance of a public statement of guilt, the government will drop that charge within 30 days of the agreement’s expiration date.
Ohio – Cleveland City Council Doubles Campaign Finance Contribution Limits, Some Residents Push Back
WVIZ – Abbey Marshall | Published: 6/3/2024
The Cleveland City Council quickly – and controversially – approved legislation that doubled campaign donation limits ahead of council elections in 2025. Those caps jumped from $1,500 to $3,000 for individuals and from $3,000 to $6,000 for PACs. Council President Blaine Griffin said it will allow candidates to tap into other sources aside from the Council Leadership Fund, a PAC controlled by Griffin that some members of the public have criticized.
MSN – Carlos Fuentes (Portland Oregonian) | Published: 5/31/2024
Lawmakers approved $5.41 million to modernize Oregon’s outdated campaign finance filing system by 2028. of State LaVonne Griffin-Valade asked for the funding after the Legislature in March passed a historic campaign finance bill that will limit the amount of money that individuals and groups can directly give to candidates.
Pennsylvania – Several Pa. House Republicans Boo Officers Who Defended Capitol on Jan. 6
MSN – Leo Sands (Washington Post) | Published: 6/6/2024
Two former law enforcement officers who defended the U.S. Capitol from rioters during the insurrection were jeered by state GOP lawmakers as they visited Pennsylvania’s House of Representatives, according to several Democratic lawmakers present. As former U.S. Capitol Police officer Harry Dunn and former sergeant Aquilino Gonell, both of whom were injured by rioters on January 6, were introduced, the House floor descended into chaos. Several GOP lawmakers hissed and booed, with a number of Republicans walking out in protest.
Pennsylvania – Former Philly Councilmember Bobby Henon’s Bribery Conviction Upheld by Federal Appeals Court
MSN – Jeremy Roebuck and Oona Goodin-Smith (Philadelphia Inquirer) | Published: 5/31/2024
Former Philadelphia City Councilperson Bobby Henon’s bid to overturn his 2021 bribery conviction fell short as a federal appeals court rejected his contention that prosecutors had failed to fully prove their case. A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit found jurors had been presented with enough evidence to conclude the former council majority leader sold the powers of his office to labor leader John Dougherty in exchange for a $70,000-a-year salary from his politically powerful union.
Rhode Island – R.I. Ethics Panel Rules Sen. Lawson Can Vote on Pension-Related Bills
Yahoo News – Nancy Lavin (Rhode Island Current) | Published: 6/4/2024
One-third of Rhode Island lawmakers collect, or could eventually receive, a state pension. Yet only one, Sen. Majority Whip Valarie Lawson, consulted with the state ethics panel on whether her former teaching career and current job as president of one of the state teachers’ unions preclude her from voting on pension-related legislation. The Ethics Commission ruled she could vote, citing a clause in the ethics code letting public officials participate in actions that may benefit them personally if enough other people also receive the same benefit.
Texas – Former Houston Public Works Official Charged in Corruption Case Involving Waterline Repair Contracts
MSN – Yilun Cheng (Houston Chronicle) | Published: 6/1/2024
A former employee of Houston’s Public Works Department was arrested for allegedly taking bribes from vendors and funneling city dollars to herself through a shell company. The department first suspended Patrece Lee, a former manager of the department’s water operation, in November 2023 after a media report alerted the city of possible conflicts-of-interest in her handling of emergency contracts for water leak repairs. The internal probe later turned into a criminal investigation.
Wisconsin – Former Trump Aides Charged in Wisconsin Over 2020 Elector Plot
MSN – Patrick Marley (Washington Post) | Published: 6/4/2024
Wisconsin’s attorney general filed conspiracy charges against a former aide and two attorneys who advised Donald Trump over a meeting of Republicans claiming to be the state’s 2020 presidential electors even though Trump had lost the state. The charges are the first in Wisconsin related to the meeting of electors. Prosecutors have separately charged Republicans who were involved in similar efforts in Arizona, Michigan, Nevada, and Georgia.
June 6, 2024 •
Thursday’s LobbyComply News Roundup
Campaign Finance New York: “NYC Council Eyes Stricter Fundraising Rules Amid Legal Probes into Mayor Adams’ Campaign” by Brigid Bergin for Gothamist Elections Wisconsin: “Former Trump Aides Charged in Wisconsin Over 2020 Elector Plot” by Patrick Marley (Washington Post) for MSN Ethics National: “Judge Cannon […]
Campaign Finance
New York: “NYC Council Eyes Stricter Fundraising Rules Amid Legal Probes into Mayor Adams’ Campaign” by Brigid Bergin for Gothamist
Elections
Wisconsin: “Former Trump Aides Charged in Wisconsin Over 2020 Elector Plot” by Patrick Marley (Washington Post) for MSN
Ethics
National: “Judge Cannon Expands Hearing on Trump’s Request to Declare Special Counsel’s Appointment Invalid” by Dan Berman and Katelyn Polantz (CNN) for MSN
National: “Ethics Panel Probes Rep. Spartz Over Staff Abuse Claims” by Daniel Lippman and Adam Wren (Politico) for MSN
Michigan: “2024 Michigan Elections: Nessel opinion tightens financial disclosure rules” by Lauren Gibbons for Bridge Michigan
Rhode Island: “R.I. Ethics Panel Rules Sen. Lawson Can Vote on Pension-Related Bills” by Nancy Lavin (Rhode Island Current) for Yahoo News
Legislative Issues
Arizona: “2 Democrats Who Yelled Were Disorderly in AZ Abortion Debate, Panel Says” by Bob Christie (Capitol News Services) for Arizona Daily Star
National: “As a Congressman Defended Trump, His 6-Year-Old Son Stole the Spotlight” by Kyle Melnick (Washington Post) for MSN
Lobbying
New York: “How Top N.Y. Officials Helped a Lobbyist Cash in on State Government” by Jay Root (New York Times) for DNyuz
June 5, 2024 •
Wednesday’s LobbyComply News Roundup
Campaign Finance Colorado: “Campaign Finance Reform Could Be Coming Next Election Cycle” by Rebecca Tauber for Denverite Ohio: “Cleveland City Council Doubles Campaign Finance Contribution Limits, Some Residents Push Back” by Abbey Marshall for WVIZ Elections Kansas: “Kansas Voters Have No Fundamental Constitutional Right to […]
Campaign Finance
Colorado: “Campaign Finance Reform Could Be Coming Next Election Cycle” by Rebecca Tauber for Denverite
Ohio: “Cleveland City Council Doubles Campaign Finance Contribution Limits, Some Residents Push Back” by Abbey Marshall for WVIZ
Elections
Kansas: “Kansas Voters Have No Fundamental Constitutional Right to Vote, Supreme Court Rules” by Jason Alatidd and Jack Harvel (Topeka Capital-Journal) for Yahoo News
Ethics
National: “Lawmakers Expensed Millions in 2023 Under New Program That Doesn’t Require Receipts” by Jacqueline Alemany, Clara Ence Morse, and Liz Goodwin (Washington Post) for MSN
National: “Investors, Worried They Can’t Beat Lawmakers in Stock Market, Copy Them Instead” by Jacqueline Alemany (Washington Post) for MSN
New York: “Trump Verdict Vindicates N.Y. Prosecutor Who Quietly Pursued a Risky Path” by Shayna Jacobs (Washington Post) for MSN
Ohio: “FirstEnergy, the Center Point of a Bribery Plot, Could Officially Beat the Rap This Summer” by Jake Zuckerman (Cleveland Plain Dealer) for MSN
Redistricting
Arkansas: “U.S.Supreme Court Sends Arkansas Redistricting Case Back to Judges after South Carolina Ruling” by Andew DeMillo (Associated Press) for Yahoo News
June 4, 2024 •
Tuesday’s LobbyComply News Roundup
Elections Georgia: “A Court Might Hear Arguments Before the Election on Fani Willis’ Role in Trump’s Georgia Case” by Kate Brumback (Associated Press) for Yahoo News Ethics Washington DC: “D.C. Ethics Board Recommends Rudy Giuliani Be Disbarred” by Alexandra Marquez (NBC News) for MSN […]
Elections
Georgia: “A Court Might Hear Arguments Before the Election on Fani Willis’ Role in Trump’s Georgia Case” by Kate Brumback (Associated Press) for Yahoo News
Ethics
Washington DC: “D.C. Ethics Board Recommends Rudy Giuliani Be Disbarred” by Alexandra Marquez (NBC News) for MSN
Florida: “Alex Díaz de la Portilla Under Investigation for Alleged Witness Tampering in Bribery Case” by Tess Riski (Miami Herald) for Yahoo News
Michigan: “Michigan Lawmaker Wants to Pay Reporters to Uncover Corruption” by J.D. Davidson (Center Square) for MSN
National: “Multiple Trump Witnesses Have Received Significant Financial Benefits from His Businesses, Campaign” by Robert Faturechi, Justin Elliott, and Alex Mierjeski (ProPublica) for MSN
National: “Billions in Taxpayer Dollars Now Go to Religious Schools Via Vouchers” by Laura Meckler and Michelle Boorstein (Washington Post) for MSN
National: “At Center of Alito Controversy, a Flag Celebrated by Extremists” by Hannah Allen (Washington Post) for MSN
Texas: “Former Houston Public Works Official Charged in Corruption Case Involving Waterline Repair Contracts” by Yilun Cheng (Houston Chronicle) for MSN
June 3, 2024 •
Monday’s LobbyComply News Roundup
Campaign Finance National: “PAC Run by Mark Meadows’ Wife Fined, Closing After Campaign Finance Violation” by Danielle Battaglia (Raleigh News & Observer) for Yahoo Finance Oregon: “Lawmakers Approve $5 Million for Secretary of State Office to Overhaul Oregon Campaign Finance Filing System” by […]
Campaign Finance
National: “PAC Run by Mark Meadows’ Wife Fined, Closing After Campaign Finance Violation” by Danielle Battaglia (Raleigh News & Observer) for Yahoo Finance
Oregon: “Lawmakers Approve $5 Million for Secretary of State Office to Overhaul Oregon Campaign Finance Filing System” by Carlos Fuentes (Portland Oregonian) for MSN
Elections
Ohio: “Ohio Senate Approves Fix Assuring President Biden Is on Fall Ballot” by Bruce Shipkowski (Associated Press) for MSN
Ethics
National: “Chief Justice Robert Declines to Meet with Democrats on Court Ethics” by Ann Marimow (Washington Post) for MSN
Missouri: “After Investigation, Top MO House Republican Now Faces Scathing Whistleblower Lawsuit” by Kacen Bayless (Kansas City Star) for Yahoo News
National: “Even as the Judicial System Finds Trump Guilty, His Attacks Take a Toll” by Sarah Ellison and Josh Dawsey (Washington Post) for MSN
New York: “Ethics Commission Subpoenaed Hochul Administration Over Bills Box Seats” by Chris Bragg for New York Focus
Legislative Issues
National: “Departing House Members Ask: ‘Why am I here?'” by Robert Draper (New York Times) for Yahoo News
May 31, 2024 •
News You Can Use Digest – May 31, 2024
National/Federal Former FTX Executive Ryan Salame Sentenced to 7.5 Years for Election Donor Scheme with Sam Bankman-Fried Courthouse News Service – Josh Russell | Published: 5/28/2024 A federal judge sentenced former FTX executive Ryan Salame to 90 months in prison for his […]
National/Federal
Courthouse News Service – Josh Russell | Published: 5/28/2024
A federal judge sentenced former FTX executive Ryan Salame to 90 months in prison for his role in straw donor conspiracy with convicted cryptocurrency mogul Sam Bankman-Fried that flooded both Democrat and Republican campaigns with tens of millions of dollars in illegal contributions. As part of his plea deal, Salame agreed to pay a $6 million penalty and more than $5 million in restitution, in addition to forfeiting his Porsche 911 Turbo and two properties in Massachusetts.
The Washington Post Said It Had the Alito Flag Story 3 Years Ago and Chose Not to Publish
MSN – David Bauder (Associated Press) | Published: 5/28/2024
Nine days after the New York Times reported about the political symbolism of an upside-down American flag that flew at U.S. Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito’s home, the Washington Post acknowledged it had the same story more than three years ago and decided not to publish it. The Post’s story was both an example of journalistic introspection and an illustration of how coverage of the Supreme Court has changed since the incident itself, shortly after the Capitol insurrection.
Voter Outreach Groups Targeted by New Laws in Several GOP-Led States Are Struggling to Do Their Work
MSN – Ayanna Alexander (Associated Press) | Published: 5/28/2024
Florida is one of several states where Republicans enacted voting restrictions that created or enhanced criminal penalties and fines for those who assist voters. The laws have forced some voter outreach groups to cease operations, while others have greatly altered or reduced their activities. Cecile Scoon, co-president of the League of Women Voters in Florida, said the law stripped the personal connection between its workers and communities. Digital tools are not easy to use when registering voters and can be expensive, she said.
RFK Jr. Files Complaint Over Potential Exclusion from Debate Stage
MSN – Amy Wang and Meryl Kornfield (Washington Post) | Published: 5/29/2024
The presidential campaign of independent candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. filed a complaint with the FEC about Kennedy’s potential exclusion from a planned June 27 debate on CNN between President Biden and Donald Trump. Kennedy’s campaign alleges Biden, Trump, and CNN “colluded” to leave Kennedy off the debate stage. The complaint also alleges CNN’s decision to hold the debate could be tantamount to the network making “prohibited corporate contributions” to Biden and Trump’s campaigns.
Supreme Court Revives NRA’s Lawsuit Alleging That New York Violated Its First Amendment Rights
MSN – Josh Gerstein (Politico) | Published: 5/30/2024
The National Rifle Association (NRA) scored a major victory at the U.S. Supreme Court as the justices unanimously ruled that appeals judges were too quick to dismiss the NRA’s claims that New York officials violated its First Amendment rights by targeting its insurance business. The decision reinstated a lawsuit the NRA filed against New York state’s top financial services regulator, Maria Vullo, after she announced a plan to pressure banks and insurance companies to stop doing business with the organization.
Trump Electors in Key States Want to Serve Again, Despite Criminal Charges
MSN – Amy Gardner and Yvonne Wingett Sanchez (Washington Post) | Published: 5/23/2024
Republican activists in at least three states where Donald Trump tried to reverse his defeat in 2020 – nearly all of them under criminal indictment for casting electoral votes for him despite his loss – are poised to reprise their roles as presidential electors this year. Their eagerness to serve, and encouragement to do so from their parties, reflects a widespread belief among Republicans the electors did nothing wrong in 2020, raising the question of what they might do or say if Trump once again loses any of those states.
Judge Rejects Request to Restrict Trump’s Speech on FBI, Says Motion Was Faulty
MSN – Perry Stein (Washington Post) | Published: 5/28/2024
U.S. District Court Judge Aileen Cannon denied a request from federal prosecutors that she order Donald Trump to stop making incendiary claims about law enforcement personnel, saying the government should have more thoroughly consulted with Trump’s attorneys before coming to her. The judge, who is overseeing Trump’s classified documents criminal case in Florida, strongly rebuked special counsel Jack Smith, who submitted his motion after the former president and his political campaign issued statements that said, “Biden’s DOJ was authorized to shoot me!”
DNC Prepares to Nominate Biden Via ‘Virtual Roll Call’ Before Convention
MSN – Patrick Svitek (Washington Post) | Published: 5/28/2024
President Biden will be chosen as the Democratic presidential nominee through a virtual roll call ahead of the party’s official convention in Chicago in August, a maneuver that will allow Biden to appear on the November ballot in Ohio. The in-person roll call of states, culminating with the official nomination of a presidential candidate, is typically a focal point of political conventions. The convention is still expected to feature the roll call, but the formal nomination of Biden will be during the virtual proceedings.
A.I. Promised to Upend the 2024 Campaign. It Hasn’t Yet.
Yahoo News – Shane Goldmacher, Tiffany Hsu, and Steven Lee Myers (New York Times) | Published: 5/23/2024
The era of artificial intelligence (AI) has arrived on the campaign trail. But the much anticipated, and feared, technology remains confined to the margins of American campaigns. With less than six months until the 2024 election, the political uses of AI are more theoretical than transformational, both as a constructive communications tool or to spread dangerous disinformation.
Experts Question Alito’s Failure to Recuse Himself in Flag Controversy
Yahoo News – Adam Liptak (New York Times) | Published: 5/30/2024
In a letter to Democratic leaders in the House and Senate, Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito said he was not only permitted but also obligated to sit on two cases arising from the attack on the Capitol despite controversies over flags displayed outside his houses associated with the “Stop the Steal” movement. Experts in legal ethics said they welcomed Alito’s decision to explain himself. But they were not persuaded by the reasoning in the letters, which said the flags had been flown by his wife and so did not require him to step aside in the pending cases.
From the States and Municipalities
California – More Independence, Sharper Teeth: Elliott’s ethics plan would overhaul how campaign, lobbying rules are enforced
MSN – Jeff McDonald (San Diego Union Tribune) | Published: 5/27/2024
The San Diego Ethics Commission has been constrained by some of the very rules and practices that were written into its governing documents in 2001. If the plan by City Attorney Mara Elliott wins approval from the city council, voters will decide this year whether to give the commission sharper teeth in overseeing hundreds of public officials, campaigns, and the donors and lobbyists who seek to influence them.
California – More Orange County Cities Overhaul Campaign Finance Rules
Voice of OC – Hosam Ellatar | Published: 5/29/2024
A couple of Orange County cities are increasing limits on how much a person can donate to campaigns ahead of the November 2024 election. Officials in one of the smallest cities in the county, Stanton, moved in the opposite direction, directing staff to look at reducing the campaign contribution limit. The changes come after a corruption scandal broke out in Anaheim, where investigators last year accused Disneyland resort interests of having outsized influence over City Hall.
Colorado Sun – Jessed Paul | Published: 5/28/2024
Jenna Ellis, the former lawyer for Donald Trump who pleaded guilty last year in Georgia to a felony charge for trying to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election in that state, is barred from practicing law for three years in Colorado. She will have to file a petition to reinstate her law license at the end of the suspension. Ellis was sentenced to five years’ probation and ordered to perform 100 hours of community service in the Georgia case.
District of Columbia – Lobbying Is the Lifeblood of DC’s Anemic Office Market
WTOP – Jeff Clabaugh | Published: 5/20/2024
The District of Columbia’s office market is struggling with record vacancy rates, but there is one tenant it can always count on: government affairs. The demand for office space from those tenants is growing. “We just looked at the big three – that’s the lobbyists for hire, the corporate government affairs groups, and associations,” said Tammy Shoham, research director at commercial real estate firm JLL. “And of those three groups, there are over 1,500 entities here in D.C.”
Florida – Disney Starts Giving to Florida Politicians Again, Sen. Thompson Says
MSN – Steven Lemongello (Orlando Sentinel) | Published: 5/24/2024
Disney’s Princess Tiana appears on the invitations to state Sen. Geraldine Thompson’s June fundraiser, and with that image comes the return of a major player in Florida politics. The Walt Disney Co. provided theme park tickets, Thompson said, in what is known as an in-kind contribution It could be the first contribution to a Florida politician in more than two years from the company, once one of the biggest donors to Democrats and Republicans alike.
Hawaii – Mitsunaga Secretary Acquitted for Bribery Could Still Face State Campaign Violations
Honolulu Civil Beat – Christina Jedra | Published: 5/23/2024
For a decade, Terri Ann Otani made tens of thousands of dollars in donations to candidates in the names of her family members, according to her relatives. During her recent trial, prosecutors showed the jury how Otani purchased cashier’s checks with the memo line filled out with her relatives’ names and submitted them to campaigns. Otani was acquitted of charges that some of those donations amounted to bribery, but the information could expose her to new criminal and civil liability. The Hawaii Campaign Spending Commission is now investigating the matter.
Hawaii – Conflict of Interest? Some Hawaii Lawmakers Work for or Even Own Companies That Get State Contracts
Honolulu Civil Beat – Blaze Lovell | Published: 5/27/2024
An examination of current state legislators’ business interests found at least a dozen sitting Hawaii lawmakers are paid by or own entities that have won more than $56 million in government contracts since 2006. The findings have prompted the State Ethics Commission to begin exploring proposals that could rein in lawmakers pulling double duty. The idea of a “citizen Legislature” can cause tension between a lawmakers’ private business interests and their duties as a public servant.
Illinois – Lawmakers OK Bill to Require ‘Faithful’ Electors in 2024, Loosen Campaign Finance Rules
Capitol News Illinois – Andrew Adams | Published: 5/30/2024
As the 2024 presidential election approaches, Illinois appears likely to join most of the rest of the country in requiring that the state’s Electoral College votes go to the winner of the state’s popular election. It is part of a broad package of election-related legislation which includes a provision loosening restrictions on what political parties can do with campaign funds.
Illinois – Judge Temporarily Blocks Hastily Passed Election Law That Favored Democrats in November
Yahoo News – Rick Pearson (Chicago Tribune) | Published: 5/23/2024
A judge issued a temporary injunction blocking a law passed by Democrats that would have prevented Republicans from slating candidates for legislative races not filled in the March primary. Previously, local committees for the political parties could fill legislative ballot spots in which their party did not field a primary candidate after the primary election. The slated candidate was still required to obtain candidacy petition signatures to appear on the general election ballot.
Iowa – Auditor: Ethics board made ‘no attempt’ to collect fines and can’t force payment
Iowa Capital Dispatch – Clark Kaufman | Published: 5/24/2024
The state auditor’s office faulted the Iowa Ethics and Campaign Disclosure Board for having made no attempt to collect penalties imposed on politicians and their campaigns. The notice sent to violators did not include information on how to pay the penalty and it did not include language requesting payment within a certain time frame. Once the initial notice was sent, the auditor found, there were “no attempts made to follow-up on the unpaid penalties.”
Iowa – Iowa Ethics Board Fines Candidate Melissa Vine, Former Campaign Manager for Illegal Contributions
Yahoo News – Robin Opsahl (Iowa Capital Dispatch) | Published: 5/23/2024
Democratic congressional candidate Melissa Vine and her former campaign manager Lou McDonald were each fined $500 by the Iowa Ethics and Campaign Disclosure Board after an investigation found the two made contributions to a state PAC in other people’s names. Federal law may have been violated by using congressional campaign money to make donations on behalf of individuals to a PAC.
Louisiana – Lawmakers Give Landry Control Over Ethics Board Amid Dispute Over Discipline
Louisiana Illuminator – Julie O’Donoghue | Published: 5/28/2024
Louisiana lawmakers overwhelmingly voted to give Gov. Jeff Landry control over the state Board of Ethics, just a few months after its members charged him with violating the ethics law. Landry could gain the ability to appoint ethics board members directly on August 1 under legislation that looks likely to pass in the next few days. The bill must return to the Senate for at least one more vote before going to Landry’s desk.
Maryland – Marilyn Mosby Sentenced to 1 Year Home Detention for Perjury, Mortgage Fraud
MSN – Jasmine Hilton and Katie Mettler (Washington Post) | Published: 5/23/2024
A federal judge sentenced Marilyn Mosby, Baltimore’s former top prosecutor convicted of perjury and mortgage fraud, to 12 months of home detention followed by two years of supervised release after a highly publicized criminal prosecution that spurred tensions over race, politics, and justice. Mosby was convicted of lying to withdraw money from her retirement account under a program built to help those struggling during the coronavirus pandemic. Prosecutors said she used that money to purchase two vacation properties in Florida.
Massachusetts – Massachusetts DPW Director Pays $17,000 Fine for Accepting Free Ski Trips, Other Gifts
Boston Herald – Rick Sobey | Published: 5/28/2024
Yet another Bay State municipal worker has paid a big fine for accepting free ski trips and other gifts from a water meter manufacturer and its distributor. Danvers Department of Public Works Director David Lane paid a $17,000 civil penalty for violating the state’s conflict-of-interest law. Lane admitted to accepting free ski trips, a golf outing, and a steakhouse dinner from a water meter manufacturer and its distributor.
Nevada – Who’s Funding Negative Campaign Mail? Legal Loophole Helps Some Groups Avoid Disclosure
Nevada Independent – Riley Snyder and Tabitha Mueller | Published: 5/29/2024
Thanks to a 2017 change in how often candidates and PACs are required to report their contributions and expenditures in Nevada, political operators now have a two-month window during which to set up PACs and spend money on the state’s June primary election without having to report how much they are raising or who is funding them until July 15. An analysis found at least 20 new PACs and political nonprofits were registered between April 1 and May 15.
New Mexico – State Ethics Commission Sues Apodacas Dark Money Operation
Yahoo News – Marjorie Childress (New Mexico In Depth) | Published: 5/26/2024
The New Mexico Ethics Commission filed a lawsuit against a dark money political group and its founder, former gubernatorial candidate Jeff Apodaca, to force the disclosure of the organization’s expenditures and donors. The New Mexico Project registered as a domestic nonprofit corporation and has spent thousands of dollars on political advertising. But the group has not identified its donors.
New York – Lobbying Loophole Bill Pushed Again, This Time Without LaSalle Lookback
Albany Times Union – Joshua Solomon | Published: 5/28/2024
More than 15 months after an historic fight over the selection of the chief judge for New York’s highest court revealed a loophole in the state’s lobbying laws, a second attempt by lawmakers to address that issue is being waged in the final days of the legislative session. The late push comes after a key change to the language intended to address a concern Gov. Kathy Hochul noted in her veto message. It would no longer require lobbying disclosure for nominations since 2023 and only apply to those moving forward.
New York – New York State’s Matching Funds Program Debuts. What Does It Mean for This Year’s Election
City Limits – Mary Cunningham | Published: 5/28/2024
New York’s Public Campaign Finance program allows candidates running for state office to qualify for matching funds for contributions between five dollars to $250 made by in-district donors. This year’s elections is the first time candidates for the Assembly and Senate will be able to take part. During the next election cycle in 2026, those running for governor, lieutenant governor, attorney general, and state comptroller will also be able take advantage of matching funds if they qualify and choose to opt in.
Portland Oregonian – Hillary Borrud | Published: 5/30/2024
The Oregon Department of Justice crossed the one-year mark on its review of whether to open a criminal probe into the state Democratic Party for misreporting the donor who gave the party $500,000 in the final weeks of the 2022 election. The party admitted the money was from Nishad Singh, an executive at the disgraced cryptocurrency exchange FTX. Under Oregon law, it is a felony to make or accept a campaign contribution under a “false name.”
South Carolina – 76 Ethics Allegations Say Ex-Clerk of Court Becky Hill Abused Post for Own Gain
Yahoo News – John Monk (The State) | Published: 5/29/2024
The South Carolina Ethics Commission found probable cause in 76 different incidents to believe that former Colleton County Clerk of Court Becky Hill repeatedly misused her position to enrich herself and promote a book she wrote on the Alex Murdaugh murder trial. A complaint says Hill also directed hundreds if not thousands of dollars to go for things like “candy, tea and lemonade” for office parties such as “Lori’s 50th Birthday.” Other public money went for dog food and picnic tables.
Virginia – Some Legislative Aides in Virginia Do Double Duty as Campaign Staff
Virginia Mercury – Graham Moomaw | Published: 5/29/2024
In Congress, elected representatives are supposed to keep their taxpayer-funded offices mostly separate from their campaigns. In the Virginia General Assembly, rules walling off legislative offices from campaign activity are less clear. In one of Virginia’s congressional primary races, the campaign website for state Sen. Suhas Subramanyam previously listed the names of five people working as campaign staff. Four of those five were also identified as publicly funded legislative staffers for Subramanyam this year. But no campaign-side pay for those four Senate staffers has been disclosed on Subramanyan’s federal campaign finance reports.
Spokane Spokesman-Review – Emry Dinman | Published: 5/26/2024
Campaign finance reports and a text appear to show a GOP candidate for Congress circumvented federal election law with the aid of the Washington State Republican Party. Days before the March 31 cutoff for first-quarter campaign finance reports, as candidates tried to rake in any last-minute cash to demonstrate their momentum, the Washington GOP donated the legal maximum for the primary election, $5,000, to state Rep. Jacquelin Maycumber. Later, Maycumber donated $5,500 to the state party, not from her campaign account for Congress, but a surplus account from her prior runs for state office.
May 30, 2024 •
Thursday’s LobbyComply News Roundup
Campaign Finance California: “More Orange County Cities Overhaul Campaign Finance Rules” by Hosam Ellatar for Voice of OC Iowa: “Auditor: Ethics board made ‘no attempt’ to collect fines and can’t force payment” by Clark Kaufman for Iowa Capital Dispatch Nevada: “Who’s Funding Negative Campaign Mail? […]
Campaign Finance
California: “More Orange County Cities Overhaul Campaign Finance Rules” by Hosam Ellatar for Voice of OC
Iowa: “Auditor: Ethics board made ‘no attempt’ to collect fines and can’t force payment” by Clark Kaufman for Iowa Capital Dispatch
Nevada: “Who’s Funding Negative Campaign Mail? Legal Loophole Helps Some Groups Avoid Disclosure” by Riley Snyder and Tabitha Mueller for Nevada Independent
Elections
National: “Voter Outreach Groups Targeted by New Laws in Several GOP-Led States Are Struggling to Do Their Work” by Ayanna Alexander (Associated Press) for MSN
Virginia: “Some Legislative Aides in Virginia Do Double Duty as Campaign Staff” by Graham Moomaw for Virginia Mercury
Ethics
National: “Justice Alito Tells Congress He Will Not Recuse from Jan. 6-Related Cases” by Ann Marimow and Justin Jouvenal (Washington Post) for MSN
Louisiana: “Lawmakers Give Landry Control Over Ethics Board Amid Dispute Over Discipline” by Julie O’Donoghue for Louisiana Illuminator
Massachusetts: “Massachusetts DPW Director Pays $17,000 Fine for Accepting Free Ski Trips, Other Gifts” by Rick Sobey for Boston Herald
May 29, 2024 •
Wednesday’s LobbyComply News Roundup
Campaign Finance National: “Former FTX Executive Ryan Salame Sentenced to 7.5 Years for Election Donor Scheme with Sam Bankman-Fried” by Josh Russell for Courthouse News Service New Mexico: “State Ethics Commission Sues Apodacas Dark Money Operation” by Marjorie Childress (New Mexico In Depth) for […]
Campaign Finance
National: “Former FTX Executive Ryan Salame Sentenced to 7.5 Years for Election Donor Scheme with Sam Bankman-Fried” by Josh Russell for Courthouse News Service
New Mexico: “State Ethics Commission Sues Apodacas Dark Money Operation” by Marjorie Childress (New Mexico In Depth) for Yahoo News
Washington: “Washington State GOP Contributions to Congressional Hopefuls Suggest Party May Have Helped Candidates Circumvent Election Law” by Emry Dinman for Spokane Spokesman-Review
Elections
National: “DNC Prepares to Nominate Biden Via ‘Virtual Roll Call’ Before Convention” by Patrick Svitek (Washington Post) for MSN
Ethics
California: “More Independence, Sharper Teeth: Elliott’s ethics plan would overhaul how campaign, lobbying rules are enforced” by Jeff McDonald (San Diego Union Tribune) for MSN
National: “Judge Rejects Request to Restrict Trump’s Speech on FBI, Says Motion Was Faulty” by Perry Stein (Washington Post) for MSN
Hawaii: “Conflict of Interest? Some Hawaii Lawmakers Work for or Even Own Companies That Get State Contracts” by Blaze Lovell for Honolulu Civil Beat
Lobbying
New York: “Lobbying Loophole Bill Pushed Again, This Time Without LaSalle Lookback” by Joshua Solomon for Albany Times Union
May 28, 2024 •
Tuesday’s LobbyComply News Roundup
Campaign Finance Hawaii: “Mitsunaga Secretary Acquitted for Bribery Could Still Face State Campaign Violations” by Christina Jedra for Honolulu Civil Beat Iowa: “Iowa Ethics Board Fines Candidate Melissa Vine, Former Campaign Manager for Illegal Contributions” by Robin Opsahl (Iowa Capital Dispatch) for Yahoo News […]
Campaign Finance
Hawaii: “Mitsunaga Secretary Acquitted for Bribery Could Still Face State Campaign Violations” by Christina Jedra for Honolulu Civil Beat
Iowa: “Iowa Ethics Board Fines Candidate Melissa Vine, Former Campaign Manager for Illegal Contributions” by Robin Opsahl (Iowa Capital Dispatch) for Yahoo News
Elections
National: “A.I. Promised to Upend the 2024 Campaign. It Hasn’t Yet.” by Shane Goldmacher, Tiffany Hsu, and Steven Lee Myers (New York Times) for Yahoo News
Illinois: “Judge Temporarily Blocks Hastily Passed Election Law That Favored Democrats in November” by Rick Pearson (Chicago Tribune) for Yahoo News
National: “Trump Electors in Key States Want to Serve Again, Despite Criminal Charges” by Amy Gardner and Yvonne Wingett Sanchez (Washington Post) for MSN
Ohio: “Gov. Mike DeWine Calls Special Legislative Session to Address Biden Ballot Issue” by Andrew Tobias (Cleveland Plain Dealer) for MSN
Ethics
Maryland: “Marilyn Mosby Sentenced to 1 Year Home Detention for Perjury, Mortgage Fraud” by Jasmine Hilton and Katie Mettler (Washington Post) for MSN
Lobbying
Washington DC: “Lobbying Is the Lifeblood of DC’s Anemic Office Market” by Jeff Clabaugh for WTOP
May 24, 2024 •
News You Can Use Digest – May 24, 2024
National/Federal With Debate Deal, Trump and Biden Sideline a Storied Campaign Institution DNyuz – Adam Nagourney (New York Times) | Published: 5/16/2024 The agreement by President Biden and Donald Trump to move ahead with two presidential debates, and sideline the Commission on […]
National/Federal
With Debate Deal, Trump and Biden Sideline a Storied Campaign Institution
DNyuz – Adam Nagourney (New York Times) | Published: 5/16/2024
The agreement by President Biden and Donald Trump to move ahead with two presidential debates, and sideline the Commission on Presidential Debates, is a debilitating and potentially fatal blow to an institution that had once been a major arbiter in presidential politics. But the roots of the commission’s decline go back at least a decade and came to a head in 2020, when the commission struggled to stage a debate with Trump and Biden during the pandemic.
Senate Democrats Open Inquiry into Trump’s $1 Billion Request of Oil Industry
DNyuz – Lisa Friedman (New York Times) | Published: 5/23/2024
Senate Democrats opened an investigation into Donald Trump’s recent meeting with oil and gas executives to determine whether Trump offered a “policies-for-money transaction” when he asked for $1 billion for his 2024 campaign so he could retake the White House and delete President Biden’s climate regulations. Trump told about 20 oil and gas executives they would save far more than $1 billion in avoided taxes and legal fees after he repealed environmental regulations, according to several people who were present.
Peter Thiel-Funded Super PAC That Backed JD Vance Didn’t Break the Law, FEC Rules
MSN – Bryan Metzger (Business Insider) | Published: 5/23/2024
The FEC dismissed a complaint that accused U.S. Sen. JD Vance’s campaign and a super PAC funded primarily by billionaire Peter Thiel of violating federal election laws. The complaint focused on the existence of an obscure website set up by the super PAC. That site contained troves of materials seemingly intended for use by Vance’s campaign and other potential supporters, including polling data, B-roll camera footage, opposition research, and other strategy documents. The complaint argued those materials were essentially an illegal contribution to Vance, given that his campaign could presumably access the materials.
Fat Leonard Bribery Cases Fall Apart Because of Prosecution Blunders
MSN – Craig Whitlock (Washington Post) | Published: 5/20/2024
Numerous Navy officers were charged with taking payoffs from Leonard Glenn Francis, a Malaysian defense contractor known as Fat Leonard. But a pattern of prosecutorial misconduct in the probe has caused several cases to unravel so far and is threatening to undermine more. The cases collapsed after defense attorneys alleged prosecutors from the U.S. attorney’s office in San Diego elide on flawed evidence and withheld information favorable to the defense during the 2022 bribery trial of five officers.
On the Week Trump’s Fla. Trial Was Scheduled to Start, Uncertainty and a Pretrial Hearing
MSN – David Ovalle and Perry Stein (Washington Post) | Published: 5/22/2024
Donald Trump’s classified-documents trial was supposed to begin with jury selection this week. It is the case that Trump’s attorneys have been the most worried about, with prosecutors offering evidence a former president who is running to hold the office again took sensitive government documents from the White House and obstructed officials’ attempts to retrieve them. But U.S. District Court Judge Aileen Cannon indefinitely postponed the trial. Instead of Trump sitting at the defense table for the first week of trial, Cannon held two hearings on long-shot requests from a Trump co-defendant to dismiss the case.
Paul Pelosi’s Attacker Sentenced to 30 Years in Prison
MSN – Azi Paybarah (Washington Post) | Published: 5/17/2024
David DePape, the man whose embrace of right-wing conspiracy theories led him to break into Nancy Pelosi’s San Francisco home and bludgeon her 82-year-old husband, was sentenced to 30 years in prison. Federal prosecutors had asked for a 40-year term, arguing the attack constituted an act of terrorism. A jury convicted DePape on federal charges of trying to kidnap the then-House speaker and assaulting Paul Pelosi because of his wife’s work in Congress.
FEC Rejects Proposal to Weaken Disclosure Laws but Agrees to Further Rulemaking
Open Secrets – Jimmy Cloutier | Published: 5/16/2024
The FEC declined to advance a temporary measure that would have made it easier for political donors to hide identifying information from the American public, but commissioners agreed to move forward in creating new rules to standardize how disclosure exemption requests are evaluated and approved. The FEC has granted exemptions when an organization or individual donor can demonstrate a “reasonable probability” the public disclosure of personal information will subject them to threats and harassment.
Another Provocative Flag Was Flown at Another Alito Home
Seattle Times – Jodi Kantor, Aric Toler, and Julie Tate (New York Times) | Published: 5/22/2024
A second flag of a type carried by rioters during the attack on the U.S. Capitol was displayed outside a house owned by Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito. An “Appeal to Heaven” flag was flown outside Alito’s vacation home last summer. An inverted American flag, another symbol carried by rioters, was seen at Alito’s Virginia home less than two weeks after the violence at the Capitol. The revelations prompted concerns from legal scholars and ethicists, and calls from Democratic lawmakers that Alito recuse himself from cases related to January 6.
Congress Aims to Overhaul Presidential Ethics Rules with a Plan Led by an Unlikely Pair of Lawmakers
Yahoo News – Farnoush Amiri (Associated Press) | Published: 5/22/2024
Bipartisan legislation in the House would require presidents and vice presidents to publicly disclose tax returns before, during, and after their time in the White House as Congress makes an election-year push to curb foreign influence in American politics. Democrats introduced rival legislation that would enforce the Constitution’s ban on emoluments, which prohibits a president from accepting foreign gifts and money without the permission of Congress.
Republican Chair Investigating Chamber of Commerce in Seismic K Street Shift
Yahoo News – Taylor Giorno (The Hill) | Published: 5/16/2024
A decade ago, a Republican committee chairperson investigating Washington’s biggest business advocacy organization would have been unthinkable. But times have changed. House Ways and Means Committee Chair Jason Smith demanded the U.S. Chamber of Commerce answer questions about the more than $12 million its foundation received from the Tides Foundation, a left-leaning nonprofit, between 2018 and 2022.
‘We’ll See You at Your House:’ How fear and menace are transforming politics
Yahoo News – Eileen Sullivan, Danny Hakim, and Ken Bensinger (New York Times) | Published: 5/19/2024
A steady undercurrent of violence and physical risk has become a new normal in American public life. From City Hall to Congress, public officials increasingly describe threats and harassment as a routine part of their jobs. Often masked by online anonymity and propelled by extreme political views, the barrage of menace has changed how officials do their work, terrified their families, and driven some from public life altogether. By almost all measures, the evidence of the trend is striking.
In the Aging Senate, 80-Somethings Seeking Re-Election Draw Little Criticism
Yahoo News – Kayla Guo (New York Times) | Published: 5/17/2024
While President Biden tries to assuage voter concerns about his age in a presidential race that includes the two oldest men ever to seek the White House, a couple of miles away in the U.S. Senate, the gerontocracy remains alive and well – and little commented upon. The recent news that two octogenarians – Sens. Bernie Sanders, 82, and Angus King, 80 – are each running for another six-year term generated little in the way of criticism or worry over age of the kind that Biden has faced.
From the States and Municipalities
Canada – Conservative Candidate Didn’t Register on Time as Travel Nurse Lobbyist
Yahoo News – Jacques Poitras | Published: 5/23/2024
A lobbyist and federal Conservative election candidate did not promptly report his lobbying for a company supplying travel nurses to New Brunswick’s struggling health care system. New Brunswick’s Lobbyists’ Registration Act requires a lobbyist to submit a return to the provincial integrity commissioner “within 15 days after commencing performance of an undertaking on behalf of a client.” But Brian Macdonald, who represented Canadian Health Labs in 2023, did not register as a lobbyist for the company until this year, after it made national headlines.
Arizona – Arizona Weighs When Lawyers’ Long-Shot Election Challenges Cross the Line
Arizona Mirror – Jen Fifield (Votebeat) | Published: 5/21/2024
At a state bar association event on election law, Arizona Secretary of State Adrian Fontes said lawyers need to do a better job of upholding their professional standards. Election lawyers are filing too many frivolous cases “just because the plaintiffs are mad at their political opponents,” Fontes said, adding that they are endangering public faith in democracy. The rise in sanctions and disciplinary scrutiny is prompting debate about exactly when lawyers who bring election challenges are crossing the line, and whether professional standards of conduct have shifted.
Arizona – Rudy Giuliani and Other Trump Allies Plead Not Guilty in Arizona
MSN – Yvonne Wingett Sanchez (Washington Post) | Published: 5/21/2024
Eleven Republicans who allegedly tried to deliver Arizona’s presidential electoral votes to Donald Trump after his 2020 defeat pleaded not guilty to the same nine criminal counts, which include conspiracy, fraud, and forgery. Arizona is one of four states where Republicans have been charged in the formation of an alternate slate of presidential electors falsely claiming Trump won the 2020 presidential election.
California – LA City Council Expansion, Once Hailed as Much Needed Reform, Is Dead for Now
MSN – Frank Stoltze (LAist) | Published: 5/20/2024
For years, advocates for a more democratic Los Angeles have called for expanding the size of the city council beyond the current 15 members. The idea gained momentum in 2022 after the release of secretly recorded audio that came to be known as the City Hall tapes scandal. Many proponents of council expansion hoped it would be placed on the November ballot, while the fervor for reform remained strong. That is not going to happen.
Colorado – Wolf Advocates Charged with Illegal Lobbying at State Capitol
Denver Gazette – Marianne Goodland (Colorado Politics) | Published: 5/16/2024
Complaints filed in Colorado claim Stephen Capra and his organization, Bold Visions Conservation, lobbied state legislators on behalf of a paying client without registering or disclosing the client’s identity as required by law. The Elections Division of the Secretary of State’s office determined Capra lobbied on behalf of Bold Visions Conservation, which pays him for his services, and should have registered as a professional lobbyist.
Connecticut – CT Supreme Court Finds Public Financing Law Restricts Free Speech
Connecticut Mirror – Mark Pazniokas | Published: 5/20/2024
The Connecticut Supreme Court ruled state elections officials violated the free speech rights of two Republicans running for the state Legislature when it fined them for criticizing the Democratic governor in ads paid for by their publicly funded campaigns in 2014. At issue was whether criticism of former Gov. Dannel Malloy’s fiscal policies by former Sen. Joe Markley and then-Rep. Rob Sampson in campaign materials was intended to further their own candidacies or improperly use their public grants to undermine the governor or help his challenger, Tom Foley.
Honolulu Civil Beat – Chrstina Jendra | Published: 5/17/2024
A jury found longtime Honolulu prosecuting attorney Keith Kaneshiro did not conspire with Dennis Mitsunaga, the former chief executive of a prominent engineering firm, and several company employees to arrange for the prosecution of Laurel Mau, a former Mitsunaga employee. Prosecutors said Mitsunaga’s company sought to use the criminal justice system to exact revenge on Mau for suing her former employer, and Kaneshiro benefitted from some $50,000 in campaign donations.
Hawaii – Hawaii Ethics Commission Grapples with Pay-to-Play Issues
Honolulu Civil Beat – Blaze Lovell | Published: 5/15/2024
The Hawaii Ethics Commission is trying to figure out how to wrangle two groups of people who are proving particularly challenging: high-level state employees who are politically active and legislators who have outside jobs with companies that have government business. Those were some of the issues raised in a recent media investigation that examined loopholes in Hawaii’s campaign spending laws.
Louisiana – Mayor Cantrell Takes French Quarter Resident Who Photographed Her to Court Over Stalking Claim
NOLA.com – John Simerman and Missy Wilkinson | Published: 5/21/2024
Anne Breaud photographed Mayor LaToya Cantrell sharing a meal with her bodyguard, New Orleans Police Department Officer Jeffrey Vappie, on the balcony of restaurant. That moment has since placed Breaud in the mayo”s crosshairs, the subject of a temporary restraining order filed by Cantrell that alleged Breaud had been stalking her. Breaud sent her photos of Cantrell and Vappie to the Metropolitan Crime Commission, which filed a complaint raising new questions about Vappie’s conduct with the mayor:
Montana – Montana Commissioner Opens Complaints Against AG Candidates
Yahoo News – Darrell Ehrlick (Daily Montanan) | Published: 5/16/2024
The Montana Commissioner of Political Practices accepted two complaints that center on the Republican primary race for attorney general, including one involving current state Attorney General Austin Knudsen. The Daily Montanan that an audio recording appeared to capture Knudsen calling Montana’s campaign finance laws “ridiculous” and saying he asked a friend to run against him in the partisan primary as a way to raise more money.
New Hampshire – Democratic Operative Indicted Over Biden AI Robocalls in New Hampshire
MSN – Maegan Vazquez, Meryl Kornfield, and Hayden Godfrey (Washington Post) | Published: 5/23/2024
Steve Kramer, a Democratic operative who admitted to commissioning an artificial intelligence-generated robocall of President Biden that instructed New Hampshire voters to not vote early this year, is now facing criminal charges and federal fines. New Hampshire Attorney General John Formella announced Kramer had been indicted on charges of felony voter impression and misdemeanor impersonation of a candidate. The Federal Communications Commission said it would propose fining Kramer $6 million for violating the Truth in Caller ID Act.
New Jersey – Campaign Finance Watchdog Taps Top Lawyer to Helm Agency
New Jersey Monitor – Nikita Biryukov | Published: 5/21/2024
The New Jersey Election Law Enforcement Commission (ELEC) appointed Amanda Haines, its acting legal director, to head the campaign finance watchdog months after the retirement of its longtime executive director. Haines, who joined ELEC in 2005 as assistant legal counsel, will be the first woman to head the commission in its 51-year history.
New Jersey – Jersey City Ed Board Approves Ethics Charges Against Member Over Pro-Palestinian Slogan. Will State End Controversy?
Newark Star Ledger – Joshua Rosario (Jersey Journal) | Published: 5/15/2024
The Jersey City school board approved ethics charges against one of its members over a controversial pro-Palestinian slogan, and now it is asking the state to decide whether it is antisemitic hate speech or a peaceful rallying cry. While dozens of speakers during the public portion of the meeting were split on the meaning and intent of “From the rivers to the sea, Palestine will be free,” most of the board agreed Trustee Younass Barkouch should not have shouted the inflammatory phrase at a school board meeting in April.
New Mexico – Disclosure Rules Unclear for Commissioners Set to Decide on O&G Wastewater Rules
Source New Mexico – Danielle Prokop | Published: 5/23/2024
Changes for rules concerning New Mexico’s oil and gas wastewater are under consideration, but questions about how the people responsible for adopting those rules, specifically their personal business dealings, have taken the debate into murky waters. Environmental groups said failures to add financial disclosures and declare alleged conflicts-of-interest threaten a potential decision about a contentious proposal to expand uses for oil and gas wastewater.
New York – BOE Mails Paper Checks to State Legislative Candidates, Delaying Matching Funds
City & State New York – Rebecca Lewis | Published: 5/21/2024
The New York State Public Campaign Finance Board approved the first round of matching funds during a meeting on May 7, with an issuance date of May 13. But many candidates were left waiting for days, in some cases nearly a week, to receive their public money. Several of those candidates were surprised to learn the reason for that delay. They were expecting direct deposit but wound up receiving a paper check in the mail for tens or even hundreds of thousands of dollars.
New York – City Hall Aide Is Cooperating with Corruption Investigation into Adams
DNyuz – William Rashbaum, Dana Rubenstein, and Michael Rothfeld (New York Times) | Published: 5/20/2024
An aide to New York Mayor Eric Adams who served as his longtime liaison to the Turkish community has turned against him and is cooperating with the corruption investigation into Adams and his 2021 campaign. The cooperation of Rana Abbasova could represent a significant development in the broad corruption inquiry, which has focused in part on whether Adams’ campaign conspired with the Turkish government to funnel illegal foreign donations into campaign coffers, and whether Adams pressured Fire Department officials to sign off on a new high-rise Turkish consulate despite safety concerns.
New York – NYC Mayor Adams’ Involvement in Brother’s Charity Group Event Sparks Concerns Over Backdoor Donors
MSN – Chris Sommerfeldt (New York Daily News) | Published: 5/22/2024
New York City Mayor Eric Adams appeared at a fundraiser for a new charity that aims to provide cultural programs for disadvantaged children. Angels Helpers NYC is the brainchild of the mayor’s brother, Bernard Adams, who is being paid $10,000 annually for his work, covered by private donations to the group. Bernard Adams’ involvement in the charity, along with the mayor’s participation in the gala, raised concern among watchdogs that wealthy players in the city will see giving to Angels Helpers as a legal backdoor for currying favor with the mayor.
New York – More Adams Administration Officials in Talks to Join Ex-Chief of Staff Frank Carone’s Lobbying Firm
New York Daily News – Chris Sommerfeldt | Published: 5/17/2024
Two more senior officials in New York City Mayor Eric Adams’ administration are in talks to join former chief of staff Frank Carone’s lobbying firm. If the officials come on board, Carone’s firm, which is actively lobbying both city and state government officials, will be employing five Adams administration alums.
North Carolina – GOP Candidate for NC Governor Blasts Public Spending as His Family Nonprofit Rakes in Taxpayer Funds
MSN – Brian Slodysko and Bill Barrow (Associated Press) | Published: 5/22/2024
In his bid to become North Carolina’s first Black governor, Republican Mark Robinson assails government safety net spending as a “plantation of welfare and victimhood” that has mired generations of Black people in “dependency” and poverty. But the lieutenant governor’s [political rise would not have been possible without it. Over the past decade, Robinson’s household has relied on income from Balanced Nutrition, a nonprofit founded by his wife that administered a free lunch program for children. The organization, funded entirely by taxpayers, has paid out at least $830,000 in salaries to Robinson and other members of his family.
Ohio – Ohio Lawmakers Won’t Pass Biden Ballot Fix, House Speaker Says
MSN – Andrew Tobias (Cleveland Plain Dealer) | Published: 5/21/2024
If President Biden is going to make it on the ballot in Ohio, it will not be because of the Republican-controlled state Legislature, according to House Speaker Jason Stephens. He said the push to fix the state law that is posing a barrier for the Democratic president has stalled out. “It’s a hyper political environment at this at this time of year and there are some Republicans who just didn’t want to vote on it. … I think there are other alternatives to it, so why create a stir that’s not necessary,” said Stephens.
Oregon – Republican Fundraisers Ran Afoul of Oregon Liquor Rules, Investigation Finds
MSN – Noelle Crombie (Portland Oregonian) | Published: 5/21/2024
The Columbia County Republican Central Committee violated state liquor regulations when it auctioned bottles of high-end bourbon, including Pappy Van Winkle, during fundraisers in 2022 and 2023, a state investigation found. The Oregon Liquor and Cannabis Commission inquiry followed a media report that determined the rural political group’s Bourbon in the Barn events appeared to skirt state rules.
Oregon – Why the First Lady’s Involvement with a Big Pharmaceutical Company Is Noteworthy
Willamette Week – Nigel Jaquiss | Published: 5/22/2024
Oregon first lady Aimee Kotek Wilson arranged a meeting for representatives of Johnson & Johnson with Ebony Clarke, the state’s director of behavioral health. The Oregon Health Plan paid nearly $1.4 billion for prescription drugs last year. Gov. Tina Kotek’s staff has a rigorous process for vetting access to the governor and her top advisers. Emails show that when a request for a meeting or even a phone call comes in, there is a detailed evaluation process and often a formal memo. For the first lady, however, there was no such process.
Pennsylvania – Can Republicans Embrace Voting by Mail? Pennsylvania Offers a Test
DNyuz – Michael Wines (New York Times) | Published: 5/21/2024
Republican Party leaders in Pennsylvania have pledged to spend millions of dollars this year to promote voting by mail despite claiming for years, without evidence, that mailed votes are riddled with fraud. The national party is also pressing a pro-mail publicity campaign called “Bank Your Vote,” apparently after concluding that staking its candidates’ fates on a hefty Election Day turnout was not an optimal strategy.
Pennsylvania – Pa.’s Judges Must Reveal the Perks They Accept, but the Public Won’t Find Those Disclosures Online
Yahoo News – Angela Couloumbis (Spotlight PA) | Published: 5/20/2204
Every year, thousands of officials in state government must fill out reports by May 1 that disclose their sources of income, creditors, and business interests, as well as any gifts, hospitality, or other perks they accepted. Those reports are then made publicly searchable and available online. Pennsylvania’s judges, however, play by somewhat different rules.
South Carolina – Supreme Court Allows Disputed South Carolina Voting Map
MSN – Patrick Marley and Ann Marimow (Washington Post) | Published: 5/23/2024
The U.S. Supreme Court allowed the use of a South Carolina congressional map that a lower court said “exiled” thousands of Black voters to carve out a district safer for a White Republican incumbent. At issue for the court was whether South Carolina’s new map, which was created by the GOP-led Legislature and moved Black voters from one district to another, was permitted to bolster the Republican majority or was an unconstitutional effort to divvy up voters by race. The conservative majority sent the case back to the lower court, giving Republicans a victory by finding it erred when it determined race predominated the map-drawing process.
Tennessee – Concerns Over Free Speech Grow as Abortion Travel Ban Heads to Tennessee Governor’s Desk
MSN – Angele Latham (Nashville Tennessean) | Published: 5/16/2024
Some free speech advocates are raising the alarm over wording in a new Tennessee bill that could potentially restrict a person’s right to speak about abortion health care. The law, passed by state lawmakers this year, makes it a felony to recruit or transport a minor for an illegal abortion without parental consent. It closely mirrors a recent law passed in Idaho, which a federal judge halted on First Amendment grounds.
Washington – Prominent Seattle Lobbying Firm Exits Bankruptcy, Cuts CEO’s Pay
Seattle Times – Jim Brunner | Published: 5/20/2024
A major Seattle lobbying and public affairs firm wrapped up its bankruptcy with a reorganization that will pay off debtors, including $6 million owed to its estranged former co-founder. Strategies 360 filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in November, a move prompted by a rancorous financial dispute between Chief Executive Officer Ron Dotzauer and his ex-business partner Eric Sorenson.
Washington – Tanya Woo Should Recuse from Minimum Wage Vote, Ethics Head Says
Seattle Times – David Kroman | Published: 5/20/2024
When the Seattle City Council votes on a new, lower pay standard for app-based delivery drivers, Councilperson Tanya Woo should recuse herself, said Wayne Barnett, director of the Ethics and Elections Commission The reason is that Woo’s father-in-law owns Kau Kau BBQ and uses delivery apps, giving Woo’s family a possible financial stake in the vote. “For me, that’s just too close,” Barnett said.
May 23, 2024 •
Thursday’s LobbyComply News Roundup
Campaign Finance New Jersey: “Campaign Finance Watchdog Taps Top Lawyer to Helm Agency” by Nikita Biryukov for New Jersey Monitor Elections Arizona: “Rudy Giuliani and Other Trump Allies Plead Not Guilty in Arizona” by Yvonne Wingett Sanchez (Washington Post) for MSN Ohio: “Ohio Lawmakers Won’t […]
Campaign Finance
New Jersey: “Campaign Finance Watchdog Taps Top Lawyer to Helm Agency” by Nikita Biryukov for New Jersey Monitor
Elections
Arizona: “Rudy Giuliani and Other Trump Allies Plead Not Guilty in Arizona” by Yvonne Wingett Sanchez (Washington Post) for MSN
Ohio: “Ohio Lawmakers Won’t Pass Biden Ballot Fix, House Speaker Says” by Andrew Tobias (Cleveland Plain Dealer) for MSN
Ethics
National: “Congress Aims to Overhaul Presidential Ethics Rules with a Plan Led by an Unlikely Pair of Lawmakers” by Farnoush Amiri (Associated Press) for Yahoo News
National: “On the Week Trump’s Fla. Trial Was Scheduled to Start, Uncertainty and a Pretrial Hearing” by David Ovalle and Perry Stein (Washington Post) for MSN
New York: “NYC Mayor Adams’ Involvement in Brother’s Charity Group Event Sparks Concerns Over Backdoor Donors” by Chris Sommerfeldt (New York Daily News) for MSN
North Carolina: “GOP Candidate for NC Governor Blasts Public Spending as His Family Nonprofit Rakes in Taxpayer Funds” by Brian Slodysko and Bill Barrow (Associated Press) for MSN
Lobbying
Oregon: “Why the First Lady’s Involvement with a Big Pharmaceutical Company Is Noteworthy” by Nigel Jaquiss for Willamette Week
May 22, 2024 •
Wednesday’s LobbyComply News Roundup
Campaign Finance Connecticut: “CT Supreme Court Rules That State Ban on Some Political Ads Infringes on Political Free Speech” by Edmund Mahoney (Hartford Courant) for Yahoo News Oregon: “Republican Fundraisers Ran Afoul of Oregon Liquor Rules, Investigation Finds” by Noelle Crombie (Portland Oregonian) for […]
Campaign Finance
Connecticut: “CT Supreme Court Rules That State Ban on Some Political Ads Infringes on Political Free Speech” by Edmund Mahoney (Hartford Courant) for Yahoo News
Oregon: “Republican Fundraisers Ran Afoul of Oregon Liquor Rules, Investigation Finds” by Noelle Crombie (Portland Oregonian) for MSN
Elections
Arizona: “Arizona Weighs When Lawyers’ Long-Shot Election Challenges Cross the Line” by Jen Fifield (Votebeat) for Arizona Mirror
Pennsylvania: “Can Republicans Embrace Voting by Mail? Pennsylvania Offers a Test” by Michael Wines (New York Times) for DNyuz
Ethics
National: “Fat Leonard Bribery Cases Fall Apart Because of Prosecution Blunders” by Craig Whitlock (Washington Post) for MSN
Louisiana: “Mayor Cantrell Takes French Quarter Resident Who Photographed Her to Court Over Stalking Claim” by John Simerman and Missy Wilkinson for NOLA.com
New York: “City Hall Aide Is Cooperating with Corruption Investigation into Adams” by William Rashbaum, Dana Rubenstein, and Michael Rothfeld (New York Times) for DNyuz
Washington: “Tanya Woo Should Recuse from Minimum Wage Vote, Ethics Head Says” by David Kroman for Seattle Times
May 21, 2024 •
Tuesday’s LobbyComply News Roundup
Campaign Finance Hawaii: “Hawaii Ethics Commission Grapples with Pay-to-Play Issues” by Blaze Lovell for Honolulu Civil Beat Elections National: “With Debate Deal, Trump and Biden Sideline a Storied Campaign Institution” by Adam Nagourney (New York Times) for DNyuz Ethics National: “‘We’ll See You at Your […]
Campaign Finance
Hawaii: “Hawaii Ethics Commission Grapples with Pay-to-Play Issues” by Blaze Lovell for Honolulu Civil Beat
Elections
National: “With Debate Deal, Trump and Biden Sideline a Storied Campaign Institution” by Adam Nagourney (New York Times) for DNyuz
Ethics
National: “‘We’ll See You at Your House:’ How fear and menace are transforming politics” by Eileen Sullivan, Danny Hakim, and Ken Bensinger (New York Times) for Yahoo News
New Jersey: “Jersey City Ed Board Approves Ethics Charges Against Member Over Pro-Palestinian Slogan. Will State End Controversy?” by Joshua Rosario (Jersey Journal) for Newark Star Ledger
Pennsylvania: “Pa.’s Judges Must Reveal the Perks They Accept, but the Public Won’t Find Those Disclosures Online” by Angela Couloumbis (Spotlight PA) for Yahoo News
Legislative Issues
California: “LA City Council Expansion, Once Hailed as Much Needed Reform, Is Dead for Now” by Frank Stoltze (LAist) for MSN
National: “In the Aging Senate, 80-Somethings Seeking Re-Election Draw Little Criticism” by Kayla Guo (New York Times) for Yahoo News
Lobbying
Washington: “Prominent Seattle Lobbying Firm Exits Bankruptcy, Cuts CEO’s Pay” by Jim Brunner for Seattle Times
May 20, 2024 •
Monday’s LobbyComply News Roundup
Campaign Finance National: “FEC Rejects Proposal to Weaken Disclosure Laws but Agrees to Further Rulemaking” by Jimmy Cloutier for Open Secrets Elections Montana: “Montana Commissioner Opens Complaints Against AG Candidates” by Darrell Ehrlick (Daily Montanan) for Yahoo News Ethics National: “Upside-Down Flag Flew at Justice […]
Campaign Finance
National: “FEC Rejects Proposal to Weaken Disclosure Laws but Agrees to Further Rulemaking” by Jimmy Cloutier for Open Secrets
Elections
Montana: “Montana Commissioner Opens Complaints Against AG Candidates” by Darrell Ehrlick (Daily Montanan) for Yahoo News
Ethics
National: “Upside-Down Flag Flew at Justice Alito’s House After Neighbor Dispute” by Justin Jouvenal and Ann Marimow (Washington Post) for MSN
Hawaii: “Not Guilty: Ex-Honolulu Prosecutor Keith Kaneshiro, businessman Dennis Mitsunaga and others walk in bribery case” by Chrstina Jendra for Honolulu Civil Beat
Tennessee: “Concerns Over Free Speech Grow as Abortion Travel Ban Heads to Tennessee Governor’s Desk” by Angele Latham (Nashville Tennessean) for MSN
Lobbying
Colorado: “Wolf Advocates Charged with Illegal Lobbying at State Capitol” by Marianne Goodland for Colorado Politics
National: “Republican Chair Investigating Chamber of Commerce in Seismic K Street Shift” by Taylor Giorno (The Hill) for Yahoo News
New York: “More Adams Administration Officials in Talks to Join Ex-Chief of Staff Frank Carone’s Lobbying Firm” by Chris Sommerfeldt for New York Daily News
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