April 18, 2024 •
Thursday’s LobbyComply News Roundup
Campaign Finance National: “Ex-Congressman Asks 11th Circuit to Toss Six-Figure Campaign Finance Penalty” by Kayla Gogging for Courthouse News Service Hawaii: “Inside the Late-Night Parties Where Hawaii Politicians Raked in Money” by Eric Sagara and Irene Casado Sanchez (Big Local News), and Blaze Lovell […]
Campaign Finance
National: “Ex-Congressman Asks 11th Circuit to Toss Six-Figure Campaign Finance Penalty” by Kayla Gogging for Courthouse News Service
Hawaii: “Inside the Late-Night Parties Where Hawaii Politicians Raked in Money” by Eric Sagara and Irene Casado Sanchez (Big Local News), and Blaze Lovell for Honolulu Civil Beat
Michigan: “Nessel Accuses Ex-Speaker Chatfield of Stealing Political Funds in Criminal Charges” by Craig Mauger for Detroit News
Mississippi: “Lawmakers Update Public Service Commissioner Campaign Finance Law” by Frank Corder for Magnolia Tribune
Ethics
California: “Questions Swirled About Millions of Tax Dollars in OC. After Months of Silence, a Key Figure Weighs In” by Nick Gerda (LAist) for MSN
Kentucky: “Ethics Commission Urges Metro Council to Amend Laws Following Greenberg Complaint” by Eleanor McCrary (Louisville Courier Journal) for Yahoo News
National: “Red States Threaten Librarians with Prison – As Blue States Work to Protect Them” by Hannah Natanson and Anumita Kaur (Washington Post) for MSN
New York: “Charged With Regulating Conflict of Interests, Ethics Commission Hides Its Own” by Chris Bragg for New York Focus
Lobbying
Europe: “EU Auditors Say Lobbyists Can Easily Slip Under Bloc’s Radar” by Nette Noestlinger (Reuters) for Yahoo Finance
Illinois: “Chicago Lobbyists Escape Serious Punishment for Improper Donations to Mayor Johnson’s Campaign” by Tessa Weinberg for WBEZ
April 17, 2024 •
Wednesday’s LobbyComply News Roundup
Campaign Finance Pennsylvania: “Pa. House Amends Campaign Finance Bills to Cover All Nonprofits and Require More Detailed Reports” by Peter Hall for Pennsylvania Capital-Star Ethics Arkansas: “Audit Says Arkansas Governor’s Office Potentially Violated Laws with $19,000 Lectern Purchase” by Andrew DeMillo (Associated Press) for […]
Campaign Finance
Pennsylvania: “Pa. House Amends Campaign Finance Bills to Cover All Nonprofits and Require More Detailed Reports” by Peter Hall for Pennsylvania Capital-Star
Ethics
Arkansas: “Audit Says Arkansas Governor’s Office Potentially Violated Laws with $19,000 Lectern Purchase” by Andrew DeMillo (Associated Press) for Yahoo News
National: “Supreme Court Divided Over Key Charge Against Jan. 6 Rioters and Trump” by Ann Marimow (Washington Post) for MSN
Illinois: “Chicago City Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin Fined $60K for Violating Ethics Ordinance” by Heather Cherone for WTTW
Missouri: “Speaker Dean Plocher Accused of ‘Absolute Obstruction’ in House Ethics Investigation” by Jason Hancock for Missouri Independent
New Jersey: “Atlantic City Mayor Marty Small Sr. and His Wife Are Accused of Assaulting Their Teenage Daughter” by Jesse Bunch (Philadelphia Inquirer) for MSN
Legislative Issues
Wisconsin: “Business Group Challenges Evers’ Creative Veto That Extended School Aid for 400 Years” by Jessie Opoien (Milwaukee Journal Sentinel) for Yahoo News
Lobbying
Washington: “Lobbying the Legislature from Behind Bars” by Grace Deng (Washington State Standard) for Oregon Capital Chronicle
April 15, 2024 •
Monday’s LobbyComply News Roundup
Campaign Finance National: “DNC Uses Political Donations to Pay Biden’s Legal Fees in Special Counsel Probe” by Soo Rin Kim, Isabelle Murray, and Lucien Bruggeman (ABC News) for MSN Elections Florida: “Florida GOP Operative Admits Role in ‘Ghost’ Candidate Scheme That Defeated Utility-Targeted […]
Campaign Finance
National: “DNC Uses Political Donations to Pay Biden’s Legal Fees in Special Counsel Probe” by Soo Rin Kim, Isabelle Murray, and Lucien Bruggeman (ABC News) for MSN
Elections
Florida: “Florida GOP Operative Admits Role in ‘Ghost’ Candidate Scheme That Defeated Utility-Targeted Dem” by Mario Alejandro Ariza for Floodlight
Georgia: “New Prosecutor to Decide Fate of Georgia Lieutenant Governor in Trump Case” by Holly Bailey (Washington Post) for MSN
Oklahoma: “Will You have to Vote on Your State Lawmaker in November? Most Races Will Already Be Decided” by Keaton Ross for Oklahoma Watch
Ethics
National: “Judge Cannon Skeptical of Trump Co-Defendants’ Arguments to Dismiss Charges” by Perry Stein (Washington Post) for MSN
National: “Leo Rejects Senate Subpoena from Panel Probing Gifts to Supreme Court Justices” by Tobi Raji (Washington Post) for MSN
Ohio: “Randazzo’s Death Clouds Path Forward on Criminal, Civil FirstEnergy Bribery Cases” by Jake Zuckerman and Andrew Tobias (Cleveland Plain Dealer) for MSN
Lobbying
Illinois: “Giannoulias Calls for Disclosure of Lobbyist Contracts” by Peter Hancock (Capitol News Illinois) for NPR Illinois
April 12, 2024 •
News You Can Use Digest – April 12, 2024
National/Federal Woman Sentenced to Month in Prison Over Theft of Ashley Biden’s Diary DNyuz – Adam Goldman (New York Times) | Published: 4/9/2024 A federal judge sentenced Aimee Harris to a month in prison for her role in a brazen scheme to […]
National/Federal
Woman Sentenced to Month in Prison Over Theft of Ashley Biden’s Diary
DNyuz – Adam Goldman (New York Times) | Published: 4/9/2024
A federal judge sentenced Aimee Harris to a month in prison for her role in a brazen scheme to steal the diary of President Biden’s daughter and sell it to a right-wing group in the hope of disrupting the 2020 election. In August 2022, Aimee Harris pleaded guilty to conspiring to transport the stolen diary to New York, where she met with employees of Project Veritas and sold it for $40,000 just weeks before the election.
How the No Labels 2024 Presidential Campaign Failed to Launch
MSN – Ken Thomas and Kristina Peterson (Wall Street Journal) | Published: 4/4/2024
No Labels, the centrist group which has sought to field a third-party presidential bid, is abandoning efforts to create a “unity ticket” aiming to win the White House. Even as the group cited polling showing public dissatisfaction with President Biden and Donald Trump and support for a generic third-party candidate, No Labels could not convince any prominent leaders to mount a challenge that aimed to become the first substantial third-party effort since independent Ross Perot’s showing in the 1992 election.
Judge Cannon Shoots Down Trump’s Presidential Records Act Claim
MSN – Devlin Barrett and Perry Stein (Washington Post) | Published: 4/4/2024
U.S. District Court Judge Aileen Cannon rejected Donald Trump’s bid to have his charges of mishandling classified documents dismissed on the grounds that a federal records law protected him from prosecution. The judge also defended her handling of the issue from special counsel Jack Smith, which had surprised legal experts and rankled prosecutors. Cannon’s decision comes two days after Smith criticized the rationale behind the judge’s demand for prospective jury instructions that seemed to largely adopt Trump’s interpretation of the law.
Super PACs Keep Testing the Limits of Campaign Finance Law
MSN – Jessica Piper (Politico) | Published: 4/8/2024
Super PACs keep pushing the boundaries of campaign finance law this cycle. They are using novel financial arrangements, like taking “bridge funding” in the form of loans from major donors or receiving ad revenue from a candidate’s podcast. They are also continuing to take advantage of long-standing loopholes in anti-coordination guidelines. Outside spending continues to increase dramatically.
Special Counsel Urges Supreme Court to Reject Trump’s Immunity Claim
MSN – Ann Marimow (Washington Post) | Published: 4/8/2024
Special counsel Jack Smith urged the U.S. Supreme Court to reject Donald Trump’s “novel and sweeping” claim that he is immune from criminal prosecution on charges of conspiring to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election. The ruling will determine whether and how quickly Trump faces trial. The justices’ decision to take up Trump’s claim, rather than let stand an appeals court decision that he can be prosecuted, has drawn criticism for delaying the trial, which initially was scheduled to begin in early March.
House Subpoena Lawsuit Risks Change to Oversight Power
MSN – Ryan Tarinelli (Roll Call) | Published: 4/8/2024
The House Judiciary Committee teed up a high-stakes legal clash with the Justice Department in a lawsuit that could influence congressional oversight authority far beyond the GOP’s impeachment investigation into President Biden, legal experts say. The committee’s lawsuit against two Justice Department attorneys asks a federal court to compel the officials to testify about the criminal case against Hunter Biden.
Trump’s The Likely GOP Nominee. He Can Serve Even If Convicted of a Crime.
MSN – David Nakamura (Washington Post) | Published: 4/11/2024
Donald Trump is facing felony charges in four separate criminal indictments in three states and the District of Columbia, with a guilty verdict in any of the cases possibly meaning a prison sentence. The circumstances have raised an often-asked question: Could Trump, or anyone else, be convicted of a felony and serve as commander in chief, possibly from prison? The short answer, legal experts said, is yes – because the U.S. Constitution does not forbid it.
Content Creators Ask Meta to Reverse Politics Limits on Instagram, Threads
MSN – Taylor Lorenz (Washington Post) | Published: 4/10/2024
Hundreds of political and news content creators signed an open letter to Meta asking the company to reverse its decision to limit the reach of accounts posting “political content” on Threads and Instagram. Meta announced in February it no longer would recommend content about politics and social issues on the two social media platforms, which have tens of millions of users in the U.S. Independent journalists and content creators say they have struggled to reach their audiences since the change was rolled out. They say the limits have significantly affected creators who are Black, female, and LGBTQ.
US Judicial Panel Proposes Greater Amicus Brief Financial Disclosures
Reuters – Nate Raymond | Published: 4/10/2024
A federal judicial panel called for greater transparency requirements for outside groups that file amicus briefs in cases by mandating they disclose when much of their revenue comes from a party involved in the lawsuit or its attorneys. The U.S. Judicial Conference’s Advisory Committee on Appellate Rules endorsed the proposal following calls by Democratic lawmakers and others for changes to shed a light on the extent to which litigants secretly fund efforts to influence cases’ outcomes through amicus, or friend-of-the-court, briefs.
Watchdog Groups Say Texas Sen. Ted Cruz ‘Brazenly Violated’ Federal Election Campaign Act
Yahoo News – Hogan Gore (Austin American-Statesman) | Published: 4/9/2024
U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz is facing a formal complaint over more than $630,000 sent from the company that syndicates his podcast to a super PAC supporting his reelection bid. The Campaign Legal Center and End Citizens United allege Cruz violated the Federal Election Campaign Act after iHeartMedia made deposits to The Truth and Courage PAC, which then reported the payments as “other federal receipts” rather than campaign contributions. The complaint says iHeartMedia’s donations qualify as “soft money” solicited or directed from Cruz.
Thousands of Alleged Lobbying Violations Languish at Justice Department
Yahoo News – Taylor Giorno (The Hill) | Published: 4/4/2024
Federal lobbyists must file new registrations within 45 days, quarterly disclosures detailing specific lobbying activities and how much they were paid, and semiannual political contribution reports. When a lobbyist or firm fails to comply, the secretary of the Senate and the clerk of the House notify them and make referrals to the U.S. attorney’s office when they fail to provide a proper response. The Government Accountability Office found thousands of reports of lobbying and political donation violations remain unresolved years after they were referred.
As Kushner’s Investment Firm Steps Out, the Potential Conflicts Are Growing
Yahoo News – Eric Lipton, Jonathan Swain, and Maggie Haberman (New York Times) | Published: 4/9/2024
Jared Kushner’s investment fund is not especially large by global finance standards. But as he gets it fully up and running, each step is bringing with it ethical issues that would only grow if his father-in-law, Donald Trump, should win another term as president. Kushner’s $3 billion fund is financed almost entirely from overseas investors with whom he worked when he served as a senior adviser in the Trump White House.
From the States and Municipalities
Alabama – Alabama Ethics Commissioner Resigns, Decision Comes as Senate Considers Ethics Law Change
MSN – Darryl Burke (WHNT) | Published: 4/10/2024
Stan McDonald resigned his seat on the Alabama Ethics Commission. The decision comes as the Senate considers a bill that would overhaul the existing state ethics code. According to campaign finance records, McDonald made contributions to at least one political campaign after being appointed to the commission in 2019. Members of the Ethics Commission are not allowed to make political donations.
Arizona – ‘Catastrophic,’ ‘a Shock’: Arizona’s Abortion Ruling Threatens to Upend 2024 Races
MSN – Maegan Vazquez and Mariana Alfaro (Washington Post) | Published: 4/10/2024
The Arizona Supreme Court revived a near-total ban on abortion, invoking an 1864 law that forbids the procedure except to save a mother’s life and punishes providers with prison time. The decision supersedes the state’s previous rule, which permitted abortions up to 15 weeks. While several states have enacted abortion restrictions, protecting access to reproductive care has been a winning issue for Democratic candidates. As a battleground state, there is a lot on the line in Arizona’s looming elections.
Arizona – Arizona Politicians’ Fundraising to Be Public Under Bill Inspired by Republic Reporting
Yahoo News – Stacey Barchinger (Arizona Republic) | Published: 4/8/2024
Arizonans will be able to see the political fundraising and spending of the state’s most powerful elected officials much sooner and more often under a measure signed into law recently. The law requires statewide officeholders, like the governor, attorney general, and others to report their finances to the public four times a year. They must do so during each of the three years between their elections.
California – How Long Before California’s Campaign Finance Website Is Replaced?
CalMatters – Sameea Kamal | Published: 4/3/2024
Cal-Access, the antiquated web portal to track California’s campaign money and lobbying, probably will not be replaced before December 2026. Secretary of State Shirley Weber’s office is currently evaluating bids and expects to have a primary vendor by this summer. An independent review estimates the project could take 27 months.
California – Every Vote Counts. Just Ask These Two Candidates Tied with Exactly 30,249 Votes Each
CalMatters – Yue Stalla Yu | Published: 4/4/2024
Whoever did not vote in a U.S. House primary in California may have helped make history. Tied for second in the March 5 election, with exactly 30,249 votes each, state Assemblyperson Evan Low and Santa Clara County Supervisor Joe Simitian are both advancing to the November general election, joining top vote-getter Sam Liccardo, a former mayor of San Jose. The stage is set for a competitive three-way November runoff, the first since California adopted its new primary system in 2012.
Colorado – Colorado GOP Ousts Reporter from Event, Claiming ‘Unfair’ Coverage
MSN – Anumita Kaur (Washington Post) | Published: 4/9/2024
The Colorado Republican Party expelled journalist Sandra Fish from its recent event in Pueblo after she was told the party chairperson finds her reporting “very unfair.” A sheriff’s deputy escorted the longtime reporter out, drawing backlash from lawmakers from both sides of the aisle and fellow journalists who criticized the move as an affront to democracy.
District of Columbia – Justice Official Clark Violated Ethics in Aiding Trump, D.C. Bar Panel Finds
MSN – Keith Alexander (Washington Post) | Published: 4/3/2024
A District of Columbia Bar committee ruled former Justice Department official Jeffrey Clark violated at least one rule of ethics and should face professional sanctions for trying to use the department’s influence to help reverse Donald Trump’s 2020 election defeat. The discipline could include revocation of his law license, blocking him from practicing law in the nation’s capital.
Florida – Miami City Attorney Helped Steer $10M Meant for Citywide Projects to Carollo’s District
MSN – Tess Riski, Joey Flechas, and Sarah Blaskey (Miami Herald) | Published: 4/11/2024
When a developer came to the Miami City Commission with a deal to build a luxury high-rise on city-owned land, commissioners approved the project. As part of the agreement, the developer promised to give the city $10 million for park improvements and other public benefits across Miami. But the city attorney’s office and other officials quietly reshaped the deal to shift those funds to a single district. Behind-the-scenes revisions to the contract meant the money would be given to Commissioner Joe Carollo’s district, where the high-rise site is located.
Florida – Sarasota City Attorney to Prepare a Potential Ordinance to Track Political Lobbying
Yahoo News – Christian Casale (Sarasota Herald Tribune) | Published: 4/4/2024
Sarasota leaders will explore an ordinance to regulate lobbying in City Hall after several ethics issues have come up. City Commissioner Erik Arroyo said he envisioned a registration requirement for anyone paid to lobby the city and a requirement they disclose their clients. The information would be kept in a digital, publicly accessible database.
Georgia – Judge Rejects Trump’s First Amendment Challenge to Indictment in Georgia Election Case
MSN – Kate Brumback (Associated Press) | Published: 4/4/2024
The judge overseeing the Georgia election interference case against Donald Trump and others rejected arguments by the former president that the indictment seeks to criminalize speech protected by the First Amendment. Trump’s attorneys argued that all the charges against him involved political speech that is protected even if the speech ends up being false.
Georgia – Former City of Atlanta Executive, Jim Beard, Enters Plea Deal in Federal Court
WXIA – Meleah Lyden | Published: 4/9/2024
A former chief financial officer in Atlanta pleaded guilty in federal court to taking money from the city and using tax deductions he was not eligible for. Jim Beard admitted using city money for personal expenses, including two custom-built machine guns he had ordered using his professional email address. He also took tax deductions of $12,000, which were based on false submissions.
Kansas – Kansas Newspaper Publisher Sues Over Police Raid, Claiming Retaliation
MSN – Praveena Somasundaram (Washington Post) | Published: 4/4/2024
The publisher of a Kansas newspaper that was raided by police in August is now suing officials involved in the move, accusing them of retaliating against the paper and violating its First Amendment rights. The unprecedented raid on the Marion County Record’s newsroom and the home of its editor and publisher, Eric Meyer, alarmed press and free-speech advocates across the country. Meyer alleges in the lawsuit that the stress of the raid led to the sudden death of his mother, who lived with him and co-owned the paper.
Maryland – Maryland Town Apologizes, Offers Amends to Settle Voting Rights Lawsuit
MSN – Joe Heim (Washington Post) | Published: 4/4/2024
The small town of Federalsburg on Maryland’s Eastern Shore settled a federal voting rights lawsuit by agreeing to apologize for its history of racism, committing to actions that acknowledge Black contributions to the town, and promote reconciliation. The town also will pay $260,000 in legal fees by 2030 to the American Civil Liberties Union of Maryland, which brought the lawsuit. Last year, following changes to the voting system overseen by a judge, the 200-year-old town with a population that is 43 percent Black elected its first Black representative.
Maryland – Baltimore County Official Helped Investigate Former Employee Who Lodged Complaints About Her
MSN – Lia Russell (Baltimore Sun) | Published: 4/10/2024
An official being considered for Baltimore County’s highest appointed position helped police investigate a former employee who accused her and County Executive Johnny Olszewski Jr. of ethics violations. D’Andrea Walker, whom Olszewski nominated to become county administrative officer, was the acting director of the county Department of Public Works and Transportation when she provided security footage and information to a detective who was investigating Michael Beichler, her former Solid Waste Management bureau chief, at the request of Olszewski’s aide, according to a police report and emails.
Maryland – Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott Received Money from 9 Donors Who Exceeded $6K Limit
MSN – Emily Opilo (Baltimore Sun) | Published: 4/11/2024
Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott has received campaign contributions above the maximum from at least nine donors this election cycle, violating state campaign finance law. Most of the problem donations, which amount to an extra $29,250, are the result of multiple contributions, some made in early 2023, before the mayoral campaign was underway, combined with others made more recently. Maryland operates on a four-year campaign cycle, and individual donors are allowed to give only $6,000 during that span.
Michigan – Judge Shows Mercy to Ex-Romulus Mayor Who Spent Campaign Money on Yacht Club, Wedding
Yahoo News – Tresa Baldas (Detroit Free Press) | Published: 4/4/2024
Former Romulus Mayor LeRoy Burcroff used campaign funds to help pay for his daughter’s wedding, his yacht club dues, and a Florida vacation with friends but he is not going to prison for any of it, despite his guilty plea. Instead, a federal judge gave Burcroff three years’ probation and four months’ home confinement, sparing him a prison sentence the government sought.
New Jersey – Top NJ Legislators Failed to Disclose Campaign Spending. They Still Haven’t Fixed Reports
MSN – Ashley Balcerzak (Bergen Record) | Published: 4/3/2024
New Jersey’s most powerful legislators, Senate President Nicholas Scutari and Assembly Speaker Craig Coughlin, have not filed amended reports nearly a month after media stories said they failed to properly disclose certain campaign spending. Critics of a controversial campaign finance overhaul said they wanted to examine provisions of the law, mainly a change that slashes the amount of time the Election Law Enforcement Commission has to investigate potential campaign finance violations from 10 years down to two years.
New York – Senate Democrats Renew Push for Changes to Matching Funds Program
Albany Times Union – Joshua Solomon | Published: 4/4/2024
State Senate Democrats are renewing their push to raise the threshold of campaign contributions a candidate needs to be eligible for New York’s new matching funds program. Sen. James Skoufis introduced an amended version of the legislation Gov. Kathy Hochul vetoed in December. This time, lawmakers excluded what was widely viewed as the most controversial element of their proposal: allowing the first $250 of any contribution to be eligible for matching funds.
New York – Conservative Hoaxers to Pay Up to $1.25M Under Agreement with New York Over 2020 Robocall Scheme
MSN – Anthony Izaguirre (Associated Press) | Published: 4/9/2024
Two conservative political operatives who orchestrated a robocall campaign to dissuade Black people from voting in the 2020 election have agreed to pay up to $1.25 million under a settlement with New York Attorney General Letitia James. The operatives, Jacob Wohl and Jack Burkman, were accused of making robocalls to phone numbers in predominately Black neighborhoods in Ohio, Michigan, New York, Pennsylvania, and Illinois that told people they could be subjected to arrest, debt collection, and forced vaccination if they voted by mail.
New York – Ex-Trump Company Executive Weisselberg Sentenced to 5 Months in Jail
MSN – Shayna Jacobs (Washington Post) | Published: 4/10/2024
A longtime executive at Donald Trump’s company was sentenced to five months in jail after pleading guilty to lying under oath in the New York attorney general’s civil investigation into business practices at the Trump Organization and at the trial that resulted from it. Allen Weisselberg, who worked for the Trump family for a half-century before retiring recently, is expected to serve his sentence at Rikers Island.
New York – NYC Council Bill Would Ban Political Consultants, Fundraisers from Lobbying Former Clients
MSN – Michael Gartland (New York Daily News) | Published: 4/11/2024
Legislation introduced in the New York City Council would ban campaign fundraisers and consultants from lobbying their former bosses for two years after those politicians take office. Two of the most notable people who could be impacted by the new bill are Mayor Eric Adams’ longtime compliance attorney, Vito Pitta, and the top fundraiser for his 2021 campaign, Brianna Suggs, whose home was raided as part of a federal probe into the campaign’s ties to Turkey.
New York – Trump Fails to Delay N.Y. Criminal Trial for a Third Time This Week
MSN – Shayna Jacobs (Washington Post) | Published: 4/10/2024
Donald Trump’s attorneys failed to persuade an appeals court judge to delay the former president’s New York criminal trial by saying the presiding judge was not qualified to oversee the proceedings. The appeals court judge, Ellen Gesmer, denied Trump’s request shortly after it was argued at an emergency session. It was Trump’s third attempt to delay his trial on charges of falsifying business documents to help cover up an affair that allegedly happened a decade before the 2016 election.
Ohio – FirstEnergy Made Secret $1 Million Payment for ‘Husted Campaign’ in 2017, Documents Show
MSN – Jake Zuckerman (Cleveland Plain Dealer) | Published: 4/10/2024
FirstEnergy, at the onset of what would become one of Ohio’s biggest public corruption schemes, gave a $1 million contribution to a nonprofit backing now-Lt. Gov. Jon Husted, who was running for governor at the time, new records show. The donation was made in 2017 to Freedom Frontier, a 501(c)(4) nonprofit that can accept unlimited funds from corporations without disclosing the source. FirstEnergy’s internal records classify the payment as for the “Husted campaign.”
Ohio – Ex-PUCO Chairman Sam Randazzo Accused in FirstEnergy Bribery Scheme Has Died
MSN – Laura Bischoff and Jessie Balmert (Cincinnati Enquirer) | Published: 4/10/2024
Former Public Utilities Commission of Ohio Chairperson Sam Randazzo, who was facing criminal charges over a bribery scandal, has died by suspected suicide. Randazzo was recently accused of accepting $4.3 million from FirstEnergy to help the utility with a $1 billion bailout for two nuclear plants and regulation that would have cost the company money. He was also accused of embezzling from his clients.
MSN – Andrew Tobias and Jeremy Pelzer (Cleveland Plain Dealer) | Published: 4/8/2024
Barack Obama, Mitt Romney, Donald Trump, and Joe Biden all have appeared on Ohio’s November ballots despite their parties nominating them after an obscure deadline in state law But that same deadline could prevent President Biden from qualifying for Ohio’s November ballot this year, a development that might have wide-reaching ramifications for U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown and other Ohio Democrats unless a court or Republican lawmakers agree to intervene, a top lawyer for GOP Secretary of State Frank LaRose warned.
Oklahoma – Campaign Finance Task Force Takes Aim at Outside Spending
Oklahoma Watch – Keaton Ross | Published: 4/4/2024
Politically active nonprofits allowed to spend unlimited amounts to sway Oklahoma voters should face greater scrutiny, a gubernatorial task force declared in its final report. The Oklahoma Ethics Commission could propose rules based on the report’s recommendations, which would take effect at the end of the legislative session in which they were considered unless the Legislature or governor objects.
Oregon – Oregon Gov. Tina Kotek to Seek Guidance from Ethics Commission Around First Lady’s Role
MSN – Dianne Lugo (Salem Statesman Journal) | Published: 4/3/2024
Gov. Tina Kotek said she is sending questions seeking clarification on what is appropriate for the role of the first spouse to the Oregon Government Ethics Commission, which is reviewing a complaint against the governor related to questions about her wife’s role in her administration. It has been reported that three of the governor’s top aides have resigned over First Lady Aimee Kotek Wilson’s involvement in the administration.
Wisconsin – Wisconsin Supreme Court Liberal Won’t Run Again, Shaking Up Race for Control
MSN – Patrick Marley (Washington Post) | Published: 4/21/2024
The longest-serving member of the Wisconsin Supreme Court’s liberal majority announced she would not run for reelection next spring, shaking up a consequential race in a swing state and improving the odds that conservatives can retake the control they lost last year. Justice Ann Walsh Bradley’s unexpected retirement sets the stage for an intense race for control of the court two years after candidates, political parties, and interest groups spent more than $50 million in the most expensive judicial race in U.S. history.
April 8, 2024 •
Georgia Lawmakers Pass Bill to Regulate Agents of Foreign Principals
The Georgia Legislature passed a bill to require registration and disclosure for agents of foreign principals. Senate Bill 368 defines foreign principal broadly to include a foreign government, political party, and a partnership, association, corporation, organization, or other combination of […]
The Georgia Legislature passed a bill to require registration and disclosure for agents of foreign principals.
Senate Bill 368 defines foreign principal broadly to include a foreign government, political party, and a partnership, association, corporation, organization, or other combination of persons organized under the laws of or having its principal place of business in a foreign country.
The registration requires extensive disclosure including the registrant’s nationality, nature of business, compensation, expenditures, and details regarding activity performed on behalf of the foreign principal. The registration must be updated every six months.
U.S. subsidiaries of foreign principals are not explicitly exempt from additional disclosures.
Agents of foreign principals must also disclose their identity to government agencies and the General Assembly each time they appear on behalf of a foreign principal.
The bill also prohibits foreign nationals from making campaign contributions to a candidate, campaign committee, independent committee, or political action committee.
Senate Bill 368 has not yet been signed by the governor.
If signed, the bill becomes effective July 1.
April 8, 2024 •
Monday’s LobbyComply News Roundup
Campaign Finance New Jersey: “Top NJ Legislators Failed to Disclose Campaign Spending. They Still Haven’t Fixed Reports” by Ashley Balcerzak (Bergen Record) for MSN New York: “Senate Democrats Renew Push for Changes to Matching Funds Program” by Joshua Solomon for Albany Times Union Elections […]
Campaign Finance
New Jersey: “Top NJ Legislators Failed to Disclose Campaign Spending. They Still Haven’t Fixed Reports” by Ashley Balcerzak (Bergen Record) for MSN
New York: “Senate Democrats Renew Push for Changes to Matching Funds Program” by Joshua Solomon for Albany Times Union
Elections
National: “How the No Labels 2024 Presidential Campaign Failed to Launch” by Ken Thomas and Kristina Peterson (Wall Street Journal) for MSN
Ethics
Washington DC: “Justice Official Clark Violated Ethics in Aiding Trump, D.C. Bar Panel Finds” by Keith Alexander (Washington Post) for MSN
National: “Judge Cannon Shoots Down Trump’s Presidential Records Act Claim” by Devlin Barrett and Perry Stein (Washington Post) for MSN
Oregon: “Oregon Gov. Tina Kotek to Seek Guidance from Ethics Commission Around First Lady’s Role” by Dianne Lugo (Salem Statesman Journal) for MSN
Lobbying
National: “Thousands of Alleged Lobbying Violations Languish at Justice Department” by Taylor Giorno (The Hill) for Yahoo News
Florida: “Sarasota City Attorney to Prepare a Potential Ordinance to Track Political Lobbying” by Christian Casale (Sarasota Herald Tribune) for Yahoo News
April 5, 2024 •
News You Can Use Digest – April 5, 2024
National/Federal From Pizzagate to the 2020 Election: Forcing liars to pay or apologize Las Vegas Sun – Elizabeth Williamson (New York Times) | Published: 4/2/2024 Michael Gottlieb, a partner at the firm Willkie Farr & Gallagher and a former associate counsel in […]
National/Federal
From Pizzagate to the 2020 Election: Forcing liars to pay or apologize
Las Vegas Sun – Elizabeth Williamson (New York Times) | Published: 4/2/2024
Michael Gottlieb, a partner at the firm Willkie Farr & Gallagher and a former associate counsel in the Obama White House, is at the forefront of a small but growing cadre of lawyers deploying defamation, one of the oldest areas of the law, as a weapon against a tide of political disinformation. Gottlieb has worked with Protect Democracy, a nonpartisan group that pushes for laws and policies to counter what it sees as authoritarian threats. Before the Trump era and the explosion of social media, though, such cases were virtually nonexistent.
Appeals Court Sides with Judge Who Threatened Peter Navarro with Contempt
MSN – Rachel Weiner (Washington Post) | Published: 4/1/2024
A federal appeals court rejected arguments from former Trump adviser Peter Navarro, one of a series of legal losses that has the economist facing sanction for defying court orders even as he serves a four-month prison sentence for ignoring similar demands from Congress. A judge threatened him with contempt if he did not hand over more records from his years in the Trump administration. On appeal, Navarro argued the Justice Department had no authority to enforce the Presidential Records Act. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit dismissed that claim.
How Corporate PAC Money Could End Up in the Personal Coffers of Sens. JD Vance and Markwayne Mullin
MSN – Brian Metzger (Business Insider) | Published: 3/28/2024
U.S. Sens. JD Vance and Markwayne Mullin have spent the last year using campaign cash to pay themselves back for hefty loans they sunk into their 2022 races. At the same time, they have been taking tens of thousands of dollars in corporate PAC money, some of which may be ending up directly in the senators’ bank accounts. The murky reality of both Vance’s and Mullin’s finances can be attributed in part to the work of Sen. Ted Cruz.
FEC Fines Mike Braun Senate Committee $159k for Campaign Finance Violation
MSN – Kayla Dwyer (Indianapolis Star) | Published: 3/29/2024
U.S. Sen. Mike Braun’s campaign owes $159,000 for violating campaign finance rules during the 2018 election, among the largest fines in the FEC’s history, ending a multi-year saga with the campaign and Braun’s former treasurer. Since 1980, only about 50 cases have warranted larger fines, but the penalty represents a small percentage of the approximately $11.5 million in campaign loans that were misreported.
Trump Special Counsel Fires Back at Cannon Order That Could Disrupt Case
MSN – Perry Stein and Devlin Barrett (Washington Post) | Published: 4/3/2024
Special counsel Jack Smith warned the judge overseeing Donald Trump’s classified documents case she is pursuing a legal premise that “is wrong” and said he would probably appeal to a higher court if she would rule a federal records law can protect the former president from prosecution. Smith’s office pushed back against an unusual instruction from U.S. District Court Judge Aileen Cannon, one that veteran national security lawyers and former judgers have said badly misinterprets the Presidential Records Act and laws related to classified documents.
Trump Media Stock Plunges as 2023 Truth Social Loss Put at $58 Million
MSN – Drew Harwell (Washington Post) | Published: 4/1/2024
Donald Trump’s social media company lost more than $58 million last year, sending its stock plunging more than 21 percent only days after a highflying public debut set the company’s value at more than $8 billion. The new figures throw into stark relief the gap between Trump Media’s highly hyped investor-driven valuation on the public stock market and the reality of its business performance. They also raise questions about the possibility that Trump could use the company as a financial lifeline. Trump cannot sell his shares or use them as collateral for a loan for six months because of a provision in the company’s merger agreement.
To Comply with Court, Federal Agency Lets White People Claim Social Disadvantage
MSN – Julian Mark (Washington Post) | Published: 4/3/2024
A federal judge ordered the Minority Business Development Agency (MBDA) to open its doors to entrepreneurs from all racial and ethnic backgrounds, ruling its presumption that minorities are inherently disadvantaged violated the Constitution’s equal protection clause. The MBDA directed its business centers to forgo racial considerations when vetting applicants. Instead, candidates must sign a form, attesting their disadvantage to certify they are “minority business enterprises.” It is the latest sign the government is untethering its definition of social disadvantage from broad racial and ethnic classifications.
Freedom Caucuses Push for Conservative State Laws, but Getting Attention Is Their Big Success
Yahoo News – Elaine Povich (Stateline) | Published: 4/2/2024
The State Freedom Caucus Network aims to push the Republican Party further to the right on issues such as immigration, voting access, and transgender restrictions. It is an outgrowth of the group in the U.S. House. The state chapters are proposing conservative legislation and slowing measures they do not like, even bills that were once considered routine and noncontroversial. Some Republicans say members of the Freedom Caucus gum up the legislative works and are more interested in publicity and grandstanding than conservative policymaking.
From the States and Municipalities
Alabama – Alabama House Approves Legislation Overhauling State Ethics Code
Alabama Reflector – Alander Rocha | Published: 4/3/2024
The Alabama House approved a bill that would repeal the current ethics laws for public officials and employees, replace the code with tougher punishments for violations, and weaken the powers of the state Ethics Commission. House Bill 227 would raise the gift ban limit to public officials and employees to $100 per occasion and $500 per year. The legislation now goes to the Senate.
Arizona – UA President Robbins OK’d Effort to Erase Millions in Fines Against Fraudulent Online University
Yahoo News – Hannah Dreyfus and Helen Rummel (Arizona Republic) | Published: 3/27/2024
Lobbyist Richard Smotkin was ostensibly hired by the University of Arizona Foundation to help build the university’s relationship with Morocco. But behind the scenes, Smotkin worked to persuade the California attorney general to erase millions of dollars in fines against a fraudulent online school acquired by the university, documents show. While Smotkin has extensive connections in Morocco, he had another important relationship: a yearslong bond with California Attorney General Rob Bonta.
California – Former L.A. Deputy Mayor Raymond Chan Found Guilty in Sprawling City Hall Corruption Case
MSN – David Zahniser and Dakota Smith (Los Angeles Times) | Published: 3/27/2024
A jury found Los Angeles Deputy Mayor Raymond Chan secured bribes for himself and for former city Councilperson Jose Huizar as part of a sprawling “pay-to-play” scheme. Chan was f0und guilty on all 12 counts of corruption in a case focused on financial benefits provided by real estate developers with projects in Huizar’s district. During the trial, prosecutors portrayed Chan as a crucial intermediary between Huizar, who wielded huge power over downtown development projects, and Chinese real estate developers.
Colorado – Colorado Appeals Court Upholds Fine, Requirement for ‘Dark Money’ Group to Disclose Spending
Colorado Politics – Michael Karlik | Published: 3/28/2024
Colorado’s second-highest court agreed that a group that spent $4 million backing conservative causes on the ballot in 2020 is required to disclose its contributions and spending and pay a $40,000 fine for failing to register as an advocacy group. A trial judge previously believed Unite for Colorado, which spent roughly $17 million during 2020, was not subject to the registration and disclosure requirement because its $4 million spent across multiple ballot initiatives was not substantial enough when broken down issue-by-issue.
Florida – Federal Court Upholds DeSantis-Backed Congressional Map
Yahoo News – Gary Fineout (Associated Press) | Published: 3/27/2024
A panel of federal judges upheld Florida’s congressional map, turning away a challenge that alleged it was discriminatory against Black voters after the district held by former U.S. Rep. Al Lawson, a Black Democrat, was dismantled. The decision is a victory for Republicans and Gov. Ron DeSantis, who muscled the map through Florida’s GOP-controlled Legislature. The congressional map his administration crafted ultimately resulted in Republicans gaining four seats, helping the GOP flip the House during the 2022 midterm elections.
Florida – With Abortion Ballot Question, a ‘Path to Relevance’ for Democrats in Florida?
Yahoo News – Patricia Mazzei (New York Times) | Published: 4/2/2024
Florida, once the biggest battleground in presidential politics, has become less important as its election results have trended repeatedly toward the political right. Few consider it a true swing state anymore. But three rulings from the Florida Supreme Court on abortion and marijuana may inject new life into Democratic campaigns before the general election on November 6.
Florida – Can Elected Officials Do Business with Their City? Here’s What Ethics Commission Say
Yahoo News – Tess Riski (Miami Herald) | Published: 4/3/2024
Elected officials in Miami-Dade County can run businesses that interact with their city’s government if the scope of work is clerical in nature and does not involve advocacy, according to a draft opinion from the Miami-Dade Commission on Ethics and Public Trust. The county ethics code prohibits public officials from receiving compensation from third parties, directly or indirectly, if the compensation is related to matters where the third parties are seeking a benefit from the city.
Georgia – Georgia Lawmakers Approve New Election Rules That Could Impact 2024 Presidential Contest
Yahoo News – Sudhin Thanawala and Jeff Amy (Associated Press) | Published: 3/29/2024
Georgia lawmakers approved new rules for challenging voters and qualifying for the state’s presidential ballot that could impact the 2024 presidential race in the battleground state. The bill would grant access to Georgia’s ballot to any political party that has qualified for the presidential ballot in at least 20 states or territories. The change could be a boost to independent candidates. It also spells out what constitutes “probable cause” for upholding challenges to voter eligibility.
Iowa – Republican Candidate’s Wife Sentenced to Prison for Voter Fraud
MSN – Kim Bellware (Washington Post) | Published: 4/3/2024
An Iowa woman who sought to boost her husband’s unsuccessful congressional bid in 2020 through a voter fraud scheme was sentenced by a federal judge to four months in prison in a rare case of fraudulent voting. Kim Taylor was convicted on 52 counts including fraudulent voting and providing false information in registering and voting. During the 2020 primary and general elections, federal prosecutors said, Taylor filled out voter registrations and absentee ballots for members of the Vietnamese community under the guise of offering translation help.
Kansas – Does Wichita Mayor’s Trip Abroad Fall Under City’s Ethics Policy? Here’s What We Found Out
Yahoo News – Chance Swaim (Wichita Eagle) | Published: 4/1/2024
Wichita Mayor Lily Wu’s trip to Switzerland – paid for by the Swiss government – falls in a gray area of a city council ethics policy that sought to limit gifts to elected and appointed city officials. The travel costs, which include flights, hotel stays, and dinners, are expected to far exceed the $150 gift limit council members can accept from a single source during a calendar year. But Wu says the all-expenses-paid trip is not a gift.
Kentucky – Louisville Mayor’s Wife Repeatedly Turned to City Worker for Social Media Help, Texts Show
Yahoo News – Eleanor McCrary and Josh Wood (Louisville Courier Journal) | Published: 4/2/2024
Text messages show a Communications Department staffer was frequently called upon by Rachel Greenberg, wife of Louisville Mayor Craig Greenberg, to assist her with her Instagram account by creating and providing content and offering advice. The texts also show Rachel Greenberg, described by the administration as a volunteer, instructed the staffer to edit posts on the mayor’s Instagram account. Two sources said the mayor’s wife had a Metro Hall office, a government email address, and gave orders to staffers. Experts said that arrangement might violate the city’s ethics rules.
Minnesota – ‘Book Senator Hoffman to speak’: DFL state senator’s consulting firm raises ethical questions
Yahoo News – Ryan Faircloth (Minneapolis Star Tribune) | Published: 4/3/2024
Minnesota Sen. John Hoffman prominently touted his political status on his personal consulting firm’s website as recently as a week ago, prompting government ethics experts to question whether he was promoting his official position for personal gain. The homepage of the website for Hoffman Strategic Advisors featured a posed photograph of the senator inside the state Capitol. Hoffman said he always considers himself a senator and had not thought about the optics of promoting his position on his personal website.
Missouri – Recall of Columbia First Ward Councilperson Nick Knoth Passes
KOMU – Hunter Walterman | Published: 4/2/2024
Columbia City Councilperson Nick Knoth was recalled over his lobbying work outside the council. Knoth was elected for a three-year term in April 2023 and took a job as a lobbyist for a trade association for real estate agents later that year. In October, a group of voters launched a campaign to recall Knoth, arguing his position amounted to a conflict-of-interest.
Nebraska – Nebraska Lawmakers Vote Against Trump-Fueled Push to Change Electoral Vote System
MSN – Patrick Svitek and Michael Scherer (Washington Post) | Published: 4/4/2024
Donald Trump’s push to get the Nebraska Legislature to change the way it awards electoral votes faced a major setback when lawmakers voted to prevent the change from being attached to an unrelated bill. Nebraska is one of only two states that divide electoral votes among statewide and congressional district winners. But Gov. Jim Pillen and Trump endorsed a proposal to return the state to a winner-take-all system.
New Jersey – New Jersey’s Unique Ballot Design Struck Down by Judge
MSN – Azi Paybarah (Washington Post) | Published: 3/29/2024
New Jersey’s unique way of displaying county-endorsed candidates on the ballot was struck down by a federal judge after a lawsuit by U.S. Rep. Andy Kim, who is running for Senate, and two other Democrats running for Congress, who called the design unfair and unconstitutional. The state’s ballot design process is unlike any other in the nation, and it allows parties to place their endorsed candidates in a specific portion of the ballot known as “the line.”
New York – Meet NYC’s New Campaign Finance Watchdog, Arriving Amid Probe into Mayor Adams’ Campaign
Gothamist – Brigid Bergin | Published: 3/27/2024
The New York City Campaign Finance Board took a reputational hit last year when then-Executive Director Beth Rotman was asked to resign over allegations of mismanagement. As the agency’s new leader, Paul S. Ryan is now responsible for charting the board’s path forward amid concerns over its oversight of campaigns, especially that of Mayor Eric Adams. “I’ve long considered this to be a model agency administering model laws for the country at a time when democracy in many places is really in crisis …,” Ryan said.
New York – Trump Ramps Up Attacks on Judges, Sparking Concerns as Criminal Trial Nears
MSN – Marianne LeVine, Clara Ence Morse, and Shayna Jacobs (Washington Post) | Published: 4/1/2024
Donald Trump is ramping up efforts to disparage judges overseeing his criminal and civil cases, reprising a long-standing strategy and prompting growing concerns from legal experts. The presumptive Republican presidential nominee’s approach, part of an election-year attempt to portray the judicial system as weaponized against him, was evident in a slew of attacks. Trump’s personal attacks against the daughter of the New York judge overseeing a hush money case prompted the judge to expand an existing gag order to include his family and the district attorney’s family.
New York – How a California Billionaire Known for Auto Loans Provided Trump’s Bond
MSN – Michael Kranish and Jonathan O’Connell (Washington Post) | Published: 4/2/2024
Donald Trump struggled to post a bond for more than $450 million to keep authorities from seizing his properties, billionaire Don Hankey and his wife started discussing a solution: Hankey’s business could cover it. But when a court reduced the bond to $175 million and Trump said he had the cash to post it himself, the matter seemed moot. Then the Trump team revived the talks and asked Hankey if he would back the new amount. Hankey agreed.
New York – Lobbyist Dating Carl Heastie Cleared to Return to Assembly – and Ethics Attorney Quits
New York Focus – Chris Bragg | Published: 3/26/2024
The lobbyist dating New York State Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie has been cleared to return to work at the Assembly. A spokesperson for the Greater New York Laborers-Employers Cooperation and Education Trust said after being barred on the advice of its former ethics lawyer, legislative and communications director Rebecca Lamorte can resume lobbying the Assembly, including Heastie’s staff, but not the speaker himself. After Lamorte was cleared to return, the former ethics attorney quit.
New York – Ex-NYPD Deputy Inspector Sentenced in Mayor Adams Campaign Straw Donor Scheme
Yahoo News – Molly Crane-Newman (New York Daily News) | Published: 4/2/2024
Dwayne Montgomery, a former New York Police Department deputy inspector who was friendly with Mayor Eric Adams, was sentenced to community service for his ringleader role in a straw donor scheme that gamed the system to boost Adams’ 2021 City Hall run and curry political favors. The cash funneled to Adams’ campaign in others’ names triggered a major injection of cash from the Campaign Finance Board that matches donations of up to $250 by eight-to-one, allowing the scheme’s architects to subvert caps on how much they could give.
North Carolina – Court Rejects Claim Challenging North Carolina Map for Diluting Black Vote
MSN – Rachel Weiner and Dan Rosenzweig-Ziff (Washington Post) | Published: 3/28/2024
A federal appellate court rejected an emergency challenge to North Carolina’s Republican-drawn legislative map, all but ensuring elections will go forward this year under contested lines drawn up in 2023 that Democrats and voting rights advocates say were created to weaken Black representation. That means 2024 elections will go forward with a map experts say will help Republicans retain a supermajority in the state Legislature. The new maps are also expected to give Republicans at least three more seats in Congress.
Ohio – The Randazzler: Court records detail chummy relationship between Sam Randazzo, FirstEnergy
Yahoo News – Jessie Balmert (Cincinnati Enquirer) | Published: 4/1/2024
Former Public Utilities Commission of Ohio Chairperson Sam Randazzo had a close, chummy relationship with ex-executives of FirstEnergy and its allies. For example, Randazzo texted an image of himself dressed as a superhero and surrounded by terms like “Randazzler” to some of the executives. But Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost alleges Randazzo’s sophomoric communication with FirstEnergy leaders extended beyond memes to a “pay-to-play” scheme at ratepayers’ expense.
Oklahoma – Gov. Stitt Task Force Calls for Changing Campaign Donation Limits
Yahoo News – Nolan Clay (Oklahoman) | Published: 4/2/2024
A task force created by Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt is calling for no limits on how much money state politicians can accept from individuals in campaign donations. The Governor’s Task Force on Campaign Finance and Election Threats said a change is needed to combat the impact of “dark money” groups. A candidate currently can accept $3,300 from an individual per election. Fewer than a dozen states have no limits on individual donations.
Oklahoma – Oklahoma Official with White Nationalist Ties Is Ousted in Recall Vote
Yahoo News – Brandy Zadrozny, Nnamdi Egwuonwu, and Micki Fahner (NBC News) | Published: 4/3/2024
Voters in Enid, Oklahoma, removed city Councilperson Judd Blevins over his ties to white nationalist groups. He faced the recall vote after local activists learned he had marched alongside neo-Nazis in Charlottesville, Virginia, in 2017 and led an Oklahoma chapter of the white nationalist group Identity Evropa. Blevins will be replaced by Cheryl Patterson, a former teacher who campaigned on a return to “normalcy” for this small city, which was divided by the furor over Blevins.
Oregon – Gov. Tina Kotek Signs Historic Campaign Finance Bill
MSN – Carlos Fuentes (Portland Oregonian) | Published: 4/3/2024
Gov. Tina Kotek signed into law a bill that will limit the amount of money that individuals and groups can contribute to campaigns starting in 2027. The law is historic for Oregon, which has seen increasingly large sums of money poured into campaigns. The bill cleared the Legislature with overwhelming support. Good government groups, labor unions, and business groups, negotiated the details of the legislation.
South Carolina – South Carolina Latest State to Use Congressional Map Deemed Illegal
MSN – Patrick Marley (Washington Post) | Published: 3/28/2024
In a scenario that has played out in three states in recent years, a federal court ruled time had run out to draw a new congressional district in South Carolina and the state would have to proceed this fall with an existing election map the court had previously deemed illegal. The ruling echoes redistricting cases in other Southern states where courts found congressional maps violated the voting rights of Black voters and other people of color but allowed them to be used anyway, at least temporarily.
Texas – Texas Appeals Court Overturns Crystal Mason’s Conviction, 5-Year Sentence for Illegal Voting
MSN – Karen Brooks Harper (Texas Tribune) | Published: 3/28/2024
A Texas appeals court overturned the illegal voting conviction of Crystal Mason, who was given a five-year prison sentence for casting a provisional ballot in the 2016 election while on supervised release for federal tax evasion. The court said there was no evidence Mason knew she was ineligible to vote when she cast her ballot, which is a condition that must be met to convict her of illegal voting. The case thrust Mason, who is Black, into the political fray amid a Republican-led crackdown on voter fraud, partly fueled by baseless claims of rampant illegal voting.
Texas – Texas Could Require Social Media Influencers to Disclose Paid Political Posts
MSN – Robert Downen (Texas Tribune) | Published: 3/28/2024
The Texas Ethics Commission gave initial approval to a proposal that would require social media users to disclose if they are being paid to share or create political advertisements. The action comes just months after it was reported that a secretive and politically connected company called Influenceable LLC paid internet influencers to defend state Attorney General Ken Paxton ahead of his impeachment trial. The proposed rule could be finalized at the commission’s next meeting in June.
Virginia – A Skill Game Company Gave a Va. Senator a $1.9K Trip. No One Will Explain It
Virginia Mercury – Graham Moomaw | Published: 4/1/2024
In 2022, Virginia Sen. Bryce Reeves disclosed a campaign finance report that skill game company Pace-O-Matic paid for a trip he took worth $1,900. Pace-O-Matic was hosting hundreds of guests in Wyoming at Cheyenne Frontier Days. But the campaign finance report gave no indication where Reeves went on the dime of a company that has lobbied the General Assembly for permission to put slot machine lookalikes in convenience stores and truck stops. Under the current rule, lawmakers cannot accept more than $108 in gifts from any single lobbying interest per calendar year, but there are several exceptions to that limit.
Washington – Washington State Legislative Maps Survive Supreme Court Appeal in Latest Battle Over Latino Voting Rights
Courthouse News Service – Kelsey Reichmann | Published: 4/2/2024
The U.S. Supreme Court refused to block the use of Washington state’s new legislative district maps that give Latino voters greater representation. A Republican lawmaker and two voters asked the justices to allow the state’s 2024 election to move forward under a map that was found to have violated a section of the Voting Rights Act that prohibits race discrimination. A lower court judge recently enacted a remedial map after claims of Latino vote dilution, but the Republicans say the new map is more discriminatory than the first.
Wisconsin – Wisconsin Becomes Latest State to Ban Private Funding of Elections
MSN – Patrick Marley (Washington Post) | Published: 4/2/2024
Wisconsin voters opted to ban private funding for election administration, joining more than two dozen states that have ended or limited the practice after Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and his wife spent $350 million to help local governments run elections during the coronavirus pandemic. They also approved a second proposal that limits who can perform election-related duties. Both measures were initiated by Republican state legislators.
Wisconsin – What Are Wisconsin’s Biggest Lobbying Law Violation Settlements Since 2016?
PBS Wisconsin – Hina Suzuki (The Badger Project) | Published: 3/26/2024
Wisconsin has strict lobbying laws – so strict that lobbyists are not allowed to give anything of monetary value to the politicians and government officials they lobby. If a lobbyist breaks the rules, the Wisconsin Ethics Commission will negotiate a settlement with the lobbyist or lobbying organization in lieu of civil litigation. Money received from settlements goes to the Common School Fund, the primary, and often only, funding source for school libraries in the state. The Badger Project obtained a list of the largest lobbying fines since 2016.
April 4, 2024 •
Thursday’s LobbyComply News Roundup
Campaign Finance New York: “Ex-NYPD Deputy Inspector Sentenced in Mayor Adams Campaign Straw Donor Scheme” by Molly Crane-Newman (New York Daily News) for Yahoo News Oklahoma: “Gov. Stitt Task Force Calls for Changing Campaign Donation Limits” by Nolan Clay (Oklahoman) for Yahoo News Elections […]
Campaign Finance
New York: “Ex-NYPD Deputy Inspector Sentenced in Mayor Adams Campaign Straw Donor Scheme” by Molly Crane-Newman (New York Daily News) for Yahoo News
Oklahoma: “Gov. Stitt Task Force Calls for Changing Campaign Donation Limits” by Nolan Clay (Oklahoman) for Yahoo News
Elections
Florida: “With Abortion Ballot Question, a ‘Path to Relevance’ for Democrats in Florida?” by Patricia Mazzei (New York Times) for Yahoo News
Ethics
Alabama: “Alabama House Approves Legislation Overhauling State Ethics Code” by Alander Rocha for Alabama Reflector
National: “Trump Special Counsel Fires Back at Cannon Order That Could Disrupt Case” by Perry Stein and Devlin Barrett (Washington Post) for MSN
National: “To Comply with Court, Federal Agency Lets White People Claim Social Disadvantage” by Julian Mark (Washington Post) for MSN
Minnesota: “‘Book Senator Hoffman to speak’: DFL state senator’s consulting firm raises ethical questions” by Ryan Faircloth (Minneapolis Star Tribune) for Yahoo News
New York: “How a California Billionaire Known for Auto Loans Provided Trump’s Bond” by Michael Kranish and Jonathan O’Connell (Washington Post) for MSN
Legislative Issues
National: “Freedom Caucuses Push for Conservative State Laws, but Getting Attention Is Their Big Success” by Elaine Povich (Stateline) for Yahoo News
Lobbying
Missouri: “Recall of Columbia First Ward Councilperson Nick Knoth Passes” by Hunter Walterman for KOMU
April 3, 2024 •
Wednesday’s LobbyComply News Roundup
Elections Georgia: “Georgia Lawmakers Approve New Election Rules That Could Impact 2024 Presidential Contest” by Sudhin Thanawala and Jeff Amy (Associated Press) for Yahoo News Ethics National: “Appeals Court Sides with Judge Who Threatened Peter Navarro with Contempt” by Rachel Weiner (Washington Post) for […]
Elections
Georgia: “Georgia Lawmakers Approve New Election Rules That Could Impact 2024 Presidential Contest” by Sudhin Thanawala and Jeff Amy (Associated Press) for Yahoo News
Ethics
National: “Appeals Court Sides with Judge Who Threatened Peter Navarro with Contempt” by Rachel Weiner (Washington Post) for MSN
Kentucky: “Louisville Mayor’s Wife Repeatedly Turned to City Worker for Social Media Help, Texts Show” by Eleanor McCrary and Josh Wood (Louisville Courier Journal) for Yahoo News
New York: “Trump Ramps Up Attacks on Judges, Sparking Concerns as Criminal Trial Nears” by Marianne LeVine, Clara Ence Morse, and Shayna Jacobs (Washington Post) for MSN
Ohio: “The Randazzler: Court records detail chummy relationship between Sam Randazzo, FirstEnergy” by Jessie Balmert (Cincinnati Enquirer) for Yahoo News
Virginia: “A Skill Game Company Gave a Va. Senator a $1.9K Trip. No One Will Explain It” by Graham Moomaw for Virginia Mercury
Lobbying
Wisconsin: “What Are Wisconsin’s Biggest Lobbying Law Violation Settlements Since 2016?” by Hina Suzuki (The Badger Project) for PBS Wisconsin
Redistricting
Florida: “Federal Court Upholds DeSantis-Backed Congressional Map” by Gary Fineout (Associated Press) for Yahoo News
April 2, 2024 •
GAO’s Report on Lobbying Compliance for 2023
On April 1, the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) released its audit of federal lobbying compliance for 2023. For the audit, the GAO reviewed a random sample of 98 quarterly disclosure reports filed for the third and fourth quarters of […]
On April 1, the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) released its audit of federal lobbying compliance for 2023.
For the audit, the GAO reviewed a random sample of 98 quarterly disclosure reports filed for the third and fourth quarters of calendar year 2022 and the first and second quarters of calendar year 2023.
They also reviewed random samples of 160 LD-203 reports for the year-end 2022 and midyear 2023 reports.
Among its findings, the GAO concluded 97% of filers of lobbying disclosure reports were able to provide documentation to support reported income and expenses, 7% of LD-203 reports were missing reportable contributions, and 94% of lobbyists who filed new registrations also filed LD-2 reports as required for the quarter in which they first registered.
The audit estimates at least 23% of all lobbying disclosure reports did not properly disclose formerly held covered positions.
The 56-page report is titled “2023 Lobbying Disclosure: Observations on Compliance with Requirements.”
April 2, 2024 •
Tuesday’s LobbyComply News Roundup
Campaign Finance National: “FEC Fines Mike Braun Senate Committee $159k for Campaign Finance Violation” by Kayla Dwyer (Indianapolis Star) for MSN New York: “Meet NYC’s New Campaign Finance Watchdog, Arriving Amid Probe into Mayor Adams’ Campaign” by Brigid Bergin for Gothamist Elections New Jersey: “New […]
Campaign Finance
National: “FEC Fines Mike Braun Senate Committee $159k for Campaign Finance Violation” by Kayla Dwyer (Indianapolis Star) for MSN
New York: “Meet NYC’s New Campaign Finance Watchdog, Arriving Amid Probe into Mayor Adams’ Campaign” by Brigid Bergin for Gothamist
Elections
New Jersey: “New Jersey’s Unique Ballot Design Struck Down by Judge” by Azi Paybarah (Washington Post) for MSN
Texas: “Texas Appeals Court Overturns Crystal Mason’s Conviction, 5-Year Sentence for Illegal Voting” by Karen Brooks Harper (Texas Tribune) for MSN
Ethics
Kansas: “Does Wichita Mayor’s Trip Abroad Fall Under City’s Ethics Policy? Here’s What We Found Out” by Chance Swaim (Wichita Eagle) for Yahoo News
National: “From Pizzagate to the 2020 Election: Forcing liars to pay or apologize” by Elizabeth Williamson (New York Times) for DNyuz
Lobbying
Arizona: “UA President Robbins OK’d Effort to Erase Millions in Fines Against Fraudulent Online University” by Hannah Dreyfus and Helen Rummel (Arizona Republic) for Yahoo News
Redistricting
South Carolina: “South Carolina Latest State to Use Congressional Map Deemed Illegal” by Patrick Marley (Washington Post) for MSN
April 1, 2024 •
Monday’s LobbyComply News Roundup
Campaign Finance Colorado: “Colorado Appeals Court Upholds Fine, Requirement for ‘Dark Money’ Group to Disclose Spending” by Michael Karlik for Colorado Politics National: “How Corporate PAC Money Could End Up in the Personal Coffers of Sens. JD Vance and Markwayne Mullin” by Brian Metzger […]
Campaign Finance
Colorado: “Colorado Appeals Court Upholds Fine, Requirement for ‘Dark Money’ Group to Disclose Spending” by Michael Karlik for Colorado Politics
National: “How Corporate PAC Money Could End Up in the Personal Coffers of Sens. JD Vance and Markwayne Mullin” by Brian Metzger (Business Insider) for MSN
Texas: “Texas Could Require Social Media Influencers to Disclose Paid Political Posts” by Robert Downen (Texas Tribune) for MSN
Elections
Georgia: “GOP Official Who Claimed 2020 Was Stolen Voted Illegally Nine Times, Judge Rules” by Amy Wang (Washington Post) for MSN
Ethics
California: “Former L.A. Deputy Mayor Raymond Chan Found Guilty in Sprawling City Hall Corruption Case” by David Zahniser and Dakota Smith (Los Angeles Times) for MSN
National: “Trump’s Social Media Company Opens New Avenue for Conflicts of Interest” by Sharon LaFraniere (New York Times) for Seattle Times
Lobbying
New York: “Lobbyist Dating Carl Heastie Cleared to Return to Assembly – and Ethics Attorney Quits” by Chris Bragg for New York Focus
Redistricting
North Carolina: “Court Rejects Claim Challenging North Carolina Map for Diluting Black Vote” by Rachel Weiner and Dan Rosenzweig-Ziff (Washington Post) for MSN
March 29, 2024 •
News You Can Use Digest – March 29, 2024
National/Federal Trump’s Legal Fees Are Sky High. An Elaborate PAC Scheme Is Helping Pay Them – for Now MSN – Erin Mansfield and Zac Anderson (USA Today) | Published: 3/24/2024 A pro-Donald Trump super PAC has been transferring millions of dollars every […]
National/Federal
Trump’s Legal Fees Are Sky High. An Elaborate PAC Scheme Is Helping Pay Them – for Now
MSN – Erin Mansfield and Zac Anderson (USA Today) | Published: 3/24/2024
A pro-Donald Trump super PAC has been transferring millions of dollars every month to the former president’s fund for paying his legal bills. The transfers have kept the fund, Save America, afloat as it bled tens of millions of dollars on legal bills since a New York grand jury indicted Trump, the first in a wave of criminal indictments and civil judgments against him. Save America is a type of fund called a leadership PAC that can only accept $5,000 per election cycle from each donor but has few restrictions on how it spends money. It is being funded by Make America Great Again Inc., a super PAC that can raise unlimited amounts of money.
Rep. Mike Gallagher to Resign in April, Narrowing House GOP Vote Margin to 1
MSN – Patrick Svitek and Marianna Sotomayor (Washington Post) | Published: 3/22/2024
U.S. Rep. Mike Gallagher announced he will resign effective April 19, leaving the slim House GOP majority with a one-vote margin that will make it even harder to pass legislation. Under Wisconsin law, Gallagher’s seat is likely to remain vacant until January, with the November general election to determine who wins his seat. The realities of the thin majority were on full display as the House passed a $1.2 trillion spending bill by a narrow margin.
Trump Media Merger Wins Investor Approval, Netting Trump a Potential Windfall
MSN – Drew Harwell (Washington Post) | Published: 3/22/2024
Shareholders voted to take Donald Trump’s media company public, a long-delayed move that will open the owner of Truth Social to stock-market investors and grant Trump a stake worth billions of dollars that he could use to pay down his legal debts. Some critics have said Trump Media is a “meme stock” with a more than $5 billion valuation they say is out of sync with its financial outlook. Trump Media lost $49 million in the first nine months of last year and brought in $3.4 million in revenue.
Federal Officials Say 20 Have Been Charged for Threatening Election Workers
MSN – Yvonne Wingett Sanchez and Perry Stein (Washington Post) | Published: 3/24/2024
Justice Department officials said reports of widespread threats against officials running the 2020 and 2022 elections have resulted in charges against roughly 20 people, with more than a half dozen receiving sentences between one and three-and-one-half years. But the federal officials said at a news conference that it remains to be seen if the stiff sentences will serve as an effective deterrent to would-be-criminals in future election cycles.
NBC Reverses Decision to Hire Ronna McDaniel After On-Air Backlash
MSN – Jeremy Barr (Washington Post) | Published: 3/26/2024
Amid a chorus of on-air protest from some of the network’s biggest stars, NBC announced that former Republican National Committee Chairperson Ronna McDaniel will no longer be joining the network as a paid contributor. The network had announced four days earlier they were bringing McDaniel on board to provide “expert insight and analysis” on politics. But the company’s on-air personalities disagreed vehemently, saying McDaniel’s promotion of Donald Trump’s false election-fraud claims disqualified her from a role in their news divisions.
No Labels, No Candidate: Rejections pile up as time runs short
Seattle Times – Rebecca Davis O’Brien and Reid Epstein (New York Times) | Published: 3/22/2024
No Labels, the group that for months has pledged to run a centrist presidential ticket in the event of a rematch between President Biden and Donald Trump, is running out of time to recruit a standard-bearer after a string of rejections. With a number of prominent prospective candidates saying no thanks in recent months, some No Labels members and leaders have grown frustrated with the failure to advance a ticket. Still, the group’s leadership continues to hold out hope for November, even as the possibility of outright defeating both Biden and Trump seems increasingly remote.
Threats Against Politicians Are Prevalent. The FEC Wants to Let Campaigns Pay for Security.
Yahoo News – Zach Montellaro (Politico) | Published: 3/27/2024
The FEC wants to allow candidates to use campaign funds for a wide range of security measures, an expansion of what campaign accounts can be used for amid a heated political environment. The proposed changes would allow federal candidates to use their campaign funds to pay for things like as security personnel, cameras or motion detectors at their homes, and cybersecurity services – so long as these purchases “address ongoing dangers or threats” arising from their status as federal candidates or officials and they pay a fair market value.
How Justice Thomas’s ‘Nearly Adopted Daughter’ Became His Law Clerk
Yahoo News – Steve Eder and Abbie VanSickle (New York Times) | Published: 3/28/2024
One of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas’s law clerks for the court’s next term will be Crystal Clanton, a conservative organizer turned lawyer, who has such a close relationship with Thomas and his wife that the couple informally refer to her as their “nearly adopted daughter.” For Thomas’s critics, the selection of Clanton is blatant favoritism, if not nepotism, particularly for a justice already under an ethics cloud for revelations about his gifts and travel from wealthy benefactors.
From the States and Municipalities
Arizona – Deepfake Kari Lake Video Shows Coming Chaos of AI in Elections
MSN – Reis Thebault (Washington Post) | Published: 3/24/2024
Journalist Hank Stephenson has made a living out of detecting lies and political spin. But even he was fooled at first when he watched the video of one of his home state’s most prominent congressional candidates. Kari Lake, the Republican U.S. Senate hopeful from Arizona, was on his phone screen, speaking words written by a software engineer. Stephenson was watching a deepfake, an artificial-intelligence-generated video produced by his news organization, Arizona Agenda, to underscore the dangers of AI misinformation in an election year.
California – L.A. City Councilmember Curren Price Accused of 21 Violations of City Ethics Laws
MSN – James Queally, David Zahniser, and Dakota Smith (Los Angeles Times) | Published: 3/27/2024
The Los Angeles Ethics Commission has privately accused city Councilperson Curren Price of voting on matters in which his wife had a financial interest. The commission accuses Price of 21 violations of the city’s ethics laws, many of them similar to those filed by Los Angeles County District Attorney George Gascón against Price last year. In the criminal case, Price is accused of voting to support projects for developers that had done business with a consulting company founded by his wife. The allegations from the commission mostly involve violations of conflict-of-interest laws or the council member’s failure to fully disclose economic interests.
California – Judge Recommends Conservative Lawyer John Eastman Be Disbarred in California
MSN – Maegan Vazquez (Washington Post) | Published: 3/27/2024
A California judge recommended that John Eastman be disbarred in the state over his role in developing a legal strategy to help Donald Trump stay in power after his 2020 election loss. State Bar Court of California Judge Yvette Roland ordering that Eastman’s law license be put on “involuntary inactive” status. The California Supreme Court will issue a final ruling on the matter, which Eastman can appeal.
Colorado – Colorado Appeals Court Upholds Campaign Finance Fine for Ex-State Senate Candidate
Colorado Politics – Michael Karlik | Published: 3/26/2024
Colorado’s second-highest court agreed that a former state Senate candidate misinterpreted campaign finance law and failed to file the proper paperwork upon declaring her candidacy. Although Suzanne Taheri believed she had satisfied Colorado’s campaign finance requirements by submitting a copy of her federal tax return shortly after she became a candidate, an administrative law judge concluded that was not the correct form of disclosure.
District of Columbia – Former DOJ Official Jeffrey Clark Could Face Disbarment for Aiding Trump
MSN – Keith Alexander (Washington Post) | Published: 3/26/2024
Jeffrey Clark, a former senior Justice Department official who sought to use the agency’s influence to help reverse Donald Trump’s 2020 election defeat, violated legal ethics and should be sanctioned professionally, even prohibited from practicing law in the nation’s capital, an attorney for the District of Columbia Bar told a disciplinary panel. The Office of Disciplinary Counsel alleged Clark engaged in dishonest conduct when he drafted a letter he wanted the Justice Department to send to Georgia officials, demanding the state Legislature call a special session to examine votes in the presidential election.
Florida – DeSantis Tourism Board, Disney Reach Settlement to End Legal Feud
MSN – Lori Rozsa and Aaron Gregg (Washington Post) | Published: 3/27/2024
The board appointed by Gov. Ron DeSantis to oversee Disney’s former special taxing district agreed to a settlement with the company, capping a legal feud over who should control development at the theme park complex. The Central Florida Tourism Oversight District, made up of DeSantis appointees, agreed to drop its lawsuit against the company in exchange for Disney relinquishing some control over its property.
Florida – Florida Donors with State Business Fueled End of DeSantis Presidential Run
MSN – Michael Scherer, Josh Dawsey, and Hannah Knowles (Washington Post) | Published: 3/27/2024
The biggest donors in Republican politics largely shunned Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis after his presidential campaign began to falter last summer. So, his allies turned to donors the governor still held sway over because of his day job. Lobbyist friends and fundraisers of DeSantis called Florida clients asking them to contribute to the super PACs paying for television ads and field operations and many of those people gave. The pitch, according to one person who received a call, was DeSantis was likely to remain a powerful governor in the state.
Florida – In Public, Suarez Says He’s Not Ken Griffin’s Attorney. Under Oath, He Said Differently
MSN – Sarah Blaskey and Alexandra Glorioso (Miami Herald) | Published: 3/21/2024
Miami Mayor Francis Suarez has said he has no conflict-of-interest when it comes to his public support for billionaire Ken Griffin, a major client of the law firm where Suarez is employed. But in an interview conducted under oath in December, Suarez contradicted previous public statements and said he is one of Griffin’s attorneys, a potential violation of ethics laws prohibiting elected officials from working for anyone who has business before their government.
Florida – Centners Downplay Ties to Arrested Miami Commissioner, Say They ‘Sprinkle Money Around’
MSN – Tess Riski, Joey Flechas, and Sarah Blaskey (Miami Herald) | Published: 3/24/2024
A wealthy couple at the center of the state’s money laundering and bribery case against a former Miami city commissioner told prosecutors they did not know the mechanics of how $245,000 from their business’s account ended up in the commissioner’s political committee coffers, according to audio recordings of interviews. David and Leila Centner, the operators of the private school Centner Academy, told prosecutors that as a “very high net-worth family,” they “sprinkle money around” and often approve large transactions without knowing the details.
Georgia – Georgia Election Official Seeking New Term Voted on Cases Involving His Lobbyist Clients
Just the News – Natalia Mittelstadt | Published: 3/22/2024
State Election Board member Edward Lindsey is up for reconfirmation before the Georgia House amid new revelations he has voted on cases involving counties for which he is a lobbyist. Lindsey is a lobbyist for both Cobb County and DeKalb County. He is also a registered lobbyist for Dentons, a global law and lobbying firm that has contracted with both Cobb County and DeKalb County. The elections board has had multiple complaints regarding both county’s elections during Lindsey’s tenure, which he has been involved in and voted on.
Kansas – In the Kansas House, When Lobbyists Ask for New Laws, Their Names Go on the Bills
Yahoo News – John Hanna (Associated Press) | Published: 3/26/2024
The Kansas House is making it a little easier for the state’s residents to find out who is lobbying its members. Besides a number and official sponsor, each bill now lists who asked for it, be it a lawmaker at someone else’s request or an individual lobbyist for a specific client. The change started in January. While at least a handful of states require lobbyists to list specific bills of interest to them in reports open for public inspection, the Council of State Governments knows of no other state legislative chamber that is listing lobbyists and groups on its bills.
Louisiana – How to Elect a Louisiana Sheriff: Runoff, recount, reversal, repeat
MSN – Molly Hennessy-Fiske (Washington Post) | Published: 3/24/2024
When Caddo Parish Sheriff Steve Prator announced last summer that he would step down after more than four decades in law enforcement, residents braced for a divisive campaign. Yet few could have predicted they would have to go to the polls three times in six months to pick a successor, elections fraught with racial tensions and legal wrangling over voting rights that mirror national struggles.
Montana – Montana Supreme Court Strikes Down Voting Restrictions
MSN – Patrick Svitek (Washington Post) | Published: 3/27/2024
The Montana Supreme Court struck down four laws the state’s Republican-led Legislature passed in 2021 to restrict voting. The laws ended same-day voter registration in most cases, eliminated student ID cards as a permitted form of voter identification, and sought to curtail paid ballot-collection efforts. They also outlawed absentee ballots for people who would be 18 years old by Election Day.
New Jersey – Tammy Murphy Drops Out of U.S. Senate Race in Stunning Announcement
MSN – Brent Johnson (NJ Advance Media) | Published: 3/24/2024
New Jersey First Lady Tammy Murphy abruptly announced she has dropped her bid for U.S. Senate, a stunning development in what had increasingly become a bitter and dramatic Democratic primary for the state’s seat currently held by indicted Sen. Robert Menendez. Murphy was aiming to become the first woman ever to represent New Jersey in the upper chamber of Congress. Now, she leaves the race four months after entering it and two months before the June 4 primary.
New Jersey – In New Jersey, Some See Old-School Politics Giving Way to ‘Spring’ Amid Corruption Scandal
Yahoo News – Mike Catalini (Associated Press) | Published: 3/25/2024
New Jersey has the reputation as a home to backroom political dealing. But advocates hoping to break the boss-dominated culture in this Democratic stronghold say the ongoing corruption case against U.S. Sen. Bob Menendez might have opened the door to a new era in Garden State politics. Many progressives were cheered when Tammy Murphy withdrew from the Senate primary, since they viewed her as someone who was benefiting from a system they argue gives party leaders undue influence. The well-connected wife of Gov. Phil Murphy dropped her bid to succeed Menendez.
New York – Trump Wins Partial Stay of Fraud Judgment, Allowed to Post $175 Million
MSN – Mark Berman, Jonathan O’Connell, and Shayna Jacobs (Washington Post) | Published: 3/25/2024
An appeals court panel in New York said Donald Trump would be allowed to post a $175 million bond to stave off enforcement of a nearly $500 million civil judgment against him and his business. While the five judges on the panel eased the financial strain on Trump, they did not erase it entirely. They gave Trump 10 days to come up with the reduced bond of $175 million, saying they would only delay enforcement of the full amount if he put up that lower figure within this window and it is not immediately clear how he will come up with the money.
MSN – Kara Scannell, Lauren del Valle and Jeremy Herb (CNN) | Published: 3/27/2024
A New York judge imposed a gag order on Donald Trump, limiting the former president from making statements about potential witnesses in the criminal trial relating to hush money payments scheduled to begin in April. Judge Juan Merchan said Trump cannot make statements about attorneys, court staff, or the family members of prosecutors or lawyers intended to interfere with the case. Trump is also barred from making statements about any potential or actual juror.
New York – N.Y. Judge Sets Firm April 15 Trial Date in Trump’s Historic Hush Money Case
MSN – Shayna Jacobs and Devlin Barrett (Washington Post) | Published: 3/25/2024
Donald Trump will begin his first criminal trial on April 15, a judge ruled, at the end of a contentious hearing in which he repeatedly slammed the former president’s legal team for claims of prosecutorial misconduct the judge said were unfounded. New York Supreme Court Justice Juan Merchan rejected Trump’s assertion that the Manhattan district attorney’s office acted improperly with regard to newly available evidence. He also insisted the trial over reimbursement of an alleged hush money payment was back on track after a delay.
New York – Adams Adviser Frank Carone Pulls Lobbying Registration as His Firm Reveals City, State Targets
New York Daily News – Chris Sommerfeldt | Published: 3/21/2024
Frank Carone, New York City Mayor Eric Adams’ ex-chief of staff, rescinded his lobbying registration earlier recently – a move that coincided with his consulting firm revealing its other employees have lobbied officials in the administrations of both Adams and Gov. Kathy Hochul. In amended filings, Oaktree Solutions removed Carone’s name from the list of employees lobbying on behalf of the firm’s 18 clients. Asked why his name was scrubbed, Carone said he only registered to undergo lobbying training.
Ohio – Imprisoned Ex-Ohio Speaker Householder Hit with New Charges Alleging Misuse of Campaign Funds
MSN – Jake Zuckerman (Cleveland Plain Dealer) | Published: 3/25/2024
Former Ohio House Speaker Larry Householder is once again facing charges in the ever expanding state and federal bribery cases surrounding the passage of legislation in 2019. The newest charges go beyond Householder’s acceptance of a bribe from FirstEnergy that landed him in federal prison for 20 years. They allege he unlawfully used campaign funds to pay his criminal defense fees in the federal case and lied on state ethics forms that require candidates and office holders to disclose their earnings, assets, and liabilities.
Ohio – Ex-FirstEnergy Lobbyist Charged in Bribery Scheme Gets to Spend Easter at His Beach House, After All
MSN – Corey Shaffer (Cleveland Plain Dealer) | Published: 3/25/2024
A former FirstEnergy lobbyist charged in connection with the largest bribery scandal in Ohio’s history will get to spend the Easter holiday at his vacation home in an upscale South Carolina beach community. Summit County Common Pleas Court Judge Susan Baker Ross placed several conditions on Dowling, including giving the court a detailed itinerary of his weeklong trip, contact information for everyone who will be staying with him, and outfitting his phone with a GPS tracker in addition to the ankle monitor he is already wearing.
MSN – Andrew Tobias (Cleveland Plain Dealer) | Published: 3/27/2024
A politically connected labor leader served as the foreperson for a grand jury that returned a new criminal indictment against former Ohio House Speaker Larry Householder, a development experts said raises questions about the impartiality of the process and that could pose future legal issues for Attorney General Dave Yost’s case. Legal experts said Dave Wondolowski’s role on the grand jury could raise problems because of his familiarity with Householder. Wondolowski was involved with issues surrounding House Bill 6, which is at the center of federal corruption charges against Householder and that spawned the new state case.
MSN – Carlos Fuentes (Portland Oregonian) | Published: 3/21/2024
Oregon Secretary of State LaVonne Griffin-Valade says her office needs more money and employees if it is to overhaul its outdated campaign finance filing system to adhere to new campaign finance rules lawmakers approved recently. Lawmakers did not allocate any money to implement the new limits and change the current filing system, which is nearly 20 years old, so Griffin-Valade plans to request at least $4.1 million from the Legislature’s Emergency Board.
Oregon – Portland Elections Office Finds Zenith Energy Violated City Lobbying Rules
Portland Mercury – Taylor Griggs | Published: 3/26/2024
Zenith Energy attempted to influence officials by communicating directly with city directors and commissioners to gain approval of a controversial land use document that allows the company to continue doing business in Portland, according to an investigation by City Auditor Simone Rede’s office. Rede said Zenith violated the law requiring organizations that spend more than eight hours or $1,000 lobbying city officials in any quarter to register and report the activity.
Pennsylvania – Philly Ethics Board Looks to Tighten Rules After Jeff Brown Super PAC Scuffle
Billy Penn – Meir Rinde | Published: 3/22/2024
After losing a court battle over alleged campaign finance improprieties during last year’s mayoral election, the Philadelphia Board of Ethics is moving to tighten its restrictions on spending by super PACs. The board is also asking a judge to throw out a lawsuit filed against the city by Jeff Brown, the supermarket magnate and former mayoral candidate, and a dark money super PAC that spent heavily to support his run. The revisions would make it clear that someone who plans to run for office cannot get around the limits by delaying the announcement of their candidacy, as Brown did.
Pennsylvania – Upgrades to PA Governor’s Mansion Bankrolled by Private Group That Won’t Disclose Donors, Full Cost
Spotlight PA – Angela Couloumbis | Published: 3/25/2024
The remodeling of the official residence of Pennsylvania’s governor will focus on bringing in new pieces of furniture, art, and other items to the public areas of the historic mansion. Beyond that, little is known about the scale, scope, or even the price tag for the redesign. Despite the involvement of Gov. Josh Shapiro’s aides in the project, no one will say who is managing it, raising money for it, or exactly who is paying for the bill.
Rhode Island – Former Top RI Official Ordered to Pay $5,000 Fine Over Infamous Philly Trip. What to Know.
MSN – Katherine Gregg and Patrick Anderson (Providence Journal) | Published: 3/26/2024
Former state official David Patten agreed to pay a $5,000 fine for his actions on a now-infamous trip to Philadelphia to visit a company seeking to redevelop Providence’s Cranston Street Armory. The Rhode Island Ethics Commission also voted to find probable cause that Gov. Daniel McKee’s former administration director, James Thorsen, violated the law by accepting a free lunch during that trip. This is the first time the commission has brought a case under the state procurement law since being granted authority to do so by the General Assembly.
South Dakota – South Dakota Ethanol Lobbying Entered a ‘Borderline,’ ‘Gray’ Area, Critics Say
Yahoo News – Dominik Dausch (Sioux Falls Argus Leader) | Published: 3/27/2024
When a bill that would open the door to Summit Carbon Solutions’ pipeline in South Dakota was about to head to the state House for debate, major ethanol companies came out in force to support the legislation. Busloads of people with ties to ethanol companies showed up at the Capitol’s doorstep. A media investigation found these companies reimbursed and, in one case, paid, employees and board members to lobby legislators in the days leading up to the vote on the bill. The state’s broadly written lobbyist laws lack clarity about compensating lobbyists.
Texas – Texas AG Ken Paxton Reaches Deal to End Securities Fraud Charges After 9 Years
MSN – Juan Lozano (Associated Press) | Published: 3/26/2024
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton agreed to pay nearly $300,000 in restitution under a deal to end criminal securities fraud charges that have shadowed him for nearly a decade. The announcement came just weeks before Paxton was set to stand trial on felony charges that could have led to a prison sentence. It was the closest Paxton has ever come to trial over accusations he duped investors in a technology startup near Dallas.
Wisconsin – Prosecutors in 3 Wisconsin Counties Decline to Pursue Charges Against Trump Committee, Lawmaker
MSN – Scott Bauer (Associated Press) | Published: 3/22/2024
Prosecutors in three Wisconsin counties declined to pursue felony charges of campaign finance violations against Donald Trump’s fundraising committee and a state lawmaker related to an effort to unseat Assembly Speaker Robin Vos. The prosecutors cited conflicts-of-interest, in some cases because they too are actively involved in their local Republican parties. The state Ethics Commission referred the charges to counties adjacent to the three that declined to prosecute. Ultimately, Attorney General Josh Kaul, could be asked to prosecute the cases.
Wisconsin – Robin Vos Slams Shadow Lobbying Effort on Electric Grid Construction Bill
MSN – Jessie Opien (Milwaukee Journal Sentinel) | Published: 3/21/2024
The intense lobbying efforts behind a bill that would have changed regulations for transmission line construction exposed problems with Wisconsin’s ethics laws, Assembly Speaker Robin Vos said. ” … For an entity to be able to donate to an outside group and have them do their lobbying for them, all unreportable, seems to me to be a … huge loophole in [the] law that we need to fix,” Vos said. The speaker named the conservative advocacy group Americans for Prosperity as a “prime” example of the issue, despite generally being politically aligned with the organization.
Wisconsin – Former Milwaukee Election Official Convicted of Absentee Ballot Fraud
MSN – Patrick Marley (Washington Post) | Published: 3/20/2024
A jury convicted a former Milwaukee election official of absentee ballot fraud and misconduct in office in an unusual case that pitted a self-proclaimed whistleblower against election conspiracy theorists. Kimberly Zapata served as deputy elections director in 2022, when baseless claims about elections circulated among Republicans, including in the state Legislature. Zapata has said the focus by some lawmakers on meritless issues frustrated her and she wanted to alert them to what she viewed as a true vulnerability in Wisconsin’s voting system.
March 28, 2024 •
Thursday’s LobbyComply News Roundup
Campaign Finance Colorado: “Colorado Appeals Court Upholds Campaign Finance Fine for Ex-State Senate Candidate” by Michael Karlik for Colorado Politics National: “Threats Against Politicians Are Prevalent. The FEC Wants to Let Campaigns Pay for Security.” by Zach Montellaro (Politico) for Yahoo News Florida: “Florida […]
Campaign Finance
Colorado: “Colorado Appeals Court Upholds Campaign Finance Fine for Ex-State Senate Candidate” by Michael Karlik for Colorado Politics
National: “Threats Against Politicians Are Prevalent. The FEC Wants to Let Campaigns Pay for Security.” by Zach Montellaro (Politico) for Yahoo News
Florida: “Florida Donors with State Business Fueled End of DeSantis Presidential Run” by Michael Scherer, Josh Dawsey, and Hannah Knowles (Washington Post) for MSN
Ethics
California: “L.A. City Councilmember Curren Price Accused of 21 Violations of City Ethics Laws” by James Queally, David Zahniser, and Dakota Smith (Los Angeles Times) for MSN
National: “NBC Reverses Decision to Hire Ronna McDaniel After On-Air Backlash” by Jeremy Barr (Washington Post) for MSN
New Jersey: “In New Jersey, Some See Old-School Politics Giving Way to ‘Spring’ Amid Corruption Scandal” by Mike Catalini (Associated Press) for Yahoo News
Ohio: “Cuyahoga County Grand Jury Foreperson Lobbied Publicly for House Bill 6. Why Was He Allowed to Hear Case Against Larry Householder?” by Andrew Tobias (Cleveland Plain Dealer) for MSN
Lobbying
Oregon: “Zenith Energy Violated City Code by Not Reporting Lobbying, City Auditor Says” by Gosia Wozniacka (Portland Oregonian) for MSN
South Dakota: “South Dakota Ethanol Lobbying Entered a ‘Borderline,’ ‘Gray’ Area, Critics Say” by Dominik Dausch (Sioux Falls Argus Leader) for Yahoo News
State and Federal Communications, Inc. provides research and consulting services for government relations professionals on lobbying laws, procurement lobbying laws, political contribution laws in the United States and Canada. Learn more by visiting stateandfed.com.