July 6, 2012 •
Illinois Affirmation Report Due in August
Lobbyists to affirm employer’s reports
The Illinois Secretary of State announced that the lobbyist affirmation statement for the period of January 1 to June 30, 2012 is due on August 4, 2012.
For this report, the lobbyists will have to affirm its employers’ reports are accurate as they pertain to the itemized expenditures.
July 6, 2012 •
Obama Tours Ohio
President Obama campaigns his way through Northern Ohio
Crowds gathered along Route 18 in the Montrose area of Summit County Thursday evening to witness President Obama’s tour bus make its way through Northeast Ohio. Eager Democrats and Obama fans filled the street corners, waiting anxiously for the president to pass by their local restaurants, stores and businesses.
Through his “Betting on Ohio” tour, Obama campaigned across the manufacturing belt of Northern Ohio on July 5, visiting the areas where he had received support during his election in 2008.
Obama arrived in Toledo on Thursday, traveling on a black secret-service bus to his first stop in Maumee, Ohio where he visited Wolcott House Museum. His tour took him across Northern Ohio, where he attended an ice cream social at Washington Park in Sandusky, and visited James Day Park in Parma, a suburb of Cleveland.
Obama endorsed his economic policies, presented his resolution to salvage American automakers Chrysler and General Motors, and compared his views to those of his Republican opponent, Mitt Romney.
“Throughout Ohio and Pennsylvania, President Obama will talk about his efforts over the last three years to get our economy back on track, doubling down on American workers by saving the auto industry, investing in manufacturing and bringing jobs back to America,” the Obama campaign said in a statement, according to CNN’s Ashley Killough.
The crowds cheered and waved as Obama’s tour bus passed through Montrose. After residing for the evening at the Double Tree Hotel in Fairlawn, Obama chose an Akron diner for breakfast, indulging in eggs and bacon at Ann’s Place restaurant on South Hawkins Avenue. He continued his tour Friday to Dobbins Elementary in Poland, Ohio, before heading to Pittsburgh.
July 6, 2012 •
Eye on the Races – July 6, 2012
Healthcare ruling already having impact on presidential race
Announcing their decision on the last day of the judicial term, the Supreme Court, in a 5-4 decision, upheld key parts of the Affordable Care Act (ACA). The decision of the Court is already playing a role in the Presidential and congressional elections as both sides look to paint the ruling in their favor.
The ruling was a win for the Obama Administration as the ACA was a major achievement of the President’s first term. The president’s campaign has used the decision to build support and highlight individuals who have been affected by the legislation. However, while the ACA was by and large upheld, the Court ruled that the individual mandate portion of the law is constitutional only as a tax, not as a penalty. A decision that has given fodder to the right to paint the legislation as a tax increase.
To complicate matters for Republicans, aides to former Gov. Mitt Romney came out in a couple of interviews over the last week stating they agreed with the administration that the mandate was in fact a penalty and not a tax putting the campaign at odds with many in the party. Eric Fehrnstrom, advisor to Gov. Romney, said during an interview with the Washington Post, “The governor disagreed with the ruling of the court, he agreed with the dissent that was written by Justice Scalia, that very clearly said that the mandate was not a tax.”
These comments forced Gov. Romney to clarify his position in an interview with CBS News on July 4th, stating, “Well, the Supreme Court has the final word. And their final word is that Obamacare is a tax. So it’s a tax.”
While both campaigns are still working to find the appropriate way to approach the ruling, polling suggests the issue may not be as important or at least not as currently relevant as previously thought. The Pew Research Center released a poll this week showing 45% of respondents either didn’t know what the court had ruled or thought most of the law had been struck down. Furthermore, 63% of people 18-29 years old either thought the law had been struck down or didn’t know.
While it’s almost certain that healthcare will become an issue in the campaign (the house has scheduled a full repeal vote for July 19) both President Obama and Gov. Romney have worked to pivot the focus of the dialogue to jobs and the economy. June employment numbers were released today showing the economy added 80k jobs leaving the unemployment rate at 8.2% for the second straight month.
July 6, 2012 •
State and Federal Communications is Celebrating 19 Years!
An exciting landmark for the company
Congratulations to Elizabeth Bartz, who is celebrating the 19th anniversary of State and Federal Communications, Inc. We had our monthly staff meeting today, so we took the opportunity to express our thanks.
Cleveland has a new casino downtown, the Horseshoe Casino in the Higbee building, which looks exciting. Many of us are eager to find out what it is like. So, we decided to have a little fun.
The staff presented Elizabeth with a night on the town in Cleveland – complete with a dinner at La Strada on trendy East 4th Street and the chance for a little gambling at the Horseshoe. We threw in good luck dice and a four leaf clover for good measure.
Good luck, Elizabeth!
We have a column in the office with Don Drumm stars on it – one for each anniversary the company celebrates. We are all proud to add a beautiful new star to the collection.
From all of the staff, we offer our best wishes, Elizabeth! Many years of health and prosperity to you.
Photos courtesy of Alexa Livadas and Nicolette Koozer.
July 6, 2012 •
Living Interns in Akron: A Nine-Part Mini-Story
Part Six: Davey Crockett
On the other side of the building, through a couple doors and down the hall is David Jones. David, at times, goes by Davey: Jones, or Crockett. A sophomore at Stark State in Canton, he studies Cisco Administration.
Davey stays busy being helpful. He fixes his family’s computers, he says, and upgrades his own. Sometimes he works on cars, and he takes things pretty easy over the summer.
For lunch, it seems he eats a very specific meal of turkey with pepper jack cheese, cherry yogurt, and an apple. David admits that this field is “far more complicated than I originally thought. Politics and lobbying in general are very complex subjects that I understand nothing about.”
This is David’s second job; he used to work food service back in his hometown—Norton, Ohio. He is excited to work here.
“I love it here,” he said. “It’s actually my field.” David works in IT, and is good at it.
July 6, 2012 •
News You Can Use Digest – July 6, 2012
Here are highlights from the latest edition of News You Can Use:
Federal:
Assets Offshore Raise Romney Wealth Questions
Do Election Laws Encourage Attack Ads in Campaigns?
From the States and Municipalities:
Arizona
Ex-Arizona Lawmaker Files $10 Million Claim against Phoenix
Colorado
Gessler Hit with Another Campaign Finance Lawsuit – But This One He May Actually Like
Delaware
Delaware Business to Pay $500,000 in Campaign Probe
Florida
New Ethics Policy Toughens Rules for Lobbying Orange School Leaders
Illinois
Wrigley Renovation Plans Stalled by Political Flap
Maryland
Sports Tickets Banned as Gifts for Baltimore County Elected Officials
Michigan
Cap on Michigan Campaign Donations Survives Challenge
Missouri
Missouri Election Season Arrives without Ethics Law
Oklahoma
Oklahoma Ethics Commission Considers Blackout Period for Filing Complaints
South Carolina
South Carolina Governor Cleared in Ethics Inquiry
Tennessee
Tim Burchett Subpoenas News Sentinel for Visitor Records, Surveillance Videos
Utah
Ruling Blocks Utah Ethics Initiative from Ballot
State and Federal Communications produces a weekly summary of national news, offering more than 80 articles per week focused on ethics, lobbying, and campaign finance.
News You Can Use is a news service provided at no charge only to clients of our online Executive Source Guides, or ALERTS™ consulting clients.
July 6, 2012 •
Highlighted Site of the Week – Two Sites for Celebrating the 4th of July
Explore websites that offer historical highlights and patriotic game apps
In honor of Independence Day, this week I have found two interesting sites featuring a historical project that took place on the 4th of July in 1959 and a website introducing patriotic phone apps that offer games, puzzles and quizzes. Our Highlighted Sites of the Week are clerk.house.gov and gov.tech.com.
According to the Historical Highlights section of the Office of the Clerk website, President Dwight D. Eisenhower arranged the cornerstone for the East Front extension of the U.S. Capitol on the 4th of July. Thousands of people gathered at the construction site for a ceremony honoring the 1959 project.
Eisenhower spoke to his audience about commemorating the Declaration of Independence that provided the groundwork for American society. “As we now lay this new cornerstone in the United States Capitol, we are grateful for the courageous beginnings of a new nation, represented by the first stone.”
In the spirit of Independence Day, Govtech featured an article called “4 Patriotic Apps to Celebrate Fourth of July” introducing phone apps ranging from United States Quizzle questions to Fireworks Arcade games. The United States Quizzle app for iPhone, iPad and iPod touch features multiple-choice questions about presidential history and facts about states. Every correct answer awards 100 points, so users are encouraged to play!
Through a series of five beginner-level games, the free Fireworks Arcade app for iPhone and iPad offers various festive fireworks displays. One of the games, called Spark Samurai, allows the player to slice fireworks for points while avoiding bombs. Whether you have a knack for playing phone apps or learning about American history, these websites will inform and entertain you!
Enjoy these sites and have a nice weekend!
Photo of the U.S. Capitol by Kmccoy in Wikipedia.
July 5, 2012 •
Del. Governor Markell Signs Procurement Bill into Law
New law will increase online presence
Governor Jack Markell signed Senate Bill 212 into law in an effort to improve the online presence and public notice capabilities of the state’s procurement office.
The bill mandates that the state create, by May 1, 2013, a one-stop website which will post all bids with an estimated value of more than $50,000.
This website must be accessible to all contractors and the general public. Further, the website will allow the state’s municipalities to advertise their bidding opportunities on the same site.
July 5, 2012 •
Online Disclosure for Political Ads on TV
and other government social media and technology news
“White House Orders Political Ad Info To Be Posted Online” by Seth Cline in U.S. News and World Report.
Here is the order published by the Federal Register: “Standardized and Enhanced Disclosure Requirements for Television Broadcast Licensee Public Interest Obligations; Extension of the Filing Requirement for Children’s Television Programming Report (FCC Form 398)”
“How hackers can code a better America” by Luke Fretwell in Govfresh.
“Civic kickstart: Citizinvestor wants to help your local project get funded” by Luke Fretwell in Govfresh.
“Agencies should publish lists of all their data, group says” by Joseph Marks in Nextgov.
Indiana: “Twitter town hall meeting taxes lawmaker’s ability to be concise” by Eric Bradner in the Evansville Courier & Press.
New Jersey: “Chris Christie, YouTube star?” by Caitlin McDevitt in Politico.
July 5, 2012 •
Jack Abramoff Gives Advice
and other lobbying news today
“Jack Abramoff: Healthy ruling for lobbyists” by MJ Lee in Politico.
“Maryland lobbying totals led by gambling interests” by Annie Linskey in the Baltimore Sun.
“Groups Admit to Lobbying Illegally to Aid Mayor’s Plans” by Ray Rivera in The New York Times.
Take a look at The Hill’s “Lobbying World” news summary.
“Common Cause files complaint against Minnesota Majority” by Jennifer Brooks in the Star Tribune.
Video courtesy of Politico.
July 5, 2012 •
Thursday Campaign Finance and Ethics News Roundup
Take a look at these latest campaign finance and government ethics articles:
“Can the Democrats Catch Up in the Super-PAC Game?” by Robert Draper in The New York Times.
“Lawmakers scrambling to nullify Citizens United” by Chris Camire in the Sentinel & Enterprise.
“Countrywide Offered Discounted Loans to Members, Report Says” by Jonathan Strong in Roll Call.
Arizona: “Indicted lawmaker uses campaign cash for legal expenses” by Gary Grado in the Arizona Capitol Times.
California: “Cudahy mayor resigns amid corruption probe” by Ruben Vives in the Los Angeles Times.
Connecticut: “Twardy finds no evidence Donovan knew of illegal campaign contributions” by Keith M. Phaneuf and Jacqueline Rabe Thomas in the CT Mirror.
Colorado: “Gessler hit with another campaign finance lawsuit – but this one he may actually like” by Sarah Burnett in the Denver Post.
Delaware: “Del. business to pay $500k in campaign probe” by Randall Chase (Associated Press) in the San Francisco Chronicle.
Kansas: “FEC fines Kan. GOP for finance violation” by The Associated Press in KFDA News.
Michigan: “Michigan campaign donation limit survives challenge” by The Associated Press in the Lansing State Journal.
Missouri: “Former Governor wants probation on campaign finance violation” by Mike Lear in Missourinet.
Missouri: “Missouri election season arrives without ethics law” by Elizabeth Crisp in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
New Jersey: “Two N.J. politicians are fined for filing campaign finance reports late” by Matt Friedman in the Star-Ledger.
July 5, 2012 •
Baltimore County Prohibits Sports Tickets From Lobbyists
Revision to ethics bill required by state standards.
Lobbyists and people who do business with Baltimore County, Maryland will no longer be allowed to give sports tickets to public officials.
County Council unanimously approved revisions to the county ethics law in order to comply with state standards.
The revision was in response to the state ethics commission’s finding that the county ethics measure (Bill No. 75-11) did not meet the state’s required standards.
July 5, 2012 •
Orange County School Board Requiring Lobbyist Registration
Registration separate from county requirements
The school board of Orange County, Florida is now requiring lobbyists to register. Registrations are filed with the school board and are separate from the county’s registration requirements. Lobbyists must register prior to July 1 of each year, or prior to lobbying if representation of a principal commences after July 1.
Lobbyists must file an annual report of all lobbying expenditures made during the preceding calendar year on or before April 1 of each year, whether or not any expenditures were made during the reporting period.
July 5, 2012 •
Legislative Sessions Adjourn
Two state legislatures have adjourned this week.
DELAWARE: The Delaware General Assembly adjourned sine die early in the morning on July 1, 2012.
NORTH CAROLINA: The North Carolina General Assembly adjourned on July 3, 2012.
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.