Search This Blog

Showing posts with label PAY FOR PLAY REPUBLICANS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PAY FOR PLAY REPUBLICANS. Show all posts

Friday, February 4, 2022

How much 2022 candidates are paying after endorsements

 

How much 2022 candidates are paying after endorsements

Some big-name 2022 candidates are cutting checks to high-profile backers who endorsed their campaigns, records show.

Why it matters: Key endorsements are a known boon to campaigns battling for support, especially among ideologically committed primary voters. The payments raise the specter of a quid pro quo.

  • In some cases, campaigns are touting those endorsements in press releases and social media posts long before campaign finance records reveal consulting gigs and speaking fees.
  • That can leave voters in the dark about pertinent financial arrangements between the campaigns and the political celebrities publicly backing them.

How it works: Newly released records show the Senate campaign of Arizona Republican Jim Lamon cut a $20,000 check in October to a firm run by Matt Schlapp, chairman of the American Conservative Union. 

In a statement, ACU board member Matthew Smith said the board decided on the Lamon endorsement, and that Schlapp disclosed his consulting role during the process.

  • "We make endorsement decisions on a regular basis, including when candidates have a personal or professional relationship with one or more of our board members," Smith wrote.
  • "Lamon earned our endorsement because he stands for conservative/ America First policies and because he has attended multiple CPAC conferences."

Lamon's campaign also made three $8,000 payments in October, November and December to a firm run by Tom Homan, who led Immigration and Customs Enforcement under President Trump.

  • Homan, who endorsed Lamon in June, said he began consulting for the campaign on immigration-related issues months later.
  • "The endorsement was much before we agreed to the contract," Homan told Axios in an interview. "There's nothing related to the endorsement. I wouldn't do that."
  • Lamon's campaign "decided to formalize the relationship and bring him on as an official adviser on those issues in October," according to Lamon spokesman Stephen Puetz.
  • The campaign has continued touting the endorsement without mentioning Homan's paid role.

What they're saying: "Both Schlapp and Homan are actively involved in the campaign, attend regular strategy meetings, weekly team calls and review policy based on their respective expertise," Puetz said.

The campaign for Ohio Republican Jane Timken, another Senate candidate, steered $5,000 in August to a firm run by ex-NYPD chief Bernard Kerik.

  • On the same day, Kerik tweeted about Timken for the first time.
  • He subsequently joined her for "Back the Blue" rallies in support of her candidacy and talked her up on Ohio talk radio.
  • Kerik denied selling his endorsement to the Timken campaign.
  • "Jane is thrilled to have former NYPD Commissioner Kerik’s support," a campaign spokesperson said. "He believes Jane is the best candidate in this race to champion the America First agenda and support law enforcement so is of course helping her spread that message.”

The big picture: Timken and Lamon are both in the midst of competitive GOP primary fights.

  • Ideological street cred is essential to winning over committed Republicans.
  • Big names in conservative politics can bestow some of that credibility, making endorsements very valuable as primary season heats up.

Between the lines: It can be difficult to draw a clear line between payments for endorsements and payments for services provided in addition to those endorsements.

  • Tamika Hamilton, a Republican House candidate in California, has paid a consulting firm run by conservative commentator Dinesh D'Souza.
  • D'Souza backed Hamilton during a pair of fundraising events last year. The payments were itemized as speaking fees in campaign finance reports.
  • That's similar to the structure of payments to former Trump White House official Sebastian Gorka, who drew speaking fees from campaigns he backed in public appearances.



LINK


GOP Senate candidates busted in pay-for-play scandal

 


Employers added 467,000 jobs in January even as omicron cases spiked

Today's Top Stories:

photo
Republican primary candidates caught sending payments to their endorsers

Pay-for-play politics is alive and well in the Republican Party.



photo
VIDEO OF THE DAY: Local TV anchor humiliates Republican lawmaker, laughs in her face on air

"You think it's entirely political that there's an investigation on the attack on the Capitol?"


photo
Top Arizona congressman on PRIMARYING Sinema

No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen: This could be huge.


Minneapolis police shoot and kill Black man on the couch after no-knock warrant
Amir Rahkare Locke was watching TV under a blanket when the police shot him for reaching for his legal firearm after barging into the apartment, looking for someone else — another life lost at the hands of police, this time for the crime of watching TV while black.



Democrats snag redistricting wins
The previously bleak outlook for the Democrats' House prospects suddenly looks a whole lot brighter.



photo
Black woman sentenced to six years in prison over a voting error

A 44-year-old activist was thrown in jail after attempting to register to vote with a felony conviction, thanks to a series of "errors" by local election officials. The rarity of voting law prosecutions and the absurdly harsh sentence is a sharp reminder of the disparity in the treatment of white and Black citizens.


Putin and Xi call for halt to NATO expansion in show of unity
The pair of powerful autocrats used the Olympics as a bully pulpit for their geopolitical agendas.


photo
Marjorie Taylor Greene, Madison Cawthorn, and Lauren Boebert's extremism costing them support from their voters

United Rural Democrats: New extremists in Congress are taking their districts for granted while delivering nothing for them. United Rural Democrats is organizing on the ground to shock Republicans by winning back Middle America. But they need your help!


US accuses Russia of planning video of a fake Ukrainian attack to justify invasion
While there's no evidence the plan was ever approved, even the idea itself is very troubling.


Chicago cop who murdered Laquon McDonald released from prison three years early
The cop who fired sixteen shots into the back of a fleeing Black teen has been freed — another painful reminder that Black lives are not valued in America's justice system.


RNC moves to censure Cheney and Kinzinger
The GOP is making it clear that any pushback against Trump will be punished.



Jacksonville cop keeps job after driving drunk to work
His blood alcohol level was four times the legal limit and he admitted working ‘impaired’ on multiple occasions.


photo


Seriously?

Yes. Seriously.

Hope...






"Look Me In The Eye" | Lucas Kunce for Missouri

  Help Lucas Kunce defeat Josh Hawley in November: https://LucasKunce.com/chip-in/ Josh Hawley has been a proud leader in the fight to ...