Home Blog Page 2346

Virginia News Headlines: Thursday Morning

2

Here are a few Virginia (and national) news headlines, political and otherwise, for Thursday, August 8. Also, check out the tweet by “Swift Boat” Dude Chris LaCivita, now the top strategist for the Ken Kookinelli campaign, paying Blue Virginia one of the greatest compliments we’ve ever received. Yes, I said “compliments.” Because, as Jim Webb for Senate senior strategist Steve Jarding told me in 2006, we should “wear these peoples’ attacks as a badge of honor” (in part, because when they attack you, it’s almost certain that you’ve gotten under their skin). And believe me, we do! 🙂

*2012 was one of the 10 warmest years on record globally

*George Takei Takes Sides In Sochi Debate: “Move The Olympics” (I doubt it’s possible to move the Olympics at this point, but if it is, I’d say do it!)

*Eric Cantor, Paul Ryan headlined Koch summit (That really says it all about Can’tor, Ryan, today’s Republican Party, dirty money in politics, and other really bad things.)

*Gifts to Va. governor expose lax state laws: Our view (“Many states’ rules are shot through with loopholes and subjective standards.”)

*The health spending mystery (“Has Obamacare slowed the growth increase?”)

*What Virginia Voters Really Think of Terry McAuliffe and Ken Cuccinelli (“Scandals, probes, and mudslinging are making this governor’s race historically unpleasant.”)

*Adding teeth to Virginia’s ethics laws (“Instead of doing the honorable thing by returning money to the favor-currying Mr. Williams, Mr. Cuccinelli has tried to distance himself from the scandal by calling for a special legislative session to put some muscle in Virginia’s anemic ethics laws.”)

*Ken Cuccinelli’s Sodomy Obsession (“The frightening legal implications of the Virginia politician’s crusade against oral and anal sex.”)

*Ken Cuccinelli Joked About Drinking With Ted Kennedy, Driving Hillary Clinton Home After One In The Morning (“The 2008 email was sent out as part of the then-state senator’s ‘Cuccinelli Compass,’ in which Cuccinelli would inform subscribers about his latest happenings.”)

*Fox, CNN Provide Minimal Coverage Of VA Governor’s Donor Scandal

*Donor funds anti-Cuccinelli ad as McAuliffe gets union cash

*Governor juggles his assets to repay Star CEO (“Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell has refinanced his private residence and restructured loans on other properties as he repays a businessman and donor who showered him and his family with gifts.”)

*Out of state donations pour into Virginia race for governor

*The battle for the new Virginia (“Conventional wisdom states that in an off-cycle election, the voting population will be whiter and more conservative than it was during last year’s presidential race. But neither party’s nominee is acting like it, and with good reason.”)

*Herring ethics plan: fewer gifts, tougher penalties, more oversight

*Virginia marriage lawsuit about ‘equal protection’

*Virginia farms on the rise

*A new era  for passenger rail (“Virginia assumes a greater role in funding regional service as it eyes an extension  to Roanoke and Bristol”)

*Remy Munasifi: From ‘Arlington Rap’ to opening for Ron Paul (That’s really sad. Ron Paul’s a racist, homophobe, anti-Semite, conspiracy theorist, and all-around tinfoil-hat nutjob.)

*Forecast: Welcome back, summer

*Nationals vs. Braves: Washington is swept after Justin Upton keys Atlanta rally (“The Atlanta Braves snuffed out any realistic hope the Nationals could defend their National League East title with a merciless three-game sweep that culminated with a 6-3 victory and a whiff of resignation in the Nationals’ clubhouse.”)

New video from NARAL has bizarre, but real, quotes from “Crisis Pregnancy Centers”

0

And guess who supports these things? That’s right, Ken Cuccinelli. Shocker, I know.

VEA Throws Support to Democratic Candidates

0

The Virginia Education Association (VEA) has thrown its support to three Democratic candidates for the House of Delegates in Northern Virginia.  Delegate Mark Keam (35th), Marcus Simon who is vying to fill retiring Jim Scott’s seat in the 53th, and Kathleen Murphy who is challenging Barbara Comstock in the 34th are among those receiving accolades.

The most significant of these is the race for the 34th District.  The VEA is well known to support candidates who will work to strengthen public schools.  Despite Comstock’s claims of being Northern Virginia’s “education candidate,” the VEA has instead opted to side with her challenger.

Meg Gruber, president of the VEA, states the organization only supports candidates “…who show that they understand the value of public education and its vital role in the commonwealth.”  By voicing recommendation for Murphy, the VEA appears to dismiss Comstock’s declarations of being a strong education advocate.

Perhaps this is because of her voting record.  During Comstock’s tenure, she has voted against teacher pay raises, against increased funding for public education, and supported efforts to increase teacher to pupil ratios in the classroom.  

Kathleen Murphy has long touted the benefits of public education.  Says Murphy, “Every child in Virginia deserves an education that will allow him or her to compete in the 21st century economy.”  Murphy continued, “I look forward to working with the Virginia Education Association to ensure our teachers have the necessary resources to educate our children.”

Virginia’s Next AG, Mark Herring, Unveils Sweeping Ethics Overhaul Plan

1

I just got off a conference call with Democratic Virginia's next Attorney General, Mark Herring, during which he introduced his plan to reform and strengthen Virginia’s ethics laws.   On the call, Sen. Herring said (partial transcript follows):

…as Virginia's next Attorney General, I will be vigilant in preventing corruption, holding elected officials accountable, and restoring the public's trust in our government institutions.

…Back on April 11, early on when the current gifts scandal was first beginning to unfold, I called for a federal investigation into the financial transactions between McDonnell, Cuccinelli, and Jonnie Williams. The two top elected officials in this state have failed Virginia and they have tarnished our state's reputation through their unethical behavior…  We need a change in Virginia's ethics laws.

Ken Cuccinelli and Bob McDonnell have shown we can't expect everyone to do the right thing…but we can make it harder and more costly to violate ethics rules. It's no wonder that the Center for Public Integrity gave the Commonwealth an F grade on corruption risk, ranking Virginia 47 out of 50 states. In the face of serious ethics and conflicts of interest violations, there has been a lot of hot air about serious reforms, but nothing has fundamentally changed. Back in 2009, Del. Phil Hamilton resigned…then-Senator Ken Cuccinelli was the only candidate not to call for Hamilton's resignation…Hamilton was later convicted and is now serving 114 months in prison…

The most recent and very public scandal involving Gov. McDonnell and Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli's cozy relationship with Star Scientific CEO Jonnie Williams has brought embarrassment to our state and her residents. And now, Bob McDonnell and Ken Cuccinelli are going to propose reforms?!? Virginians deserve better. That's why I'm rolling out my plan to you today that restores integrity to our state government…  

…I'd like to…remind everyone that last night, my opponent said he would leave it up to political calculus as to whether Ken Cuccinelli should repay the roughly $18,000 in gifts he took from Jonnie Williams. I think Ken Cuccinelli should return the gifts, period. There's no consideration of politics here. And it just shows you what type of Attorney General Mark Obenshain would be. [Obenshain] would continue the political games that Ken Cuccinelli brought to the office. He has the same "politics first" approach as Cuccinelli.

Herring also ran through highlights of his ethics overhaul plan:  Create an Independent Statewide Ethics Commission Limit Gifts and Strengthen Disclosure Requirements Root out, Punish and Deter Corruption and Conflicts of Interest Prohibit Using Campaign Contributions for Personal Expenses *Expand Public Access to Government Records  For the full plan, click here. Also, see the press release below.

HERRING ANNOUNCES ENHANCED ETHICS AGENDA TO RESTORE INTEGRITY IN STATE GOVERNMENT

Obenshain says politicians need to weigh 'political calculus' to determine whether or not they should do the right thing

Democratic candidate for Attorney General Mark Herring announced his plan today to reform and strengthen Virginia’s ethics laws. On a press call this morning, Herring laid out his vision for sweeping changes to Virginia’s outdated and ineffective ethics and conflict-of-interest laws.

Herring’s plan can be found on his website, http://www.HerringForAG.com/EthicsPlan.

"The two top elected officials in the state have failed Virginians and they have tarnished our state’s reputation through their unethical behavior. Virginia's system relied on lax laws, and the integrity and ethics of our Governor and Attorney General, and it didn't work. We need a change in Virginia's ethics laws. Ken Cuccinelli and Bob McDonnell have shown we can't expect everyone to do the right thing. We can't legislate honesty, but we can make it harder, and more costly to do the wrong thing," Herring said.

Serious lapses in ethical judgment by Governor Bob McDonnell and Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli have undermined the public trust and hampered the effectiveness of state government.

Herring went on to criticize his opponent Senator Mark Obenshain for leading from behind on this issue.

Yesterday, Obenshain said that politicians should consider the “political calculus” of whether or not they should do the right thing.

“Virginia government is facing an ethics crisis that requires real leadership and meaningful action from elected officials. Mark Obenshain wants to let political calculus determine the state’s accountability. Mark Obenshain made it clear yesterday he will continue Ken Cuccinelli’s politics-first approach,” Herring said. "As Attorney General, I am committed to returning credibility to the office, accountability to our state government and restoring the public trust.”

As Virginia’s next Attorney General, Mark Herring will work proactively to prevent corruption, hold elected officials accountable and restore the public trust. Included in his “Restoring Integrity to State Government” plan (attached with this release), Mark Herring outlines his plan to clean up the ethical mess in Richmond:

  • Creating a State Ethics Commission to administer and enforce all of Virginia’s ethics rules and conflict of interest laws. The Commission would be made up of several appointed public officials. It will have professional staff and would be empowered to undertake investigations and hold hearings regarding alleged violations of ethics and conflicts of interest laws.  One of the Commission’s first orders of business would be a full review of Virginia’s ethics and conflict of interest rules.
  • Limiting Gifts and Strengthening Disclosure Requirements, such as imposing a $100 limit and full disclosure on gifts from any business, organization or person, other than a relative to elected officials and their immediate family members. Mark would also work to prevent public officials or their immediate family members from receiving gifts from lobbyists, their employers and those with business before the Commonwealth. This proposal also includes the requirement to fully disclose corporate loans, fully identify creditors and post disclosures to a single online location within ten days.
  • Root out, Punish, and Deter Corruption and Conflicts of Interest by requiring independent audits of financial disclosures by the State Ethics Commission and increased penalties for officeholders who violate conflict of interest and campaign finance disclosure laws.
  • Prohibit the Use of Campaign Contributions for Personal Expenses. Mark will work with legislators to pass a law that stops elected officials and candidates from using campaign funds for personal expenses.
  • Expand Public Access to Government Records by clarifying that the Attorney General’s office must honor FOIA requests and expanding the scope of FOIA to cover the State Corporation.

###

Video: Mark Obenshain Dodges Cuccinelli Ethics Question; Mark Herring Takes it Head On

0

Can Mark Obenshain look any more uncomfortable (pissed, exasperated, tongue-tied, frustrated, etc.) trying to answer a simple question than he does here? Heck, all we need is to make him up like Richard Nixon in his infamous TV debate disaster with John F. Kennedy (the one where Nixon was seen as sweating, tired, shifty, stubbled, etc.) and the image would be complete. Gotta love how Obenshain’s all about political calculation this campaign, while trying to hide his true, extremist political beliefs that he’s held for years. And in this case, trying desperately not to slam the head of his ticket, Ken Cuccinelli, over the $18,000 in gifts he received from slimeball Jonnie Williams. #FAIL

Meanwhile, Mark Herring talks straight, aka “plain English,” that “it takes a lot of moxie for someone like Ken Cuccinelli to be calling for a special session.” Herring adds, “Ken Cuccinelli is just making excuses by saying this is some kind of bell that can’t be unrung.  We know what the fair market value of the gift he failed to disclose and he needs to return them. The public trust is too important.” So true. Yet Mark Obenshain either doesn’t understand that, or can’t bring himself to say it on camera. Surprise surprise: more politics without principle from Cuccinelli’s “clone,” Mark Obenshain.

Bill Bolling Sends Virginia Democrats a Message on Ethics Reform; Will They Listen?

0

by Paul Goldman

The 2013 GUV race just got weirder if that is possible. Let me ask you: Do you think it is  coincidental LG Bill Bolling just happened to issue his first-ever ethics reform proposal to reform things he never previously wanted to reform 24 hours after his GOP rival Ken Cuccinelli shocked the LG by calling for a Special Ethics Session of the General Assembly?

As philosopher Yogi “I tagged out Jackie” Berra said, some things are just too coincidental to be a coincidence. So why did Billy Boy Bolling call for “immediate action” to fix the McDonnell Mess, given that anyone who writes stuff understands the phrase was purposely chosen and as will be shown shortly, has only one logical political interpretation?

We all know Bill Bolling holds Ken Cuccinelli in maximum low regard. Republican Bolling has all but endorsed Democrat Terry McAuliffe. As the saying goes, when they are together, “get a room!” So why, then, did Bolling just give Cuccinelli a gift potentially worth far more than would be legal under the LG’s newly proposed Ethics Reforms?

The answer: Bolling has been sending signals to Democrats for months to hold a Special Ethics Session of the General Assembly. To be sure, he couldn’t say it directly without appearing to stomp on Governor McDonnell’s political grave. Bolling however saw the self-evident: with the Senate split between Republicans and Democrats, he could “pay back” the GOP establishment for deserting him in the GOP GUV nomination fight. He and the Democrats could craft the most kick-ass, bipartisan Ethics reform in the state’s history. Bolling knows Speaker Howell and his posse doesn’t want it.

Bolling never figured that Cuccinelli would grow a brain on Ethics Reform and flank the Democrats on the reform issue.  

Use you noodle: How does a kick-ass, pro-reform Ethics package coming out of the Senate with bipartisan support – Bolling is still a Republican for now – hurt Democratic candidates for the House of Delegates this November if Republicans kill it? Ahhhhh….now you get it. Bolling isn’t suddenly a big reformer. It isn’t the issue, but the politics for him.

Speaker Howell would be forced to pass at least kick-ass lite, the most forward looking reform ever in the state. McDonnell would have to sign whatever the GA would pass. Moreover, tucked in the Bolling package is a ban on legislators getting paid to represent clients before state agencies. Who do you think supported himself doing that as a legislator? Bob McDonnell whose abandonment of Bolling during the GOP GUV  nomination fight still makes Bolling furious, and remains the most underreported important story as to why Bolling really quit the race.

Bottom line: Bolling would be the hero of Ethics Reform. He would have, with his last votes as LG, paid back the GOP Establishment. Hello! Representing clients before state agencies is the way Delegate Bob McDonnell paid the bills, it was a big issue against him in when he ran for AG in 2005! Don’t think Bob For Jobs didn’t pick up on that!

BUT DEMOCRATS REFUSED TO TAKE BOLLING’S HINTS.

Instead of taking Bolling’s hints, the Democrats decided TO BASICALLY LET MCDONNELL AND THE GOP OFF THE HOOK. I think I know why and I think Bolling knows why and I think everyone in Virginia who thinks knows why. Democrats know McDonnell can’t stand Cuccinelli. They expected this to hurt Cuccinelli. They never figured Bobs for Jobs would morph into Jonnie Williams.

Now McDonnell is toxic to Dems; just read the polls, the Dem base wants McD gone. All McD has left is the Republicans. So if McDonnell is seen as hurting Cuccinelli, then he will lose any chance of staying in office if he happens to get indicted. McDonnell knows that. If his party sticks with him as having the benefit of the doubt (if indicted, McDonnell will naturally attack the DEM AG and DEM President), then McD can last until January if he wants should the worst happen.  

Let’s be clear: The current Dem strategy – against a Special Ethics Session – isn’t necessarily a bad political move. It is the conventional move. It has pluses. But as Bolling indicated yesterday – if you read between the lines – it has a huge downside. As in: The Democrats gave Cuccinelli a huge opening.

BOLLING TRIED TO CLOSE IT YESTERDAY.

As I said at the beginning: Do you really think it is just coincidence that Bolling released his reform package on issues he never before thought needed reform within the same basic news cycle as Cuccinelli’s call for a Special Session on Ethics?Ahhh, that’s right, it can’t be coincidence. Exactly: Bolling was trying to steal some of Cuccinelli’s thunder, one last gasp to try to get Democrats to see the better play.

Use your noodle: Bolling said cleaning up the McDonnell Mess required “immediate action.” This is August. There is less than a 50-50 chance that the General Assembly would do something small by the end of the next GA Session, 9 months away. If you put that down as “immediate” on your SAT test, do you think you would going to college anytime soon?  

“Immediate” means immediate. Bolling couldn’t endorse a Special Session, he isn’t going to give Cuccinelli that kind of help! Thus, Bolling’s PR person did the dodge and weave, a lot of yada, yada, yada, but it didn’t make any sense: Bolling will not be in office next year! So if he is serious about “immediate”, then why would he not want to be a player as opposed to a spectator?

Bolling has this fear: He fears the GUV race will turn into one about character as defined by the Johnnie Williams Mess. Democrats think this cooks Cuccinelli because he took gifts from Williams. But a Democratic prosecutor cleared Cuccinelli of anything wrong. Republicans thought Wilder would be sunk in 1985 and 1989 over similar types of charges. But once Wilder was cleared of any wrong doing (because there wasn’t any, they were all GOP trumped-up stuff), the voters didn’t care. As I have learned: The Williams thing is far more complicated than people yet think.

Currently, the campaign is being defined by Cuccinelli’s image on social issues. As I have written, if this defines the campaign, Cuccinelli is a sure loser. The GOP establishment types who urged Bolling to run for Governor do not support Cuccinelli on the social issues. The same for the basic Bolling type of Republican.

HOWEVER: The social issues don’t really rock their boat, they aren’t for instance into the “war against women” type of political message. This is why these folks are the most critical of the McDonnell Mess because for them, the image of that in the Governor’s Mansion is contrary to everything they believe about themselves and Virginia.

They aren’t worried about Cuccinelli taking Virginia back on social policy: that’s why they didn’t much care about Romney pandering to the social conservatives, or in George W. Bush’s social positions or even the GOP platform on social issues. This is why the backed Marshall Coleman over Doug Wilder.

What gets these folks going, in the worst way, is sleazy business guys like Jonnie Williams having access to the Governor, not the head of the Right-To-Life organization. They take the Governorship of Virginia personally on that level.

The Bolling constituency wants Ethics Reform NOT because they are liberal Dems, not because they really give a “rat’s ass” (to quote Brad Pitt) about whether legislators practice in front of state agencies, not because they care whether a legislator gets a free trip or Rolex, not because they are bothered by Cuccinelli taking the same kind of airplane rides and vacation stuff that Wilder and Warner and Kaine and everyone in the GA on the Dem side and GOP side take. In fact, these business types don’t believe that is corruption at all.

But Williams does symbolize what they don’t like. They have spent a lifetime telling their peers around the country in New Jersey and New York and Ohio and Illinois that guys like Williams don’t have any sway here! Not in Virginia. Naive? Yes. But that’s why they want to believe. I know a lot of these folks: It is difficult to underestimate how much they are appalled at the kind of sway Jonnie Williams seemed to have over their Governor. That’s the rub for them.

Bolling gets that. So he has been shocked Democrats didn’t do the self-evident. And on Monday, he couldn’t believe the grits and gravy of Cuccinelli daring to try and out reform Democrats on what Bolling thinks could be a key issue depending on things play out in the fall. Bolling can’t believe Cuccinelli can get away with it.

BOTTOM LINE:  Bolling felt he had no choice but to try to steal some of Cuccinelli’s thunder once it became clear Democrats and the GOP establishment were joining forces to oppose “immediate action.” Bolling therefore was actually trying to send Democrats a message yesterday.

It galls him to think that Cuccinelli can get a beachhead in the Ethics Debate from which a competent campaign organization could be like the boys at D-Day, able to maneuver once they get a secure foothold.

It is no secret that I agree with Bolling on the need for “immediate action.” And Bolling and I don’t need TJ to tell us what is self-evident: unless you do a Special Ethics Session, there is “immediate action” as defined.

But Bolling and I also know this: There is no reason to believe the Cuccinelli high command is any better than General Montgomery. He led the D-Day invasion in terms of the plan to get the boys on the beach. It was a bad plan, but Yankee guts and blood made it work.

Then, until D-Day +21, Montgomery got bogged down to the point Eisenhower wanted to fire him, would have fired him, but for the politics of the thing. Fortunately, Bradley and Patton figured out a way to get around not only Monty but the Germans.

Net, Net: Bolling is very afraid that Cuccinelli might be able to appeal to a decent chunk of those backing him by using the Ethics issue.

Is he right? I have no idea. It surely is counter-intuitive. But under the theory that Bolling should know his people better than any Democrat, his actions yesterday should have people thinking this morning.  

Big Confederate flag to welcome visitors to Richmond

0

This report is on Raw Story at:

http://www.rawstory.com/rs/201…

A group of Virginia residents say that they are purchasing a plot of land and intend to use it to fly a 15-foot Confederate battle flag in the view of motorists driving on Interstate 95 near Richmond.

In a message on the Free North Carolina website, Susan Hathaway explained that the group Virginia Flaggers would begin installing the flag next week.

“The Va Flaggers are THRILLED to announce that we have finalized a lease to acquire property adjacent to Interstate 95, just South of Richmond, and will be erecting a 50′ pole, on which a 10 x15 Confederate Battle Flag will fly 24/7, 365 days of the year,” Hathaway wrote. “The flag will serve to welcome visitors and commuters to Richmond, and remind them of our honorable Confederate history and heritage.”

. . .

Great.  Just great.

The Swift-Boating of Terry McAuliffe

10

The Republican Swift boat campaign against Terry McAuliffe has now begun in earnest. As is typical of GOP message campaigns, it is being spread in a coordinated, multi-media fashion with similar talking points being repeated by a variety of sources to create the illusion of a “bandwagon effect”. This was only to be expected as Ken Cuccinelli’s chief campaign strategist, Chris LaCivita, was media advisor to the infamous Swift Boat Veterans for Truth organization that so brutally smeared John Kerry in his 2004 presidential campaign.

Unfortunately, the media rarely applies the investigative resources needed to figure out what’s really going on here — it’s a lot easier to say things like “both sides are accused of scandals” or similar meaningless nonsense. So sometimes us regular folks need to do the digging.  

The Repubs are blowing out so much smoke right now that it can be hard to sort the truth from the poppycock.  So this is my humble attempt to begin to set the record straight.

The Players: A “Vast Right Wing Conspiracy”

Over the weekend, the McAuliffe campaign put out a statement in response to all the allegations being thrown against it, and the Cuccinelli campaign followed with an attack (both here at Ryan Nobles’ blog.)  McAuliffe’s statement made one reference to Sen. Chuck Grassley (IA-R), the source of much of the current attention to Terry’s former company, GreenTech Auto: “I find it unfortunate that a Republican Senator from Iowa…selectively released information for the purpose of partisan attacks instead of getting facts.”

The Cuccinelli response curiously used this comment to tar Terry’s whole press release as falling “one step short of claiming a ‘vast right wing conspiracy’ against his candidacy.”  Why the overreaction?  I suspect they were using the classic Karl Rove technique of preemptively ridiculing their opponent’s observation of what’s really going on in order to discredit anyone who tries to reveal the facts of the matter.  In other words, they’re simultaneously raising and making fun of the idea of a “vast right wing conspiracy” in order to distract attention from the actual alliance of right wing forces working to elect Cuccinelli by bringing down McAuliffe.

In fact, Sen. Grassley appears to have triggered one or both of the current investigations in question by releasing over 150 pages of statements (see here and here) as part of his effort to block the nomination of Alejandro Mayorkas to be Deputy Director of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).  While his main goal may be the Republican mission of blocking everything President Obama tries to do, he is in the process providing a mighty big assist to the Cuccinelli campaign.  It’s hard for Federal agencies to not investigate allegations made by the ranking member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, regardless of their merits.  We’ll get to the substance of those investigations in a minute.

But first let’s look at some of the other players in the pro-Cuccinelli mud-fest:

Watchdog.org, a right wing blog run by the Franklin Center for Government and Public Integrity, has been operating as the opposition research arm of the Cuccinelli campaign.  Their role has included demanding documents from the DHS about GreenTech and making the allegations and posting the documents online that are the basis for the SEC investigation.  According to Sourcewatch, the Franklin Center is 95% funded by Donors Trust, which Mother Jones has called “the dark-money ATM of the conservative movement.”

Citizens United, the execrable group behind the “Fast Terry” movie, is well known for its tragically successful effort to protect the power of rich people to control our political system, after winning its 2010 Supreme Court case to overturn key provisions of the McCain-Feingold campaign finance law. But it’s mostly been in the business of making attack films against Democrats like Hillary Clinton and John Kerry, and conservative bogeymen like the ACLU, immigrants and the nefarious UN.  So Terry is in good company here!

The Charges: Where’s the Beef?

The Cuccinelli campaign’s statement accused Terry and GreenTech of doing something dreadful “to warrant not one, but two federal investigations?”  This is highly misleading.

First, these investigations appear triggered by the dust storm raised by Sen. Grassley and Watchdog.org even though there is no indication yet whether these allegations have a shred of actual merit.  

Second, these are two very different types of investigations.  The target of the DHS Inspector General’s office investigation is US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) Director Alejandro Mayorkas; IGs investigate the actions of their own organizations and people, not outside companies per se.

While the investigation is of whether Mayorkas granted any special preferences or privileges to GreenTech, there is no evidence to date that he did. Sen. Grassley released a flood of internal DHS emails on the matter, which show only that GreenTech and its advocates expressed much frustration over the slow pace of approvals of visas for their foreign investors and kept asking for the process to be sped up. Companies expressing frustration at bureaucratic delays and trying to speed things up is not exactly news — it literally happens every single day. And most days of the year, Republicans take the side of the business against that of the government agency.  

The only question in this investigation, then, is whether USCIS followed the proper procedures in this case. I took the painful route of reading through Grassley’s 97 pages of stuff to try to find out.  Here are a few quotes from emails from Director Mayorkas on the matter — WARNING: EXTREMELY SHOCKING CONTENT FOLLOWS!

“I want to make sure that we are providing customer service consistent with our standards but that we are not providing any preferential treatment.”

“I am eager to learn as much as possible about the EB·5 program because it is the source of considerable attention and. given the job creation potential, appropriate interest”

“As the Director of this Agency, I do not adjudicate cases and am not the proper audience for a telephone call or a meeting about a particular case. I will forward your email to that appropriate individual in the Agency.”  [Followed by email to staff:] “Please handle however you deem appropriate”

Talk about a smoking gun!

The SEC investigation was triggered by a document posted online by Watchdog.org, allegedly from GreenTech, and purportedly promising investors returns. This one is hard for me to say much about, because we don’t know if the document is real or a forgery, and I frankly don’t know enough about SEC rules to be able to speak intelligently to the issues here. But the idea being floated by some Repubs and right wing bloggers that Terry should drop out simply because this investigation is taking place is absolutely laughable. How about we find out the facts first?  

Then there is Citizens United’s film, “Fast Terry.” I watched the whole thing, and what its charges basically come down to is that GreenTech and another company of Terry’s failed to meet their projections for coming on line and creating jobs. Terry worked to create both of these companies in the wake of Bush’s Great Recession and it is unfortunate that they have struggled.  

His success or shortcomings as head of these companies is a legitimate issue. But it’s certainly no scandal. There are companies that fail to hit their projections every quarter. Why should these ones be judged any differently?  Because their CEO is a Democrat?  

The bottom line is this: If you want to allege “scandals”, then lay out precisely what the allegations are — who allegedly did what by when and why it’s a crime — and then provide at least a few scraps of evidence to prove your point. Just yelling that somebody is a crook or whatever, and airing lots of commercials or full length movies with disturbing-sounding voice-overs and ominous music ain’t gonna cut it.

And it’s time for the press to dig in and do some actual reporting on these matters, and get to the truth, rather than just repeating the talking points that Chris “Swift Boat” LaCivita hands them every day on a silver platter. There’s too much at stake in Virginia this year for that kind of hack work.

Virginia News Headlines: Wednesday Morning

7

Here are a few Virginia (and national) news headlines, political and otherwise, for Wednesday, August 7.

*When the deficit is falling, it isn’t growing (“On Sunday, Eric Cantor claimed that the deficit is ‘growing.’ That’s wrong, but PolitiFact took a look at the claim and rated it ‘half true.'” Something that’s falling rapidly is kinda-sorta rising? Next from PolitiFiction – black is kinda-sorta white, cold is kinda-sorta hot. #FAIL)

*Fact-Checking Is a Doomed Enterprise: Federal Deficit Edition (The problem is, these people claim to be fact checkers but don’t have the courage or skill to really do it. Instead, they keep defaulting to mindless false equivalency, and inevitably fail.)

*Politifact embarrasses itself again (and hurts GOP in the process) (Yes, it’s pile on PolitiFiction day, and for good reason. They suck.)

*Bezos could transform the newspaper industry (Let’s hope it’s for the better; this industry desperately needs transformation!)

*Rethinking Ethics in Virginia (“McDonnell has squelched Cuccinelli’s cynical maneuver by insisting that the matter wait until next winter’s General Assembly session, denying the attorney general and gubernatorial candidate to make hay out of ethics reform before election day.”)

*Virginia Lt. Gov. Bolling calls for gift and ethics reform

*McAuliffe, Cuccinelli race drips with venom (This article is a CLASSIC example of everything wrong with corporate media reporting: “both sides” false equivalency, utter inability/unwillingness of the reporter to get to the truth, not just lay out he said/she said; etc. In fact, Ken Cuccinelli really IS far outside the mainstream on the issues. Why not just state that? That would actually be objective, not the false objectivity we get in garbage articles like this one.)

*Support lacking for Cuccinelli’s quick ethics reform

*The nasty slide toward Richmond (Yet more brain-dead false equivalency from the aptly named “legacy media.” With editorials like this, it’s easy to see why it’s a “legacy.”)

*McDonnell announces state tour (Blech, just go away!)

*Schapiro: McAuliffe biggest obstacle seems to be himself (Actually, I think Terry’s been a far better candidate this time around than in 2009, very well informed and serious at events, etc. And Cuccinelli remains, as he’s always been, an extremist nutjob.)

*Disclosure under wraps (“An effort to look at electronic reporting forms reveals the high cost of public information.”)

*Pentagon cuts civilian defense furloughs from 11 days to 6

*U-Va. to scale back financial aid for low- and middle-income students (Not good.)

*Make sense, not haste, on ethics reform (“A call for a special session isn’t generating enthusiasm, for political  and practical reasons.” The problem is, we could very well end up without either sense OR haste.)

*Veterans of 1987 dolphin die-off converge on Virginia Beach

*Forecast: Humidity without the heat, but 50 percent chance of showers

*Things get heated and Braves stay hot, beat Nationals, 2-1, for 12th straight win (And a season which started with so much promise now appears to be all but over. Is that a fat lady I hear singing? La la la la la….)

Hard to Defend: Top Cuccinelli Ally Stumped on Cuccinelli Gift Scandal

0

From the McAuliffe for Governor campaign, check out this total #FAIL by Cuccinelli clone Mark Obenshain.

 

Ken Cuccinelli's refusal to return or repay the $18,000 in gifts and trips he received from Star Scientific and its CEO Jonnie Williams is inexplicable and today Cuccinelli's top ally couldn’t even find the words to defend him. When asked by the Washington Post on Tuesday for his thoughts on whether Ken Cuccinelli should return the gifts he received from Star and Williams, Cuccinelli’s handpicked candidate for Attorney General Mark Obenshain responded by saying:

They’re going to have to weigh the political calculus of those decisions,” Obenshain said, adding when specifically pressed about Cuccinelli: “I’ve never been given $18,000 in gifts. I can’t imagine receiving $18,000 in gifts. You’re asking me a question that I can’t answer.” 

Obenshain's inability to defend Cuccinelli came on the heels of Republican Governors Association Chair Governor Bobby Jindal also refusing on Sunday to defend Cuccinelli's refusal to return the gifts. As of Wednesday, a full week had passed since Governor McDonnell first announced he would repay Williams for the gifts he and his family received. 

“Ken Cuccinelli's refusal to repay Jonnie Williams and Star Scientific for the $1,500 Thanksgiving dinner, trips to Williams' Smith Mountain Lake home, private jet flight to New York, and thousands of dollars worth of a dietary supplement sends a clear signal to voters that he is not remotely serious about righting the wrong his ethics scandal has done to Virginia government. Cuccinelli is on an island of one in his belief that he is right to cling onto these scandal gifts, even as his own top ally cannot find any words to defend him,” said McAuliffe spokesperson Josh Schwerin.

 

Background

Washington Post: Attorney General candidate Obenshain indifferent on special session on ethics

By Errin Whack, Tuesday, August 6

Republican Attorney General candidate Mark D. Obenshain said Tuesday that he isn’t calling for a special session to address ethics reform in Virginia, in contrast to comments made by his gubernatorial running mate a day earlier.

Obenshain did say he thinks change is needed, whether it happens now or when the General Assembly is scheduled to reconvene in January.

“Whether it’s done in a special session or in January, it matters not to me,” Obenshain told reporters after addressing a group of seniors to discuss his campaign at the Greenspring senior living facility in Fairfax County. “I think we just need to wait and see what unfolds.”

On Monday, GOP gubernatorial nominee Ken Cuccinelli called on Gov. Robert F. McDonnell (R) to convene a special session this month. McDonnell has said he is working on reform proposals, but doesn’t see the need for a special session four months before the General Assembly returns.


Cuccinelli on Tuesday expressed disappointment in the governor and House leadership for not supporting a special session.

Outoing Lt. Gov. Bill Bolling (R) also endorsed a $250 cap on gifts to elected officials as part of a package of proposals he announced through his political action committee on Tuesday in response to the gifts controversy. While Bolling did not discount a special session, he signaled that he thought taking up the issue in January could be more productive.

House Clerk G. Paul Nardo said in a statement that a one-day special session could cost taxpayers about $28,000 a day. Only the governor has the authority to convene a special session.

The issue of gifts to lawmakers has come under growing scrutiny in recent months, after The Post began reporting in March about more than $150,000 in gifts and loans given to McDonnell and his family members by Star Scientific Chief Executive Jonnie R. Williams Sr. Williams also gave $18,000 in gifts to Cuccinelli.

Obenshain, a state senator from Harrisonburg, is running against fellow Sen. Mark R. Herring (D-Loudoun) in November to succeed Cuccinelli as attorney general. Both candidates have said they favor new ethics laws that would cap gifts to elected officials and members of their households to $100, and that they would implement such a policy in the attorney general’s office, regardless of whether the General Assembly takes action on the matter.

“I think it’s appropriate for us to adopt new rules, irrespective of whether any laws or rules have been broken,” Obenshain said Tuesday. “The fact remains a crisis of conscience has arisen as a result of what is going on in the governor’s office. I think that’s all it takes for me to be satisfied that we need to restore confidence, and if by adopting restrictions on receiving gifts can help do that, I’m all for it.”

Asked whether he thought McDonnell or Cuccinelli should return gifts they received from Williams, Obenshain declined to comment.

“They’re going to have to weigh the political calculus of those decisions,” Obenshain said, adding when specifically pressed about Cuccinelli: “I’ve never been given $18,000 in gifts. I can’t imagine receiving $18,000 in gifts. You’re asking me a question that I can’t answer.”