Tag: rga
Christie Touts GOP’s Success In Gubernatorial Races

Christie Touts GOP’s Success In Gubernatorial Races

By Maddie Hanna, The Philadelphia Inquirer (MCT)

TRENTON, N.J. — As Republican governors across the country claimed wins Tuesday, so did New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie.

The national face of the effort to elect Republican governors, Christie helped raise $106 million and visited at least 35 states as chairman of the Republican Governors Association. The role allowed him to tout his party’s successes — victories in blue states, swing states, and a net gain of two governor’s seats — during a blitz of morning-show appearances Wednesday.

He also fielded questions about his political ambitions, saying on NBC’s Today that he had not decided on a 2016 presidential bid, but he and his wife, Mary Pat, would “have to start talking about that in earnest.”

Christie was “instrumental” in growing the ranks of Republican governors from 29 to 31, Phil Cox, executive director of the RGA, said in a briefing Wednesday.

Citing Christie’s record fundraising haul, which enabled the RGA to spend $130 million on the elections, and “tireless” campaigning, Cox said, “he certainly has raised the bar.”

Former Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour said that while he had raised significant money as RGA chairman in 2010, Christie “blew by me like I was Maybellene at the top of the hill,” referring to a Chuck Berry song.

Barbour said 2014 was challenging, given that Christie had to defend 22 of the 29 seats held by Republican governors.

“It is a blessing to the RGA that Christie and his team were able to raise so much,” Barbour said.

Not all were as generous in their assessment of Christie’s impact. “All these races at the end of the day are individual races,” said Rick Wilson, a Florida-based Republican strategist.

Wilson said Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker — a potential 2016 rival of Christie’s, who at one point suggested he needed more money from the RGA — “won because he busted his tail on the ground. (Florida Gov.) Rick Scott won because he spent $100 million, a lot of which he raised outside of the RGA track.”

The RGA said it poured $19 million, its largest-ever expenditure in a state race, into Scott’s tight victory over Democrat Charlie Crist in Florida, where Christie made seven trips to campaign for Scott.

Christie “deserves some credit for that,” Wilson said. But “when it comes time for voters to make decisions in 2016, they’re probably not going to say, ‘How did he do as RGA chairman?’

Christie may benefit in other ways from the election wins, analysts said.

“The big plus for Christie is that he built up chits with new GOP governors whose states will have loads of delegates to the 2016 GOP convention,” said Larry Sabato, director of the Center for Politics at the University of Virginia. “Governors matter in nomination battles as long as the candidate they endorse is a real contender.”

Sabato added that Christie’s presidential chances are still hindered by his image as a moderate, “and his new friends in statehouses can’t help him much there.”

States won by Republicans where the RGA spent heavily included Florida, Michigan ($14 million), Massachusetts ($11 million), Illinois ($9 million) and Wisconsin ($8 million). Wilson said Walker’s win in Wisconsin may help quell “the perception, true or not, that (Christie) was playing politics with one of his 2016 rivals.”

Republicans won competitive races in Kansas and Georgia, where the RGA spent $5 million each. And in the presidential swing state of Ohio, where the RGA spent $4 million, Republican Gov. John Kasich won re-election in a landslide.

Maryland had elected only one Republican since the 1970s, but the party’s candidate, Larry Hogan, pulled off a win Tuesday.

In his acceptance speech Tuesday, Hogan thanked “Governor Christie for bringing the cavalry from New Jersey.” Christie decided to put the RGA in debt to spend $1.5 million on Hogan’s race, Cox said.

Not every race that received substantial RGA resources paid off: In Connecticut, Democratic Gov. Dannel Malloy managed a win, despite the RGA spending $7 million on Republican Tom Foley’s behalf. Christie made six trips to Connecticut for Foley — exceeded only by his trips to Illinois, Florida and Pennsylvania, where Gov. Tom Corbett’s losing campaign was fueled by $7 million from the RGA.

Cox said Democrats and labor unions also spent big in the elections.

In the early presidential nominating state of New Hampshire, which Christie visited five times, Republican Walt Havenstein lost to Democratic Gov. Maggie Hassan.

Some political observers saw Christie’s early presence in the state, where he endorsed Havenstein in a contested Republican primary in June, as geared more toward laying groundwork for a 2016 race than a victory for Havenstein, who trailed Hassan in polls.

But more recently, the race narrowed. By keeping Havenstein competitive, Christie helped Republicans make gains in the state legislature, said Fergus Cullen, a former New Hampshire Republican party chair.

“People will notice that,” Cullen said.

One state where the sitting governor didn’t need Christie’s help down the stretch was Iowa, where Gov. Terry Branstad cruised to an easy re-election.

Yet Christie visited Iowa, which hosts the first presidential caucus, four times in recent months.

“That was above what the RGA chairman normally would do and can’t be seen as a perfunctory effort,” said David Oman, who served as Iowa co-chair of Mitt Romney’s 2012 presidential campaign.

Oman, a former chief of staff to Branstad, said he expected Branstad to stay neutral in the 2016 race, as he has in the past. But Branstad “may have passed along a little advice to his colleague,” he said.

In addition to meeting party leaders and donors in key presidential states, Christie’s RGA travel also boosted a possible presidential bid by broadening his knowledge base, Barbour said.

“What works in New Jersey may not work in New Mexico,” he said. “You get an issue exposure and perspective that you would not have just by being governor of your home state.”

Photo: Peter Stevens via Flickr

GOP Nightmare Reveals Secret Corporate Donors

GOP Nightmare Reveals Secret Corporate Donors

Some people have myriad recurring nightmares about being publicly embarrassed, such as rising to give a speech and realizing you know nothing about the topic — then realizing you’re naked.

You might be surprised to learn though, that corporations also have such nightmares. OK, corporations aren’t really people, no matter what the Supreme Court fabulists claim, so they can’t dream, but their top executives can, and several recently suffered the same chilling hallucination. Only, it wasn’t a dream… it was real.

Perhaps you think that corporations use their campaign donations to buy privileged access to state and national policymakers. Perhaps you even think that their political money actually buys those politicians — after all, they do deliver the public policies the corporate donors want. Perhaps you think this whole monetized political system is corrupt, anti-democratic, and…well, stinky.

You would, of course, be right about all of the above. As Lily Tomlin has put it, “No matter how cynical you get, it’s almost impossible to keep up.”

The corporate purchase of Washington, DC is pretty widely reported, but — keep up now — for the kleptocratic stinkiness fast consuming our statehouses as well. The Republican Governors Association has devised a layaway purchase plan allowing brand-name corporations to make secret donations of $100,000 or more a year to the RGA in support of the corporate-friendly agenda of various GOP governors. And a lot of execs have been buying.

These are chieftains of brand-name corporate giants who have secretly funneled millions of their shareholders’ dollars into the “dark money” vault of the Republican Governors Association. In turn, the RGA channels the political cash into the campaigns of assorted right-wing governors. This underground pipeline has been a dream come true for corporations, for it lets them elect anti-consumer, anti-worker, anti-environment governors without having to let their customers or shareholders know they’re doing it.

But — oops! — the RGA made a coding error in its database of dark-money donors. So in September, a mess of the GOP’s secret-money corporations were suddenly exposed, standing buck-naked in front of customers, employees, stockholders and others who were startled and angered to learn that the companies they supported were working against their interests.

A lifelong champion of political money reform, Fred Wertheimer, put it this way: “This is a classic example of how corporations are trying to use secret money hidden from the American people to buy influence, and how the Governors Association is selling it,”

Feed the RGA’s political favor meter with $250,000 a year (as Coca-Cola, the Koch brothers, and others do), and the association cynically anoints your corporation with the ironic title of “Statesman,” opening up gubernatorial doors throughout the country. Well, sniff the participants, the money buys nothing but “access” to policymakers. But wait — when was that access put on the auction block? Shouldn’t everyone have access to our public officials? Of course, but call your governor and see if you can even get an office intern to call back.

If you’re an RGA corporate “Statesman,” however, you could get a tête-à-tête with Rick Perry, the recently indicted governor of Texas, or a private breakfast with Bob McDonnell, the now-convicted former governor of Virginia. See, membership in the corrupt club has its privileges.

Now let’s call the roll of some of the privileged corporate dreamers that were pulling the wool over our eyes, hoping we would slumber in ignorance: Aetna, Aflac, Blue Cross, Coca-Cola, Comcast, Exxon Mobil, Hewlett-Packard, Koch Industries, Microsoft, Novartis, Pfizer, Shell Oil, United Health, Verizon, Walgreens and Walmart.

The corporate donors to this previously secret scheme of plutocratic rule says it’s OK, for they also give money to Democrats. Oh, bipartisan corruption — that makes me feel so much better… how about you?

To find out more about Jim Hightower, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Web page at www.creators.com.

Photo: Ervins Strauhmanis via Flickr

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Christie Sticks To His Itinerary As RGA Chief

Christie Sticks To His Itinerary As RGA Chief

By Melissa Hayes, The Record (Hackensack, N.J.)

TRENTON, N.J.—Gov. Chris Christie said New Jersey’s budget challenges and the ongoing George Washington Bridge controversy won’t stop him from traveling the country to support candidates as chairman of the Republican Governors Association.

Christie, speaking at a news conference during the association’s quarterly meeting at the Waldorf Astoria in Manhattan on Wednesday, said he has no intention of giving up the chairmanship.

Crediting his efforts and those of his vice chairman, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, for record fundraising this year, he said the association is in a strong position to win Democratic-led states.

“Given the success that the RGA has had in the first five or six months of the leadership of me and Governor Jindal in terms of raising money and expanding the map, I don’t think anybody is concerned about whether or not me or Bobby can make the case,” Christie said.

South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley said fellow governors are not concerned about issues in New Jersey becoming a distraction.

“We don’t want him to give up the chairmanship,” she said. “He completely has the backing of all of the Republican governors. He’s been a rock star in a way, not just raising money but going out there and really fighting to tell our story. So we wouldn’t let him step down.”

The RGA announced last month that it had raised a record $23.5 million in the first quarter of the year, topping its previous high of $9.1 million during the same period in 2010. Since Christie took the helm of the association in November, it has raised $33 million.

He has attended fundraisers in Florida, Chicago, Maine, Georgia and Massachusetts. He’s back in Florida Thursday to support Gov. Rick Scott, who is seeking another term. The events were originally set for April 29, but Scott canceled them because of severe rain and flooding in the Panhandle.

Wednesday’s news conference was the only portion of the three-day RGA quarterly meeting that was open to the press.

The meeting — which featured Christie and Haley as speakers at a dinner Tuesday night — is meant to fulfill obligations to donors who pay membership fees to the group. The more they pay, the more access they are granted to governors. The RGA counts pharmaceutical companies, hedge fund founders and industry leaders among its members.

Christie’s appearance at the news conference came the day after he announced he would be reducing the state’s contribution to the public employee pension fund by almost $900 million to help close a nearly $1 billion revenue shortfall by June 30. The governor also proposed scaling back the pension payment for the coming fiscal year by $1.5 billion.

He defended his record, saying he has lowered the state’s unemployment rate — though it still hovers above the national average — and that he has not been able to fully enact all of his proposals.

AFP Photo/Eric Thayer

Lawyers Slam Controversial Republican Attack Ad

Lawyers Slam Controversial Republican Attack Ad

The South Carolina Bar Association has condemned an ad that brutally attacks Vincent Sheheen, the Democratic candidate for governor in South Carolina, for legal cases he took on during his time as a criminal defense attorney.

The Republican Governors Association released an ad on Monday, saying, “Sheheen defended violent criminals who abused women, and went to work setting them free. So next time Sheheen says he’ll protect women from violent criminals, ask him: What about the ones who paid him?”

That angered South Carolina Bar Association President Alice Paylor, who expressed her disapproval in a Tuesday press release.

“The political season has blossomed, and a few people are again attacking the Constitutional principles that are essential to a free society,” she said. “Every day lawyers step up to the plate and ensure that each citizen is afforded the rights guaranteed to us all and essential to protect our liberties. It would be refreshing to see comment on the merits of positions rather than attacks seeking to evoke a gut response.”

“The truth is that each and every one of us has a professional duty to ensure that justice is not rationed but is available to everyone,” Paylor added. “It is the job of a criminal defense lawyer to ensure his or her client has a fair trial, not to defend the crime.”

The South Carolina Bar Association is a non-partisan organization and typically does not intervene in political races. The RGA ad, however, triggered Paylor to announce the launch of a website — sclawyerfacts.org — which is aimed at “refut[ing] the misinformation that is being spread and provid[ing] education about the legal profession and the service provided by lawyers to the citizens of South Carolina.”

The RGA continues to defend the ad and refuses to take it off air.

New Jersey governor Chris Christie (R), the RGA’s current chairman and a lawyer by trade, hasn’t personally commented on the ad. But a lawyer representing the Christie campaign and the New Jersey Republican State Committee during the federal investigation into “Bridgegate” has criticized the spot, calling it a “disgrace.”

“The people who talk incessantly about American exceptionalism ought to demonstrate some understanding—and some respect—for what makes our system truly admirable: That includes the willingness of lawyers to stand up for their clients no matter how ugly the allegation. But a lawyer is only ever an advocate; he’s not a co-conspirator or an enabler,” Robert D. Luskin of the law firm Patton Boggs told The Huffington Post.

Incumbent governor Nikki Haley (R) has said that her Democratic opponent certainly had a right to represent the accused, but added: “Just like South Carolinians have the right to know exactly who Vince is and who he chose to represent when they vote for governor.”

Watch the RGA ad here:

h/t:The Maddow Blog

Screenshot: YouTube