Thursday, August 19, 2021

Carnahan gets golden parachute. Don't go away mad . . .

 Strib: The party's 15-member executive board voted 8-7 to give Jennifer Carnahan a severance of three months salary, roughly $38,000, to leave her role as she faced a no-confidence vote amid scandal.

She wanted to keep the cash cow and the three-legged stool to keep milking. If three months = $38,000 than the annual salary going to her and Hagedorn was four times that, or $152,000. No wonder she tried to hang onto the job, that and for love and affection toward coworkers?

She was not worth it.  Do you figure they likely changed her network access code, got back keys, and gave her a box of opportunity? Not likely that callous. But decisive.

Gotta ask: Did she have to accept a non-disclosure - non-disparagement agreement to get the severance bucks?

Bigger questions left hanging: Will there still be that audit; and was she given an assurance that audit results would not subject her to any claw-back? Did she exit with tail coverage, i.e., ongoing errors and omissions insurance paid by the Party, or will she have to pay her own way, that way?

Remember, there remain all those harassment claims. Litigation for damages could ensue, and Carnahan could be a named individual defendant along with the H.R. head honcho. What happens now to the claimants, that remains a question, as well as what remediation will be planned and implemented to reduce likelihood of recurrence?

Biggest question: Who'll be the new boss, how soon, and how chosen?

Almost as big a question: Is the party broke, in debt, or holding a positive funds balance?

Aplikowski for the new chair? You beat the champ to be the champ?

Open question for all readers: Would you ever consider voting for Hagedorn after all this stuff loaded the fan?

Carnahan on the way out. Live by the sword, die by the sword. "Carnahan has also been accused of making liberal use of non-disclosure agreements to silence critics, one of many subplots in the unfolding drama. Andy Aplikowski, former executive director of the Minnesota GOP, revealed in an email to members of the executive committee over the weekend that Carnahan offered him $10,000 in exchange for his silence."

 Alpha News is a GOP party organ in Minnesota, so their reporting will be a beginning focus. The above headline quote is from them, here. That item continues - 

“You can’t ignore that every single person put in the ED position by Chair Carnahan has quit or been fired in a flash with little to no explanation,” he [Aplikowski] said in a follow-up email.

His emails prompted several Republican lawmakers to call on the party to release all current and past employees from non-disclosure agreements, or “silence severances,” as one state senator described them.

“As the Lazzaro situation unfolded, some individuals felt empowered to step forward and share some troubling information. However, there may be other parties involved who are unable to speak up as a result of NDAs they had signed with the MNGOP,” Bobby Benson, a member of the executive committee, said in a statement.

He then put forth a motion to “rid the party of the cancerous NDAs,” which passed in a vote of 8-6 during a Sunday night emergency meeting of the executive committee.

But now some members of the executive committee are already moving to rescind Benson’s motion, according to an email Carnahan sent to party leaders Monday afternoon.

She defended the use of NDAs as a “normal part of standard operating procedures with a majority of employers.”

“Non-disclosure agreements are important because they protect the party’s confidential, proprietary and organizational information. It’s of critical importance that we do not let the party’s proprietary information fall into the hands of the left or others that do not have our best interests and objectives in mind,” Carnahan wrote.

She also noted that NDAs do not prevent whistleblowers from coming forward to “expose illegality or impropriety within the organization,” but some have expressed online that they felt fear about coming forward because of the nature of their NDAs.

Carnahan then attacked executive committee members for “leaking” discussions from Sunday night’s meeting to “Twitter in real-time.”

“Such activity does nothing but disseminate mistruths and misinformation in an attempt to destroy my chairmanship and defame my personal reputation,” she said.

Carnahan joined WCCO Tuesday to discuss the situation and confirmed the veracity of a recording of her shared online by reporter Rebecca Brannon.

“Jim’s gonna be dead in two years. So be it,” Carnahan says in the recording, referring to her husband, Rep. Jim Hagedorn, who has cancer. Carnahan said she regrets the comment and apologized to her husband.

At least 20 Republican legislators, candidates, and causes have called on Carnahan to resign. She has thus far resisted those calls but directed the executive committee to take a “vote of confidence or no confidence” in her leadership at an upcoming meeting.

“Trust must be restored in the MNGOP leadership. Many of us work diligently to try to get Republican candidates elected, and the image of the party is crucial,” said Conservative American PAC Chairwoman Vicki Ernst, who called for Carnahan’s resignation.

“We are disheartened by practices put in place throughout the years of her leadership including new requirements to sign NDAs in order to keep board members quiet,” she added. “This is not a matter of whether you like or don’t like Jennifer Carnahan — it is a matter of what is right for the Republican Party.”

Alpha News reached out to the Minnesota GOP for comment. This story will be updated if a response is received.

If there's nothing to hide, don't hide it. Yes/no?  That Alpha item links to another Alpha item from April this year stating in part - headlining first -

Party officials accuse Minnesota GOP chair of creating culture of intimidation - Several current and past committee members recently issued letters opposing the incumbent chair, with complaints about her lack of communication, financial mismanagement, vengefulness, and more. Some have now endorsed her opponent, Sen. Mark Koran, who has vowed to lead "without drama."

By A.J. Kaufman - April 8, 2021

So, back then a "drama queen" suggestion about the Carnahan style. The item adds -

Republicans also lost two congressional seats in 2018. The party extended its run of failing to win a statewide election to over 14 years in 2020, when Tina Smith retained her U.S. Senate seat, and Joe Biden increased the Democrats’ margin over Donald Trump in the presidential election.

This came on the heels of Gov. Tim Walz beating Republican candidate Jeff Johnson; Attorney General Keith Ellison defeating Doug Wardlow; and Amy Klobuchar winning a third U.S. Senate term in 2018.

Two years ago, Carnahan “promised President Trump that we will deliver Minnesota’s 10 electoral votes to him in 2020, and I’m committed to seeing that through,” which didn’t occur.

Carnahan has her share of detractors. Several current and past Executive Committee members recently issued letters opposing the incumbent, with complaints about her lack of communication, financial mismanagement, vengefulness, impugning of reputations, creating and tolerating a toxic environment, bullying, disrespect, and more.

Republican National Committeewoman Barb Sutter, for instance, said in a letter to delegates that over 50% of online donations to the Minnesota GOP have gone to “credit card processing fees.”

“The state party has used fundraising vendors who get a percentage of the donations.  However, over the period from October 2019 to February 2020, the oversight of those allocations was virtually nonexistent,” Sutter said in her email. “MN GOP got to keep only 48% of the money that came in online, whether the vendor was responsible or not for the donations. Our vendors took large fees on nearly all donations throughout the life of our relationship.”

Sutter concluded her email by discussing Carnahan’s alleged attempts to “ruin peoples’ reputation when they don’t do what” she wants.

“Rather than nurturing a vibrant environment that fosters teamwork and creativity, Jennifer uses fear to intimidate and silence her opponents. This is a drain on our party’s energy and resources, and it’s inconsistent with the values our donors expect, and that our Constitution stands for. We deserve better, and the conservatives in this state deserve better,” Sutter said.

Republican National Committeeman Max Rymer said he was subjected to the kind of retaliation Sutter described when he attempted to privately raise concerns about the party’s financial mismanagement. In response, Carnahan “has impugned my character, tarnished my reputation at the highest levels of the Republican National Committee, has told explicit falsehoods, and involved more people than just our Executive Committee — all the way up to the COO of the RNC and beyond,” Rymer said in an email to party officials.

“I am disturbed the way MN GOP Chair Jennifer Carnahan has handled this situation. She’s displayed prolonged financial negligence, misrepresented the financial impact to the Executive Committee Board, and attempted to intimidate a whistleblower (me),” Rymer continued.

Dave Pascoe, secretary of the Minnesota GOP, said in an email to delegates that he has been “asking questions about party mismanagement and finances” since December.

“These questions have not been well received,” he said. “Unfortunately, it appears that me looking into these matters has been taken as a combative personal attack.”

Janet Beihoffer, a former Republican committeewoman for Minnesota, also objected to Carnahan’s leadership in a recent email to delegates and endorsed her opponent.

[italics added]

Follow the money, then get into truculent characteristics. Money first, as an earlier noted Shot in the Dark posting about "an audit" seemed to suggest. Turning to two of Strib's recent posts, not as much a management examination (but with a j'accuse or two that way) as reporting MNGOP inner party claims of shrewish truculence and vengeance -  First:


Growing GOP calls for chairwoman's resignation following sex trafficking indictment against top donor
Carnahan tries to distance herself from furor over donor's sex trafficking charges.

By Kim Hyatt Star Tribune
August 15, 2021 — 9:20pm

Lazzaro, who remained in the Sherburne County jail awaiting his first court hearing Monday, has ties to many prominent state Republicans, including Carnahan, who recently co-hosted a podcast with Lazzaro.

Carnahan did not respond to repeated calls for comment over the weekend. However, she released a lengthy statement Sunday on Facebook, saying that "leaders in our party are now using guilt by association to demand my resignation" and that the party and its leaders "cannot be responsible for the actions of donors and unofficial persons," such as Lazzaro.

"The coup taking place right now to relitigate the chair's race, smear my reputation and defame me is not right," she wrote.

She noted that the party took immediate action to donate Lazzaro's contributions to charity and to condemn both his and Medina's actions. She said the state's executive committee was scheduled to meet Sunday evening to discuss the matter.

Carnahan is married to U.S. Rep Jim Hagedorn, R-Minn., and photos of the couple with Lazzaro were circulating on social media.

The Minnesota Reformer reports several anonymous party officials came forward after Lazzaro's indictment, saying that Carnahan forced staffers and donors to sign nondisclosure agreements "prolifically" to silence staff.

On Saturday through the MN GOP's Twitter account, Carnahan released a statement regarding the arrests and charges, but she did not address the growing number of calls from within her party to resign.

[...] Carnahan said the party stands with victims of sex trafficking. But some Republicans say the statement isn't enough and the chairwoman should step down.

[One inner party type quoted ...]

"We're broken. Transparency is gone. Respect for one another and building a culture of respect is not present. Accountability is often best achieved through audits, and the potential to right the ship through audits has been declined numerous times."

[...] State Sen. Roger Chamberlain, R-Lino Lakes, was the first legislator to call for her immediate resignation [...] while adding that he will be "praying for the victims" of Lazzaro.

"Carnahan's close, ongoing relationship with him is troubling, to say the least. I find it impossible to believe she didn't know about his activities," he wrote. "That relationship is cause enough for Carnahan's resignation."

Barb Sutter, a Republican National Committeewoman and executive committee member, said in a statement Sunday that Carnahan brought Lazzaro "into the fold in 2017, and she actively encouraged his complete immersion into the party structure and the homes of activists and donors."

"Her poor judgment of character and the resulting lack of leadership has tainted the party," Sutter wrote. She added that Carnahan's calls to "come together as a party" and "rally around our Chair" do not address the problem, and she must step down "for the sake of our Party's and state's future."

Rep. Marion O'Neill, R-Maple Lake, said in a statement that Lazzaro is "the worst humanity has to offer." She said that if Carnahan did not have "the wisdom to recognize the evil that lurks within," she is unfit to lead.

On Saturday, a letter sent to the state GOP executive board signed by Republican state Reps. Steve Drazkowski of Mazeppa, Tim Miller of Prinsburg, Cal Bahr of East Bethel and Jeremy Munson of Lake Crystal called for a change in leadership, saying Carnahan has "toxic conflicts of interest surrounding herself with a board that fails to act."

"The news of a close, personal friend and advisor to our state party chair being indicted and arrested for heinous crimes against children doesn't just look bad. It is bad," the lawmakers wrote.

Minnesota Young Republicans and Minnesota College Republicans issued statements Sunday calling for Carnahan's resignation as well. GOP state Sens. Michelle Benson of Ham Lake, Julia Coleman of Chanhassen and Andrew Matthews of Princeton also have called for her to quit, as has Sen. Mark Koran of North Branch, who challenged Carnahan for party chair this year.

Piling on? Using the Lazzaro arrest as cause to reignite an earlier failed effort to purge Carnahan? That item was followed up three days later -

Former staff for Minnesota Republican Party allege Jennifer Carnahan created 'toxic' workplace - Former executive directors of state party speak out on Carnahan; NDAs voided.

By Briana Bierschbach Star Tribune - August 18, 2021 — 5:03pm

 Minnesota Republican Party Chairwoman Jennifer Carnahan has presided over a toxic workplace culture and unchecked sexual harassment in the state party, according to a growing number of former staffers and activists who have leveled allegations against her.

Four former executive directors of the party released a lengthy statement on Wednesday saying Carnahan "ruled by grudges, retaliation, and intimidation" in the party, often withholding prized party data to help candidates she preferred to get a "leg up." The statement said she retaliated against those who spoke out against her, often trying to prevent former staff from getting other jobs.

"Carnahan created an extremely toxic work environment, often yelling, demeaning and questioning loyalty," the former staffers said in a joint statement. "We would be reprimanded if we did not glowingly 'pump up' and stroke the ego of Carnahan in our rare public appearances."

The four former executive directors — Becky Alery, Andy Aplikowski, Christine Snell and Kevin Poindexter — said they were able to speak out after the party's Executive Board voted Sunday to void nondisclosure agreements that they said Carnahan used to silence staff.

They added their voices to a widening chorus of people calling for Carnahan to resign from party leadership, including well over a dozen state legislators, three Republican governor candidates and five members of the party's own executive board.

Carnahan has said the allegations are part of an effort by her detractors to "relitigate" the 2021 race for party chair, when she won a third term. The 15-member executive board is meeting Thursday night and will take a vote of confidence in Carnahan's leadership. Ten votes are required to remove her as chair.

Many have cited Carnahan's close relationship with Anton "Tony" Lazzaro, a prolific GOP donor and activist who was arrested last week on federal charges of sex trafficking. Lazzaro became deeply involved in state politics through his friendship with Carnahan.

Since his arrest, other allegations have flooded social media about Carnahan's leadership of the party. Multiple women detailed in social media posts their experiences being harassed or spoken to inappropriately by staff in the party, a culture they said went unchecked.

"I don't think young women are safe in politics," said Kayla Khang, who interned for the party when she was 17 and said male party staffers had inappropriate conversations with her and frequently made comments that made her uncomfortable. She said she was warned specifically about being alone with one former party staffer.

Sen. Karin Housley, R-Stillwater, said allegations that the party leadership "could have known about sexual harassment allegations involving one of its staff and done nothing is beyond the pale and reprehensible."

In a statement to the Star Tribune, the party said "none of the allegations brought forth publicly in recent days were ever brought to the Republican Party of Minnesota's Human Resources Director or the Chair."

"Had they been brought forth; appropriate action would have been taken. The Republican Party of Minnesota stands with all victims of sexual harassment or assault. The allegation that the Republican Party of Minnesota, its staff, or the Chair would ignore such complaints is blatantly false," the statement said.

It appears released GOP party press statements have a strange angle on reality, while Carnahan looks like chopped liver from the reporting of the multitude of voices and what they voice. Where does that leave Hagedorn? If the claims of extreme shrewishness are valid, what kind of marriage responsibilities have Hagedorn and Carnahan? Who wears the pants in the family? What they do have together is the marital privilege, not being compelled to testify against one another. Like Bill and Hillary that way.

Next, the latest Mitch Berg dark shooting post

 

Reckoning

During her first campaign for #MNGOP state chair, I supported Jennifer Carnahan. It wasn’t a slam-dunk – Keith Downey was very capable. I thought she told a good story, and had a good plan.

The vote made sense at the time.

But a lot has changed during Carnahan’s administration.

I left activism in 2018 – but heard the stories about the goings on at the GOP HQ. I tend to give people the benefit of the doubt – and politics tends to draw big egos and hair-trigger tempers (much like radio) – so like a lot of grassroots voters, I paid them little mind.

But the tsunami of stories this past two weeks hasn’t left a lot of room for rational doubt. It’s time for Carnahan to go.

It’s not even really about the allegations about Tony Lazzaro, awful as they are. I think it’s entirely plausible Carnahan didn’t know that her close friend, guest at her small wedding, and primary campaign donor was involved in the activities for which he now faces Federal criminal charges; it’s not like sex traffickers advertise it in polite company.

I said plausible. But while rumors abound that Lazzaro’s side hustle was an open secret in inner party circles about (including from Andy Aplikowski’s letter this morning), let’s just leave that, noxious as it is, to the FBI and the DOJ.

The allegations against Carnahan and her staff, though? It’s impossible to read the credible, against-interest allegations of sexual harassment on the parts of various staffers and not get outraged at the “bro” culture that seems to have erupted in *our* party’s HQ.

As a conservative, a Republican and a father and grandfather of young women, I see these stories (none of them *completely* news to me, even outside the party) and wonder, not just why any woman would *work* there, but why they’d vote for the GOP?

Are they merely allegations, not court verdicts? Sure.

So what about when the “allegation” go to court? With discovery, testimony under oath? Imagine the anger every parent will feel at a party that’d foster that kind of depravity, when allegation turns to judgment? When that revulsion goes to vote?

Do you, loyal GOPer, feel lucky?

As to the allegations about Carnahan’s HR style, and her staff’s dubious HR practices, and the allegations four former Executive Directors made? Those just bounced the rubble.

It’s time for Carnahan to go.

And maybe others are reaching that conclusion:

And if Carnahan doesn’t? The Executive Committee must relieve her of her duties.

And if for whatever reason they don’t? The State Central needs to do it. Not just because the alternative is electoral disaster – although it is. No – because either way it’s the right thing to do.

It should go without saying – the GOP needs an independent investigation of the HR and financial allegations, including the out of control spending and tens of thousands in hush money purportedly paid to departing staffers.

Minnesota Republicans – the heart and brains of this state – may nor may not “deserve better”, but we had best demand better.

"Heart and brains of this state" seems questionable; but Berg has the opinion that Carnahan has reached the end of her shelf life, and he is a party pundit having standing among his Republican peers. Carnahan looks out. Let's see what the levels of inner party discipline Berg mentioned have to say, unless Carnahan jumps on her sword, making purging her unnecessary and honchos like Berg can gladly close the chapter on Carnahan times atop the troubled party. 

That Gezelka thing - today being the 19th, that 6:30 pm confab should end in a resolution, one way or the other, with few aftershocks expected. Kill it, bury it, act from then on as if it never was. Focus on candidates, campaigns, donors as a class being ongoing without Lazzaro - ultimately they will be kept happy over their political investments. Where else can the likes of Cummins go? Wardlow and the pillow guy? That would be a hoot. Despite all the slung mud Ellison destroyed that option, DFL publishing Real Doug Wardlow and such, as part of the destruction.

__________UPDATE_________

KARE 11 posts of the Thursday evening Board meeting, for a vote of confidence or non-confidence. MSN posts a WCCO item suggesting Andy Aplikowski was a focal critic in the current reexamination of Carnahan's tenure. Andy used to blog, and freely spoke his mind. While thinking some of his opinions were wrong headed, his discourse on inner MNGOP happenings, when he'd post that way, were blunt but carried a sense of legitimacy rather than sore headedness. I trust his saying the Carnahan tenure was flawed. He says it. I believe it. He bases his critique on personal experience as he perceived it. I trust his first-person knowledge, as he is reported to have expressed it.

_______FURTHER UPDATE_______

One paragraph in that MN GOP Executive Directors' letter Pioneer Press published online deserves attention -

Carnahan is very much the person the supposed “coup” is making her out to be. She has successfully insulated herself with loyal staff and packed the State Executive Board and committees with people who will vote exactly how she wants them to protect her.  If Carnahan wasn’t willing to drag down Big Brothers Big Sisters with this chaos, why would she not afford Republicans in this state the same opportunity of a clean slate?

The mention of Big Brothers Big Sisters relates to this published info, from days earlier, this month, the item being a terse report that Carnahan resigned from that operation's Board - per the Aug. 16 report -

 “Jennifer Carnahan reached out to us and resigned from the Big Brothers Big Sisters Twin Cities board of directors on Saturday amidst the recent media attention. Her resignation is effective immediately,” the spokeswoman said.

The Ex. Dir. letter's sentence, " If Carnahan wasn’t willing to drag down Big Brothers Big Sisters with this chaos, why would she not afford Republicans in this state the same opportunity of a clean slate," needs the context that Carnahan was with BBBS on a volunteer board, whereas she and Hagedorn pull down money from MN GOP, with the exact figure not known at Crabgrass. Beyond that, an honorary nonprofit board seat (for a charity) is not in any sense congruent to a political party boss position - with salary. And the letter writers know this, so that sentence is more than a bit disingenuous.

Aplikowski mentions a July email trail in a public open letter, which was reported on by bringmethenews.com

That arguably stands against Carnahan's saying she knew nothing of Lazzaro's activities until the August indictment informed the public of its issuance by a grand jury. His mention of a contemporaneous July phone conversation with Carnahan might be something she'd deny, but he has made the allegation.

Beyond that, this evening's Thursday 8/19 Board event will be a web topic tomorrow.

_______FURTHER UPDATE_______

Since Aplikowski ceased blogging Crabgrass has relied upon Gary Gross, now posting here, for day-to-day Republican news. Gary's last post was August 16, while publishing nothing of the Lazzaro situation and the renewed scrutiny Carnahan faces. Looking forward to his analysis after the Board session is something we all should anticipate; along with Mitch Berg's follow-up after expressing his "reckoning" post expressing the thought that Carnahan should step aside.

 https://www.powerlineblog.com/ continues to not touch the story in postings there.

If Carnahan does not tell the Board tonight of a decision to step aside, they might table the confidence vote question until after they have received and studied their audit results. That seems the prudent thing for them to do. Also, requesting that Carnahan grant Board auditing agents access to her campaign finances as part of Board follow-the-money due diligence. Sweeping things under the rug seems to not be an option. Pandora's box stands open.

 

Tuesday, August 17, 2021

[UPDATED] Freedom Club - Republican men of distinction shaking out a lawyer to say for them, "Distance, distance more than anything we stand for holding this shit at a distance." And so far there is only an indictment.

 Quick rats. Troubled ship. Not yet sunk. The headline is a paraphrase for the posting of this gentlemens' club's decision to punt without even reaching third down first; and doing it, as expected, via soft phrasing over having taken the money earlier before the smell -

click the image to enlarge and read


 Sorensen at Bluestem Prairie has detail where tight writing means read it all there because attempting excerpting here would not do that item justice.

-----------------

 UPDATE: A websearch. Nothing was found online about this operation's regard for or against Jan. 6 Capitol events. Too few tailored suits involved? What?

FURTHER: Apart from Freedom Club as an issue, the Shot in the Dark blog reports; here and here. (While Powerline, for instance, at least early in the story acts as if Lazzaro does not exist.) Alpha News could also have gone MIA on the story, reporting about events instead, e.g.- this link.

It is unclear whether suggestions that Carnahan resign as Minnesota GOP boss are legitimately based on Lazzaro-related outrage, or arise out of other grudges, biases or judgments.

FURTHER: BringMeTheNews.

FURTHER:  Gockowski himself authors Alpha News' item on Lazzaro. Alpha News is, itself, powered by REVV - a Republican content-and-contribution solicitation operation. As such, it is biased Republican, in origin as well as editorial content bias. It sucks. But when it jumps the Lazzaro story up front, that means something just as much as Freedom Club being shocked, SHOCKED!, by "allegations" to the point of throwing off Lazzaro's amount of money he'd given Freedom Club, ASAP, unload and disclaim. 

Rats, all. Let the story develop to where we can see - Why blame Carnahan?

The Board hiring an audit, ASAP, is the first step toward answering that question. Was the money handled on the up-and-up, or was the handling problematic?

Carnahan has herself disclaimed close ties to Lazzaro.

One thing - this prompt action by the players - on an indictment and not a conviction - is amazing. The indictment was reported by DOJ on Thursday, the 12th. Friday 13th, the unanimous Freedom Club board had convened somehow, magic or whatever, so as to threw Lazzaro to the sharks with its not us, no way, we donate against human trafficking, so there! Notice from a lawyer. Does all that smell funny to you, as if word had spread of a shoe about to be dropped? All we have is collective circumstantial evidence that way - the blazing promptness of all recipients of Lazzaro money, to distance, to disavow, to suggest as many have, look at Carnahan, not us.

FURTHER: MN DFL has posted. Excerpt, showing Jim Hagedon got twice the Lazzaro money as the next nearest candidate, Emmer. (Hagedon got as much as Freedom Club got) -

The FBI believes there may be additional victims. Lazzaro has donated roughly $150,000 to Minnesota Republican candidates, party units, and allied organizations.

Lazzaro’s contributions to Minnesota Republicans include:

Congressman Jim Hagedorn $31,000
Congressman Tom Emmer $15,600
Congresswoman Michelle Fischbach $1,000
Congressman Emmer’s NRCC $10,000
Congressman Pete Stauber $8,000
Doug Wardlow for Attorney General $1,150
Kendall Qualls for Congress – via Lazzaro’s PAC $4,800
House Minority Leader Kurt Daudt $1,000
Senator Karin Housley $1,500
The Minnesota Republican Party – Federal Account $21,178
The Minnesota Republican Party – State Account $21,030
33rd Senate District Republican Party of Minnesota $800
59th Senate District Republican Party of Minnesota $1,550
5th Congressional District Republican Party of Minnesota $775
Log Cabin Republicans $500
MN Young Republican Victory Fund $3,200
Freedom Club $30,000
Jesse Pfliger for House $750
Ben Schwanke for State Senate $1,000

Fischbach, Housley and Daudt got small allocations. Minnesota Republican Party fattened up off Lazzaro by ten grand more than Freedom Club got. That factual presentation on the DFL site was followed by a Ken Martin dare.

Ken Martin, Chairman of the Minnesota DFL Party, released the following statement:

“The crimes that Republican strategist and donor Anton Lazzaro was indicted and arrested for are absolutely horrifying. It is also extremely disturbing that a man arrested for sexually trafficking six minors has such deep ties to so many Minnesota Republican officials, candidates, and organizations, particularly Republican Party Chairwoman Jennifer Carnahan and her husband, Congressman Jim Hagedorn

“Carnahan, who also invited Lazzaro to co-host the Minnesota Republican Party podcast, must denounce Lazzaro immediately. However, it is not enough for Carnahan and other Minnesota Republicans to just denounce and disavow Lazzaro after collectively accepting over $150,000 from him. As such, I am calling on each and every elected official, candidate, and organization that received a cent from this predator to donate those funds to an anti-trafficking organization.”

[italics added]

https://www.powerlineblog.com/ as of midday, 2/18/2021, has yet to regard Lazzaro as news; (despite the narrowness of Pelosi's House majority and upcoming 2022 federal elections where it might matter among voters; and more keenly, despite how statewide and local elections will be impacted).

The DOJ's Castro Medina press release, second paragraph, begins -

According to court documents, from May 2020 through December 2020, Gisela Castro Medina, 19, and co-defendant Anton Joseph Lazzaro, 30, conspired with each other and others to recruit and solicit six minor victims to engage in commercial sex acts.

Do you suppose that "and others" to recruit . . . caused the disavowal stampede?

Do you guess "with each other and others" might be conspiracy boilerplate language; or might it be specific to actual grand jury testimony known to the Lazzaro prosecution; but secret to the public. It differs from the boilerplate "conspiracy" phrasing of Lazzaro's indictment - Count 1, Paragraph 1. 

Between Strib, MNPost, and PioneerPress, detail over the next few months may matter and be published. (Also Bluestem Prairie likely will be publishing added information from time to time). 

How quick and thorough an audit do you believe the Republican Party of Minnesota's Board can present press and public? Complete or by synopsis of key findings. Speed and accuracy, re any uncovered wrongdoing seems required by circumstances. 

Freedom Club, Carnahan/Hagedon, and the Party could turn out to form a triangle of importance; or it just might be only that Lazzaro wanted to give a lot of money to Freedom Club, it being an elitist thing with credibility which he might have thought to want to glom onto. Things could settle; Lazzaro accepting a plea. The indictment refers to 2020 conduct. That might mean an investigation was ongoing, and might be why the FBI did not seek to instigate a prosecution during the Barr stint at DOJ.



 

Cardinal Burke has developed a Covid 19 infection and is hospitalized in Wisconsin.

 This Roman Church individual. As with that site, not mainstream. Not that Crabgrass is mainstream, but it and the Reflections site are polar extremes. With some overlap, things never being either/or but more-or-less.

DWT has no kind words for the sick Cardinal. Final paragraph of that analysis - 

Burke has said that Catholics cannot vote for Democrats and he once said that Catholics who voted for Obama had "collaborated with evil." He has brought pain and suffering to countless Catholics and he will not be missed outside of a small circle of hateful extremists. Wisconsin has had 704,854 cases of COVID-- 121,058 cases per million and over 8,300 have died. In the last 2 weeks cases have risen 88% and hospitalizations are up 139%. Hospitalizations in Burke's home county, La Crosse, are up 841%. Maybe people there still take him seriously.

 Burke wrote over a year ago about the pandemic

Many with whom I am in communication, reflecting upon the present worldwide health crisis with all of its attendant effects, have expressed to me the hope that it will lead us – as individuals and families, and as a society – to reform our lives, to turn to God Who is surely near to us and Who is immeasurable and unceasing in His mercy and love towards us. There is no question that great evils like pestilence are an effect of original sin and of our actual sins. God, in His justice, must repair the disorder which sin introduces into our lives and into our world. In fact, He fulfills the demands of justice by His superabundant mercy.

God has not left us in the chaos and death, which sin introduces into the world, but has sent His only-begotten Son, Jesus Christ, to suffer, die, rise from the dead and ascend in glory to His right hand, in order to remain with us always, purifying us of sin and inflaming us with His love. In His justice, God recognizes our sins and the need of their reparation, while, in His mercy He showers upon us the grace to repent and make reparation. The Prophet Jeremiah prayed: “We recognize, O LORD, our wickedness, the guilt of our fathers; that we have sinned against you,” but he immediately continued his prayer: “For your name’s sake spurn us not, disgrace not the throne of your glory; remember your covenant with us, and break it not” (Jer 14, 20-21).

God never turns His back on us; He will never break His covenant of faithful and enduring love with us, even though we are so frequently indifferent, cold and unfaithful. As the present suffering uncovers for us so much indifference, coldness and infidelity on our part, we are called to turn to God and to beg for His mercy. We are confident that He will hear us and bless us with His gifts of mercy, forgiveness and peace. We join our sufferings to the Passion and Death of Christ and thus, as Saint Paul says, “complete what is lacking in Christ’s afflictions for the sake of his body, that is, the Church” (Col 1, 24). Living in Christ, we know the truth of our Biblical prayer: “The salvation of the righteous is from the LORD; he is their refuge in the time of trouble” (Ps 37 [36], 39). In Christ, God has fully revealed to us the truth expressed in the prayer of the Psalmist: “Mercy and truth have met together; justice and peace have kissed” (Ps 85 [84], 10).

That message has to have stayed with him making him ready for whatever fate deals. Hopefully he recovers, and may then have more to say about the illness and how vaccine is not in any way unholy or ungodly. 

May his suffering be lighter from today onward.

Monday, August 16, 2021

AP - An ignoble end to America’s longest war. "WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden and other top U.S. officials were stunned on Sunday by the pace of the Taliban's nearly complete takeover of Afghanistan, as the planned withdrawal of American forces urgently became a mission to ensure a safe evacuation. The speed of the Afghan government's collapse and the ensuing chaos posed the most serious test of Biden as commander in chief, and he was the subject of withering criticism from Republicans who said that he had failed. Biden campaigned as a seasoned expert in international relations and has spent months downplaying the prospect of an ascendant Taliban while arguing that Americans of all political persuasions have tired of a 20-year war, a conflict that demonstrated the limits of money and military might to force a Western-style democracy on a society not ready or willing to embrace it."

Headlining is the AP's opening three paragraphs run together, to define the focus of this post. How can the AP publish such horseshit? Didn't the Vichy French fold after Germany's withdrawal? Don't unpopular occupancies go that way? Always?

India, after British occupation, a big civil war but both sides glad to see the Union Jack disappear? Vietnam, after Dien Bien Phu and aftershocks? Michelin lost rubber plantations, but the peasantry was glad to see conflict peril to their water buffalo ending, much as U.S. farmers do not want their tractors damaged.

The DC creeps, both parties, Deep State administrative types, we can call them the "bipartisan and agency intelligensia," - they ALL knew exactly what would happen.

There are lies, and big lies, and the entire AP item rings the bell in category 2.

Collaborators aiming for a quick exit a step ahead of retribution - big, new story?

Get real. Any honest person you might be able to find in DC will tell you the truth. The problem there, Diogenes' lamp would burn out, he'd be footsore, searching.

Hypocrites Unite! We have nothing to lose. If credibility were to have existed, that would be threatened with loss. No problem. No cred. No loss. 

AP cred? You figure that one out.

Biggest hypocrites? The Republicans critiquing Biden's ending the freak show that Little Bush inflicted on us, Liz Cheny's dad doing drum beating and inciting the ENDLESS WAR ON TERROR as Little Bush sold it along with the selling of Colin Powell's cred.

Making a list:  Actually, already made and featured. Do you see "Perpetuation of the Bushco Endless War on Terror" anywhere on the list? Not a priority, nor should it be, in anything like a sane and decent world. 

Keeping control of the heroin trade, not on the list, yet somehow possibly a priority that Obama kept aflame, Biden attached back then, and now Biden sinks that rotten boat. Or appears to. Good move. The Pentagon will not miss that one, the CIA will. It was a big failure at the box office. It appears over. 

Enough. May the story end here. Give Biden credit. Trump presaged the ending. So give him credit for that, regardless of other legacy nostalgia.

The only thing left is to shrink Homeland Security bloat; Pentagon bloat; DC consultancy bloat. And to tightly shut the revolving door keeping all that stuff going.

May it happen. Sometime. Even if not in my lifetime or yours. 

_________UPDATE________

Strib, nobody putting name to it, instead, "Editorial Board" writing, "America's fiasco in Afghanistan - The withdrawal debacle and Afghanistan's fall to the Taliban will have enduring impact for Afghans, Americans and the world."

The fiasco was Little Bush starting the stupidity, with a second front in Iraq. If you believe the official 9/11 story, bless you. If you believe an inside job demolition as pretext for 9/11 false justification, bless you. Either way, a long unwanted occupancy, all that wasted wealth which could have gone to improving life in the U.S. of A. for US was pissed down a rat hole.  

Biden had the guts to call it a dead waste of lives and resources, and to get out. Something Obama skated on. Trump kicked the can down the road. The whole sick adventure was something that never was helpful to the U.S. of A. 

Get over it. Move on to better use of national wealth than screwing over some fairly primitive people half a world away - because we could. Because some junior officers wanted their combat ticket punched.

Rumsfeld croaked before the ending in Afghanistan. Too bad. Cheney can see it and Little Bush can paint a watercolor of it. Move on. Biden did the right thing.

Biden's domestic policy "bipartisanship" is what he should be hammered over, not really pushing for better for US. Serving oligarchs instead. Serving Mammon. Keeping up appearances, but not pushing much over a finish line. However, getting out of Afghanistan - the sooner the better, and it was done and it is over. Give Biden credit where it is due.

________FURTHER UPDATE________

Sunday, August 15, 2021

The magnitude 7.2 Hatian earthquake has a death toll near 800, with rubble being cleared and more dead expected to be found. How does that compare with the daily death toll in our nation, from Covid 19 peaking, delta variation, high unvaccinated rates?

Not to minimize the earthquake, and with a hurricane expected, the death toll will climb.  For purposes of comparison, put it at a thousand lost lives, final count projection. Likely the death toll will be higher.

AP reports, nationwide -

The COVID-19 death toll has started soaring again as the delta variant tears through the nation's unvaccinated population and fills up hospitals with patients, many of whom are younger than during earlier phases of the pandemic.

The U.S. is now averaging about 650 deaths a day, increasing more than 80 percent from two weeks ago and going past the 600 mark on Saturday for the first time in three months.

Data on the the age and demographics of victims during the delta surge is still limited, but hospitals in virus hotspots say they are clearly seeing more admissions and deaths among people under the age of 65.

Two days of Covid-19 U.S. deaths, more than the Haiti quake's possible final toll. 

Keep a perspective. Push your local village idiots toward vaccination sites. It is like trying to herd cats, unwilling cats, but the vaccine haters imperil the rest of us, and should stop being the public health menace they are. 

UPDATE: The reported death toll from the earthquake has reached over 1400. For the analogy, presume that by the time tropical storm and clearing collapsed buildings are factored in, 2000 Haitian lives may have been lost. In a U.S. Covid-19 week at present-levels of death, the virus deaths might be twice that number. If virus fatality levels drop, it is only a matter of time for our nation's virus death toll to surpass Haiti's quake/storm number. It debunks effort to minimize the virus threat to consider the relative loss of lives. Pandemic has a meaning, one you can take to discuss at one of your friendly vocal neighborhood mask burnings. "Delta Blues" may take on a second meaning. Until another Greek letter's variant shows up as even more virulent and transmissible.

Strib carries AP feeds on Afghanistan - nothing unexpected. One Way Out.

Two feed stories: Afghan president flees the country as Taliban move on Kabul - Aug. 15; a day earlier: As Taliban tighten their grip, Kabul airport only way out - Aug 14.

Opening of the earlier item -

KABUL, Afghanistan — As a Taliban offensive encircles the Afghan capital, there's increasingly only one way out for those fleeing the war, and only one way in for U.S. troops sent to protect American diplomats still on the ground: Kabul's international airport.

The Vietnam lesson again. They live there, next door, Pakistan now. Hanoi then. 

They wait for invading world-away forces to leave. Patient that way. Over years. Ultimately they did leave. Hurriedly.

Only one way out. Ain't going out that front door. A man's down there, just might be Taliban -  I don't know. 

From the Aug. 15 AP item beginning - 

KABUL, Afghanistan — Afghanistan's embattled president left the country Sunday, joining his fellow citizens and foreigners in a stampede fleeing the advancing Taliban and signaling the end of a 20-year Western experiment aimed at remaking Afghanistan.

The Taliban, who for hours had been on the outskirts of Kabul, announced soon after they would move further into a city gripped by panic where helicopters raced overhead throughout the day to evacuate personnel from the U.S. Embassy. Smoke rose near the compound as staff destroyed important documents. Several other Western missions also prepared to pull their people out.

Civilians fearing that the Taliban could reimpose the kind of brutal rule that all but eliminated women's rights rushed to leave the country as well, lining up at cash machines to withdraw their life savings. The desperately poor — who had left homes in the countryside for the presumed safety of the capital — remained in their thousands in parks and open spaces throughout the city.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken rejected comparisons to the U.S. pullout from Vietnam, as many watched in disbelief at the sight of helicopters landing in the embassy compound.

Disbelief? It was inevitable. Each time. Why not believe the inevitable? Life is more orderly that way. Things falling into place. 

History teaches. Nixon and Kissinger did the right thing when they left.

Trump then Biden did the right thing. Leaving.

Each one having its story of how we got there. We got reporting. Never a decent "WHY IN THE WORLD . . .?" There are reasons, and then there are good reasons.

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At least this time it was not conscripts being sacrificed. There is that difference.

___________UPDATE___________

Two wars. Each time a feckless Congress going along to get along. Image. If you enlarge that image you can read the lectern badge. It is getting a haughty response. History in the making.