Categories
Politics Beat Blog

Brian Kelsey, Accomplice Indicted in Campaign Finance Fraud

State Senator Brian Kelsey (R-Germantown) has been indicted by a federal grand jury in Nashville for violating multiple campaign finance laws in his unsuccessful 2016 campaign for an open U.S. Congress seat. The five-count indictment announced Monday charges Kelsey and Nashville social club owner Joshua Smith with violating multiple campaign finance laws in a conspiracy to benefit Kelsey’s campaign.

According to the indictment, beginning in February 2016 and continuing through mid-October 2016, Kelsey and Smith conspired with others to violate federal campaign finance laws to secretly and unlawfully funnel “soft money” (funds not subject to the limitations, prohibitions, and reporting requirements of the Federal Election Campaign Act [FECA]) from Kelsey’s Tennessee State Senate campaign committee to his authorized federal campaign committee. 

Kelsey and others also caused a national political organization to make illegal, excessive contributions to Kelsey’s federal campaign committee by secretly coordinating with the organization on advertisements supporting Kelsey’s federal candidacy and to cause false reports of contributions and expenditures to be filed with the Federal Election Commission. 

The indictment alleges that Kelsey, Smith, and other unindicted co-conspirators orchestrated the concealed movement of $91,000 to a national political organization for the purpose of funding advertisements that urged voters to support Kelsey in the August 2016 primary election, and that the conspirators caused the political organization to make $80,000 worth of contributions to Kelsey’s federal campaign committee in the form of coordinated expenditures.

If convicted, Kelsey and Smith face up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine on each count. A summons has been issued by the Court and the duo are directed to surrender to U.S. Marshals in the Middle District of Tennessee on or before November 5, 2021, at 10 a.m. and both will make an initial appearance before a U.S. Magistrate Judge.

Categories
Politics Politics Feature

Trent Lott to Resign; Wonkette Starts Reckless Speculation

Wonkette.com, the irreverent political blog based in Washingon, D.C., has offered its usual cheeky spin on the news of Mississippi senator Trent Lott’s forthcoming resignation.

Among the possible reasons offered by Wonkette:

“Trent finally had enough of Mitch McConnell trying to play footsie under the table at leadership meetings.”

“The other Senators kept making fun of his and his wife’s matchy names: ‘Trish-Trent! Trish-Trent!'”

“He didn’t want to be the last racist left in the Senate, and Byrd was looking damn old …”

Read ’em all at Wonkette.com.

By the way, Lott says his resignation has nothing to do with those pesky anti-lobbying restrictions on former congressmen that take effect next year. Just so you know.

Categories
News

After 10 Hours In Iraq, Sens. Corker And Alexander See “Clear Success”

Returning from a trip to Iraq, Republican Tennessee Senators Lamar Alexander and Bob Corker “gave an upbeat report on progress in Iraq” to reporters this morning.

Alexander said a strategy devised by General Petraeus to work with local leaders and win them over to the U.S. cause has shown “clear success, province by province.”

“They are fed up with random murders of their children” by al-Qaida terrorists, he said.

“There are probably seven provinces where enough progress has been made to involve Iraqis in their own security,” claimed Alexander during the call with reporters.

Unmentioned in press accounts of Alexander and Corker’s trip, however, is the fact that they only spent half a day on the ground in Iraq.

Read more on the senators’ “fact-finding” tour at ThinkProgress.com.

Categories
Politics Politics Feature

Mike McWherter, Former Governor’s Son, Eyes U.S. Senate Race


BY
JACKSON BAKER
 |
JUNE 24, 2007

NASHVILLE — The name of McWherter, prominent in Tennessee politics for most of the latter 20th century, will apparently resurface in fairly short order, as Jackson lawyer and businessman Mike McWherter, son of two-term former governor Ned McWherter, is making clear his plans to challenge U.S. Senator Lamar Alexander’s reelection bid next year.

Apparently only one thing could derail Democrat McWherter — a renewed Senate candidacy by former Memphis congressman Harold Ford Jr., who last year narrowly — lost a Senate race to the current Republican incumbent, Bob Corker. “I don’t think I would compete against Harold. But I don’t think he will run,” McWherter said in an interview with The Flyer at Saturday’s annual Jefferson-Jackson Day Dinner in Nashville.

Fresh from his his service as treasurer in state Senator Lowe Finney’s win last year (taking back a Democratic seat from Don McLeary, considered by McWherter a “turncoat” after changing party affiliations in 2005), the 52-year-old activist is now focusing on Alexander, whom McWherter sees as a slavish follower of President George W. Bush.

“With one or two exceptions, he’s done everything the president has wanted him to do. He’s toed the party line,” said McWherter, who has recently paid courtesy calls on ranking Democrats, both in Tennessee and in Washington, D.C., informing them of his interest in running next year and soliciting their support. He is getting active encouragement from Gray Sasser, state Democratic chairman and son of an influential former officeholder himself, former Senator and Ambassador Jim Sasser.

There’s no doubt that former governor McWherter remains highly popular among Tennesseans and had considerable crossover potential during his active political career. Both those facts are boosts for Mike McWherter’s chances against a senator who has enormous name identification and, in winning races for governor and senator, has demonstrated appeal across party lines himself.