The Daily Muck
It's getting a lot worse for Rep. Katharine Harris (R-FL).
Last Friday, Mitchell Wade, the former president of the defense contractor MZM and one of the two who so impressively and repeatedly bribed Duke Cunningham, pled guilty. He admitted, among other things, that he illegally contributed to two Congressional campaigns. They've since been identified as Harris' and Rep. Virgil Goode's (R-VA).
Now, Wade told the government that neither Harris nor Goode knew that the contributions were illegal, i.e. that Wade reimbursed his employees and their spouses for the $2K they laid out to the campaigns.
But in both cases, Wade approached the Member of Congress after having delivered the contributions and asked if they wouldn't be so kind as to throw an appropriation his way. In Goode's case, that resulted in a $9M MZM facility in Goode's district.
Now it's coming out that Harris followed through too. And she's been lying, breaking promises, and doing her best to cover up her involvement with Wade....
She lied to the local press:
What the heck had Wade, MZM's CEO, wanted from Harris in return for that money?
Harris has claimed, to me and other journalists, that she didn't have any idea. She insisted that she had assumed all those MZM-connected people -- who didn't live in Florida and whose $2,000 checks arrived in bundles -- just liked her stands on the issues and wanted to see her re-elected.
She did say Wade had been considering opening a plant of some sort in the Sarasota area. But she said she knew no details and didn't know exactly how that might inspire MZM to break the law to give her so much money, or why it would inspire MZM employees and spouses to send her as much as $4,000 each from their own wallets.
Even after learning Wade had bribed another congressman and had used illegal means to make far bigger donations to Harris than the law allows, she said she still had no idea what the heck MZM's motive was for giving her all that money. (Herald Tribune)
As Wade plea makes clear, Wade wanted something very specific from Harris: help with a defense appropriation. He even drafted a proposal and forwarded it on to her office. And she followed up on it, writing a letter to the Defense Appropriations Subcommittee asking for the money, estimated at $10M. (Wade's plea, The Ledger)
To clinch Harris' closeness with Wade, one of her staff left to work for MZM in April, 2005 - the same month that she asked for the earmark. It's unlikely then, to indulge in some understatement, that she just couldn't figure out what MZM was after. (The Ledger)
And it gets worse. Five weeks ago, during the media's Abramoff and lobbying reform feeding frenzy, Harris boldly promised to disclose all of her earmark requests. It was a bold step that signalled her real commitment to earmark reform. Except, apparently, this earmark request. Her spokesman says it's "privileged information" and they're not handing the request over. (The Tampa Tribune)
I guess Harris just thinks that she can ride this one out. We'll see.
Ronnie Earle Keeps on Investigatin'
As we reported yesterday, Ronnie Earle issued a subpoena for travel records related to his junket to Scotland in 2000. The trip, which included another lobbyist and some DeLay staffers, was charged to Jack Abramoff's credit card. It cost him $40,000. (TPM, WaPo)
Abramoff by the Numbers
Awhile back, the American Prospect released a piece that broke down the political contributions of Jack Abramoff's tribal clients and determined that he had taken what had been (marginally) Democratic donors and turned them into Republican donors. Because of the obvious implications of that, the Prospect got a lot of flak from the right; now the independent analyst hired to undertake that research (on which the Prospect based their article) has weighed in to refute those criticisms. (Tapped, Political Animal)
Supreme Redistricting
The Supreme Court heard arguments from the Texas Redistricting case, and the general consensus seems to be that it was not a good day for those challenging the plan. (Bloomberg, LAT, NYT, WaPo, Slate, AP, USA Today)
Reform
The Senate continues the process of drawing up reform legislation today, and this time they'll be considering a proposal to create an external enforcement agency, called the Office of Public Integrity. It's being proposed by Sens. Lieberman (D-CT) and Collins (R-ME) and is likely to meet opposition. (NYT)
Time surveys the Congressional landscape and concludes that the lobbying reform "fad" will pass on by without much substantial change. (Time)
Santorum Watch
Santorum's charity got a $25K check from a real estate developer at the same time that he was working to win as much as $8.5M in federal aid for one of the donor's projects. (Philadelphia Daily News)
The Hill reports that Sens. Santorum (R-PA) and McCain (R-AZ) are now suddenly allies, due to Santorum's recent posturing on the need for tougher lobbying reforms. (The Hill)
But it appears that Santorum, formerly the Senate GOP's point man on ethics reform, has been forced to step back and let others take charge. (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)
Conyers' Unhappy Aides
As we noted yesterday, Rep. Conyers (D-MI) has some very unhappy aides, who say they were used as baby sitters and personal servants. They are likely to file a formal ethics complaint. (AP)
New Hampshire Phone Jamming
A TV station in New Hampshire thinks that the next indictee is likely to be Darryl Henry, a lobbyist up there who, according to testimony during the trial of James Tobin (the national Republican political figure who facilitated the jamming), knew what was going on. (WMUR)
Noe in Ohio
Apparently Thomas Noe was so deeply involved in state politics that he thinks none of the judges in his county should hear his case - all of the judges, he says, are "political enemies" or "personal friends." (Toledo Blade)
The Washington Post notes the back and forth between the government and Duke Cunningham's lawyers over his possible sentencing. Old news to Daily Muck readers. (WaPo)
Did we miss something? Was there local coverage in your area we should know about? Email us at talk@talkingpoin tsmemo.com with the Subject line "Daily Muck" and let us know.















Apropos of Santorum:
It seems his wife worked at what would appear to be no-show jobs funded via some indirect means from the usual suspects. At the same time she is a stay at home mom who is home schooling her kids.
Usually when a person runs for elective office it is because they believe in the role of government in making the lives of the people better. Thus, sending their kids to public school would be a way of demonstrating their commitment to government financed (i.e. public) education. The home school movement is mostly associated with those who distrusted public education, as opposed to the usual political hypocrite who sends his kids to a private school. If Santorum has such a lack of faith in government what is he doing in the Senate?
Buying houses with insider financing, no show jobs, using PAC money for personal expenses would give one the impression that he is just in it for self aggrandizement.
PS. He doesn't really even live in his state, either.
--- Policies not Politics
Daily Landscape
March 2, 2006 10:14 AM | Reply | Permalink
Oh, poor Katherine Harris. What a pity it would be if such a fine public servant who helped steal, oops, I mean win the 2000 election for the most incompetent nonentity ever to occupy the White House would have to give up her seat in Congress.
Tom
March 2, 2006 10:18 AM | Reply | Permalink
I am a stay-at-home mom who is homeschooling my kids. I volunteer at my church and basically hold the household together while my husband travels for his job. Other than having to be the "wife of a Senator" which I'm sure takes some time from her schedule I would say our schedules are similar. The only work I can imagine squeezing in would be something I can do from home at any hour of the day or night. (Of course, that's my blogging time and that's what I'm basing it on.)
March 2, 2006 11:38 AM | Reply | Permalink
I meant this to be a reply to RDF..
March 2, 2006 11:40 AM | Reply | Permalink
Please, please do not destroy Katherine 'stuffer' Harris, not yet.
Please wait until after the primaries have closed and the GOP have no way to replace her on the ballot.
Her dishonest and corrupt handling of the 2000 election count has left a permanent stain on the country. There is no way that the Bushies could have prevented the votes being counted without Harris being a willing accomplice.
We need to get the attack ads against Harris circulated more widely. They GOP culture of corruption must become a national theme. So many of them are now involved: DeLay, Harris, Doolittle, Ney, Cunningham and thats before you get to Cheney and Enron's shakedown of California, Halliburton's shakedown of the DOD.
March 2, 2006 12:20 PM | Reply | Permalink
Bush got a lot of nasty, wrongheaded things signed into law. He wanted to invade Iraq, he did it. He wanted gigantic taxcuts for his buds, he got them. He wanted to name rightwing conservatives to the Supreme Court and swing it to the right for an entire generation, long after he's gone from office, he did that. How do we define success, achieving what we set out to accomplish, or achieving what's proper? How about we say he was successful at what he wanted to do, but that he was the worst president in history, leaving the country in far worse condition than he found it, both domestically and internationally. All the things he wanted to do were detrimental to the country, and all the things he didn't attempt because of lack of interest, or political ideology, left us weaker for it.
March 2, 2006 1:27 PM | Reply | Permalink
Salut on noting it both ways. Josh may be on his way to building a "new media" empire.
March 2, 2006 1:29 PM | Reply | Permalink
The tapped article on abramoff has the analyst morris stating that it is clear from the testimony of the tribal leaders that abramoff directed indian money to democrats. I question where this often repeated thesis is accurate..
The only mention i have seen in either the reported testimony or the senate committee exhibits is a solitary remark by a tribal leader (of the coushattas, I believe), where he says that Abramoff gave lists of politicians and committees for the tribe to donate to. He is later asked if the tribe donated to the committees of both major parties and and says yes. It is not clear that the latter answer was limited to the recipients on abramofff's list.
While he may have still been referring to the lists provided by abramoff (in which case Morris would be right).
It is however equally likely that the remark onlymeant that the tribes had donated to democratic committtees., without direction form Abramoff. I have scoured the records, and written reports and find nothing that resoves the ambiguity in the testimony. If anyone is aware of a specific instance in which a tribal leader , or anyone, says that abramoff ever told a specific tribe to give a donation to a democratic politician or committee, please post it so i can stop looking.
March 2, 2006 4:31 PM | Reply | Permalink
Why is Katharine Harris's name associated with corruption so unsurprising? Gee, who would have thought the got-to gal for the GOP in 2000 would turn out to be a corrupt insider? Especially considering how clean the 2000 elections was, Florida especially, and the utter lack of insider corruption in the GOP since.
You know how the NSA is data mining for terrorists? Well, here's an idea, how about if they started data mining for corruption? I'd like to see the GOP charted out, the scandals, bribes, relations, think tanks, college republican alumni, and other correlations and slim degrees of separation. Let's see the GOP laid out flat, a poster sized chart of corruption. Talk about "triangulation" let's see the GOP triangulation between Big Business, Big Corruption, and the GOP.
I guess that's what Paul Keil is, our data miner. He’s "on the hunt" to "root out" the corrupt from their granite and marble caves.
"He stormed into his office pissed, and said he might as well become a Democrat." ~ Duke Cunningham's reaction upon learning a defense contract was blocked, having already accepted a bribe from a defense contractor.
March 2, 2006 5:40 PM | Reply | Permalink
Help! I found a company, Travron Inc., registered to Lovelin Poncho, the former chairman of the Coushatta tribe during the Abramoff era on the Mississippi Secretary of State website a couple of months ago.
Travron initially was formed by one Travis Lott in 1987. He and his wife, Sherri, were the only officers until April 1999 when Poncho and two other Coushattas, Winston John and Horace Smith, were listed as officers. Leonard Battise and Bertney Langley and William Worfel, all Coushattas, also became either directors or officers.
In June 2004, Travis Lott was again listed as president of Travron but replaced by Lovelin Poncho.
On December 7, 2005, Travron filed a new registration with the Secretary of State naming new officers one week after I first posted about Travron online.
In the corporate registrations, Travron listed itself as a sporting goods store with a post office box in Long Beach, Mississippi for an address. Long Beach is on the Gulf Coast and is home to some gambling casinos. I could not find a sporting goods store in Long Beach named Travron online. I no longer have access to Lexis-Nexis but in November 2005, I did not find any other Coushatta-owned businesses in Mississippi nor did I find any other Coushatta businesses that appeared to be sporting goods stores.
I did find a Travis Lott living with Sherri in Christian Pass, also on the Gulf Coast in MS. But I don't know if this Travis Lott is the same Travis Lott who is the former director of the Gulfport-Biloxi Regional Airport Authority and the current director of the Mississippi Coast Foreign Trade Zone. Both positions could be patronage jobs awarded to the those who are politically connected.
I don't know how to find out if Travis Lott is related to Trent Lott. I'd say there's a fairly decent chance that something shady is going on because, one, Lovelin Poncho is no babe in the woods. I keep waiting to hear that Abramoff kicked back some of the Coushatta fees to him. Two, the Coushattas don't seem to have any good reason for being in the sporting goods business in Long Beach MS between 1999 and 2004 when they were paying out the big bucks in Washington. Three, the Mississippi gambling industry is centered on the Gulf Coast.
Any thoughts? Mine is that Trent Lott has been around a long, long time and would trust a relative to take care of business rather than some shyster like Abramoff. I just don't see the then Senate Majority Leader passing on the Coushatta gravy train.
March 2, 2006 9:00 PM | Reply | Permalink
I don't know how to find out if Travis Lott is related to Trent Lott.
Could be a cousin, I suppose, but it doesn't look like it's anyone in his immediate family. A biographical sketch here says that Trent Lott was an only child (so Travis is neither brother nor nephew) and of his immediate family:
March 2, 2006 9:40 PM | Reply | Permalink
Thanks, slb. I knew Trent Lott was an only child so I was going with the cousin idea myself. I saw a photo of the Travis Lott who is a director of the foreign trade zone and he looks about Trent Lott's age and sort of resembles Trent Lott in height and build.
I'm going away this morning for the weekend but when I get back, I think I'll stop by the local bookstore and check out Lott's book for any references to relatives. Other than that, I'm stuck. I'm from NY and don't know anyone in Mississippi. I did notice that there a number of Lotts listed as officers or directors on the Mississipi Secretary of State website.
I guess Trent Lott's real name is Chester Trent Lott since his son is Chester II. I didn't know that.
March 3, 2006 5:23 AM | Reply | Permalink
I must say that I am excited at the possibility of Katherine Harris getting hers!
MsAnnaNOLA
New Orleans, Louisiana
March 3, 2006 10:56 AM | Reply | Permalink
Why did you make the decision to home school?
April 12, 2006 11:43 AM | Reply | Permalink
You could also Search Inside the Book on Amazon.com.
April 12, 2006 11:52 AM | Reply | Permalink