Anonymous ID: 2036a8 July 30, 2022, 11:48 a.m. No.16938277   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8283 >>8381 >>8504 >>8684 >>8907 >>8918

Prosecutors have subpoenaed records related to a $600,000 money transfer between dark money organizations tied to an ongoing Miami-Dade criminal case surrounding “ghost candidates” in the 2020 election, according to court records unveiled Friday. The transfer is adding a new layer of intrigue to a years-long question into who paid for thousands of political mail advertisements to promote sham no-party candidates in three contested Florida races that were key to helping solidify the Republican majority in the state Senate. While the source is not yet clear, the money transfer shows prosecutors are looking into a $600,000 transfer made on or around Sept. 30 from Foundation for a Safe Environment, a nonprofit organization controlled by prominent Republican operative Stafford Jones, to Let’s Preserve the American Dream, a nonprofit organization run by Ryan Tyson, a top GOP pollster in Florida.

During the course of the investigation, court records show that Tyson told investigators that he, too, had sent $600,000 on Sept. 29, 2020, to Grow United, a dark money organization that sent $550,000 to two political committees that paid for the mailers that promoted as political progressives the no-party candidates in two Miami-Dade state Senate races and another in Central Florida. Tyson told investigators his organization transferred the money to Grow United to help “left to center” candidates, and that he “had a hunch” the money would later be transferred to the two political committees — The Truth and Our Florida — which were controlled by Tallahassee consultant Alex Alvarado.

Tyson, however, said he could not be sure what the money would be used for. He told investigators that “once he makes a contribution to an entity, he loses control of how they spend the money.” A LABYRINTH OF POLITICAL COMMITTEES, NONPROFITS Records released Friday — a summary of investigative activity related to the elections for Senate Districts 37 and 39 from Sept. 1 to Dec. 31, 2021 — did not offer much detail about the relationship Foundation for a Safe Environment has to the investigation. But Jones, who chairs the organization, controls a number of political committees associated with the prominent GOP research firm Data Targeting, according to court records. Data Targeting has long served as a chief firm advising Senate Republican campaigns, including during the 2020 election cycle. Data Targeting also paid former Republican state Sen. Frank Artiles, who is facing several charges related to the no-party candidate who ran in District 37, for campaign-related work. Data Targeting paid Artiles $90,000 over six months to work on “state legislative campaign assignments … to include certain Senate Districts in Miami-Dade County,” according to records released by the Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office. The contract did not detail the exact duties.

Unlike political committees, which are legally required to disclose their donors, dark money groups are not required by law to do so, which makes them useful for funders who don’t want their identities revealed when backing certain campaigns or causes. In addition, records show that on April 20, prosecutors were seeking information from Brian Lacey, who worked with the Florida Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee until he was let go in December 2020 following “a bad cycle and losses in Florida Senate races.” The DLCC also received money from Grow United. Lacey told investigators he recalled the contribution was made but that he did not have information beyond that and did not have access to those records because he was not employed by the committee.

 

Read more at: https://www.miamiherald.com/news/politics-government/state-politics/article263983846.html#storylink=cpy

Anonymous ID: 2036a8 July 30, 2022, 11:48 a.m. No.16938283   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16938277

part 2

 

Friday’s records are part of the discovery in the case against Artiles in Miami. The candidate in Senate District 37, who shares a surname with the Democrat incumbent and received more than 6,000 votes in an election decided by just 32, was arrested on four felony campaign finance charges last year. Auto-parts dealer Alexis Pedro Rodriguez later took a plea deal in exchange for helping prosecutors build a case against his acquaintance, Artiles. Investigators say Artiles paid Rodriguez $40,000 to run as a no-party candidate to sway the outcome of the election by siphoning votes away from the incumbent. READ MORE: After 3-day recount, incumbent Democrat loses Senate seat to Ileana Garcia Both men were charged with conspiracy to make or accept campaign contributions in excess of legal limits, accepting and making those excess campaign contributions, false swearing in connection to an election and aiding in (and eventually, submitting) false voter information. Under state law, each of those charges carries sentences of up to five years in prison if convicted. The case is scheduled for its next hearing on Sept. 1.

 

Read more at: https://www.miamiherald.com/news/politics-government/state-politics/article263983846.html#storylink=cpy

Anonymous ID: 2036a8 July 30, 2022, 11:57 a.m. No.16938312   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8325

SHE HOTTER THAN GRETCH

 

Tudor Dixon is a businesswoman and conservative commentator running for governor in Michigan. The Republican primary is on Tuesday, and Dixon just received former President Donald Trump’s endorsement on Friday.

Dixon and I speak about her background in manufacturing, creating a business-friendly environment In Michigan, and why she believes she’s best suited to take on incumbent Democrat Gov. Gretchen Whitmer in November. Dixon says she supports decreasing the personal income tax, cutting back regulations, and modernizing the education system to promote vocational options.

Please note: this interview has been edited for grammar, length, and clarity.

Cameron Arcand: Could share a little bit about your background and how you’re feeling after yesterday? You just got President Trump’s big endorsement.

Tudor Dixon: Yes. What an honor to have him come into this race. We feel really excited about where we’re going, how we’ve gotten here, and how much work we’ve done to get here.

I can tell you what led me up to this, and you asked about my background. I come from a manufacturing background. My family had a steel foundry in Michigan. We moved from the foundry industry into the forging industry, and went from heavy equipment to more of the automotive industry. And then in the last five years, I have been fighting for conservative voices on a conservative media network. That’s how I was led to the political world–by talking to congressmen and senators every day, and then building a team to run up against Gretchen Whitmer.

CA: Awesome. So right now, the big story nationally is the economy. This week, we saw the White House try to downplay the fears of a recession. We are technically in a recession right now. I was wondering if I could hear about what your plan is to tackle some of the economic issues we’re handling.

TD: Yeah, that’s challenging at the state level, but we definitely want to look at what we could do to ease the burden on the people of Michigan. One of the things that we can do right away is that the legislature has passed a bill to reduce the personal income tax. Now, they’ve done that two different times at two different levels. The governor has vetoed that both times. So, we think that’s one way to immediately get some relief into the pockets of the people of Michigan. But [it would] also protect against the dangerous policies that would continue if Gretchen Whitmer were to continue to be governor, because she wants to shut down one of our pipelines here in the state of Michigan, which would increase the cost of gasoline. We want to make sure that we don’t have any increases in costs on the people of Michigan, and certainly not on the products that travel through our state.

CA: How do we bring back manufacturing jobs to the U.S., and how do you plan to make Michigan really the gold standard for manufacturing as governor?

TD: We need to be friendly to the job creators and make sure that they feel that they have a friend in the government in Michigan, and that’s not happening right now. Even if you talk to the automotive industry, which is our legacy industry here in the state of Michigan, they’re even looking outside of the state of Michigan when they’re building new factories.

Even if it’s going to be a U.S. factory, it’s not coming to the state of Michigan anymore. The reasoning behind that is that the regulatory system in Michigan is just so bloated and out of control. They’ll tell me these are our largest industries, but even our smallest industries are telling me that if they wanna expand[…] the government will say, “You know, it’s gonna take a long time for us to get the permits. You might be able to break ground in eight months and then start making product within a year.” Whereas our neighboring states, and some of our Southern states, are saying, “We’re gonna help streamline the process. We’re gonna come alongside you. We know you’re in a race in manufacturing, and we wanna make sure that our state is the place for you to be, and we’re gonna have you break ground right away.” That’s not happening in Michigan.

It needs to be happening, so that not only can we bring business back from overseas, but we can bring business back from the rest of the country, into the state of Michigan and thrive. Manufacturing is our niche, and that’s what we need to focus on. We need to make sure that if a business comes here, they’re going to have a strong workforce. That means that we have to help our students ,who may not be the student that wants to go to college or thrives in a college environment, to have the opportunity to work in a skilled trade and have that training, whether it is in a tech school or vocational school, and that training is available to students across the state.

 

https://redstate.com/carcand/2022/07/30/interview-michigan-gubernatorial-candidate-tudor-dixon-its-an-honor-to-be-endorsed-by-trump-vows-to-shore-up-manufacturing-n604274