Rep. Kathy Dahlkemper (D-Pa.)
said Monday that she will donate to charity $14,000 in contributions she
received from beleaguered Rep. Charles Rangel (D-N.Y.).
Dahlkemper, who ignored a GOP
call earlier this spring to return the money, is now the second House Democrat
to announce she will give up the cash since news broke that the House Ethics
Committee is charging Rangel with multiple violations.
The National Republican
Congressional Committee has called on dozens of Democratic members to return or
donate money they received from Rangel and his leadership PAC.
And the NRCC kept up the heat
Monday afternoon, blasting out another set of releases targeting Democrats in
46 districts who have received money from Rangel, labeling each target “a
typical Washington politician who is happy to fill [their] campaign account
with dirty money while refusing to hold [their] party accountable for their
tarnished record.”
Late Friday, Indiana Senate candidate and Rep. Brad Ellsworth
(D) announced that he would donate to charity the $12,000 he received from
Rangel.
Idaho state Rep. Raul
Labrador (R) said Monday that he wasn’t included on the National Republican
Congressional Committee’s latest list of “Young Guns” because heopted out of
the program earlier in the year.
Labrador, who defeated the
NRCC’s favored candidate Vaughn Ward in a May primary, is challenging freshman
Rep. Walt Minnick (D-Idaho) in November.
Last week the NRCC added
another 33 candidates to the lower levels of its Young Guns program, but
Labrador wasn’t among them. That drew the attention of the Democratic
Congressional Campaign Committee, which suggested the omission meant the
district is falling off the NRCC’s radar. Minnick holds one of the most
conservative districts in the country.
According to the Idaho
Reporter, Labrador now says he didn’t want to be a part of the candidate
program, but didn’t offer a specific reason.
“I’ve still met with them and
still met their financial goals,” Labrador told the paper.
Labrador also missed out an
earlier round of Young Gun promotions in June.
He has reportedly had a tense relationship with the committee.
He campaigned vigorously against Ward, railing against him as a Washington
establishment candidate. And Labrador was stood up by NRCC officials when he
came to Washington in December, according to the Idaho Statesman.
Rep. Michael McMahon (D-N.Y.) would have been in physical danger had he voted for the healthcare reform bill, according to Michael Grimm, one of the freshman Democrat's potential Republican challengers.
"Had he voted for the healthcare bill, Staten Island and Brooklyn, they would really have been marching like they were going for Frankenstein," Grimm, a former FBI agent, told The Ballot Box. "There was no question. That was just not even an option. Physically he would have been in danger. It would have been that bad."
McMahon said Grimm's comments were in "very poor taste."
"With respect to Mr. Grimm's accusations about my constituents threatening physical danger, I think it's in very poor taste for a candidate to paint the people he wants to represent so crudely," he said in a statement.
McMahon was under pressure to support the Democrats' healthcare reform bill in March but ultimately cast a vote against the legislation.
"The fact that it was a very quiet 'no,' the conservatives and the Republicans know he kind of got a pass," Grimm said.
He noted that McMahon has since opposed repealing the healthcare legislation.
"He's on both sides," Grimm said. "That's going to be a big problem. My district has a tremendous amount of seniors; they are very nervous. We don't have a public hospital, so healthcare is a huge issue in my district, a huge issue."
In response, McMahon cited his repeated opposition to the bill.
"Mr. Grimm must have trouble understanding the legislative process because I voted against the bill not once, but twice despite calls from colleagues and organizations on the left to vote in favor of it," McMahon said.
Meanwhile on Monday, Grimm was boosted by the endorsement from Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.).
New York's 13th District, which was formerly held by retired Rep. Vito Fossella (R-N.Y.), went for McCain in the 2008 presidential election.
"Michael served as a Marine in combat for our country, continued his service for 11 more years as a Special Agent in the FBI, and then went on to become a small-business owner," McCain said in a statement. "Michael Grimm is an extraordinary candidate, and I am proud to endorse him for New York’s 13th Congressional District."
Grimm faces businessman Michael Allegretti (R) in the Sept. 14 primary.
In a fundraising e-mail
penned for the political action committee EMILY’s List, Sen. Barbara Mikulski
(D-Md.) warns that Republicans are “raising money at an alarming rate” for this
fall’s elections.
The e-mail is part of the
group’s push to get donations in the door before the end of the month to meet
its July fundraising goal.
“The GOP is targeting seats
across the nation, leaving nothing off the table,” Mikulski wrote in the e-mail
to EMILY’s List supporters. “They’re raising money at an alarming rate. They
have more than $200 million pledged from right-wing groups who would profit
from Republican wins.”
EMILY’s List has propped up several Democratic House challengers
this cycle, lending fundraising help to Julie Lassa, who is running to succeed
retiring Rep. David Obey (D-Wis.), and Tarryl Clark, who is challenging Rep.
Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.).
White House Chief of Staff
Rahm Emanuel will hold a fundraiser for Rep. Kendrick Meek (D-Fla.), who’s
running for the Democratic nomination in Florida’s Senate race.
The event will take place
Monday, Aug. 2, in Washington D.C., according to the Orlando Sentinel.
The administration officially
supports Meek in his primary against billionaire Jeff Greene, but there’s been
grumbling that the White House hasn’t done all it can to help the congressman.
Part of the problem could be
Gov. Charlie Crist, who’s running as an independent candidate and giving
Republican Marco Rubio a tougher race than either Democratic candidate is,
according to polls. Crist hasn’t said which party he’ll caucus with if he wins,
and both President Obama and Vice President Joe Biden have appeared in
photoswith Crist when they were in Florida to assess damage from
the fallout of the oil spill in the Gulf.
But the party has helped
Meek.
Biden and former President
Clinton have hosted fundraisers for the four-term lawmaker, and reports indicate
Clinton will return to Florida to campaign for Meek before the Aug. 24 primary.
Greene has spent a little
more than $5.5 million of his own money on the race, according to Federal
Election Commission (FEC) reports. Meek has raised a little more than $7
million and has about $4 million cash on hand, according to second quarter FEC
reports.
And that money has helped Greene make inroads. A St. Petersburg
Times poll in May showed Meek leading Greene by 24 points. A Public Policy
Polling survey taken last week showed Meek leading Greene by three points.
Meanwhile, Meek has released his first television ad against Greene and it goes negative. The ad criticizes the Greene for "becoming a billionaire on Wall Street while middle-class families lose their homes" and it also points out Greene moved to Florida two years ago.
Greene has been on the air in Florida since May. Here's Meek's ad, entitled "Meet the real Jeff Greene":
New Hampshire Senate
candidate Paul Hodes (D) is using a push poll to undercut former Attorney
General Kelly Ayotte’s bid for the Republican Senate nomination, according to a
complaint filed Monday.
The New Hampshire Republican
Party filed a protest with the attorney general’s office alleging Hodes engaged
in “illegal push-polling” to scuttle Ayotte’s candidacy.
The Hodes camp called the
complaint “frivolous.”
According to the documents,
the polling calls begin with routine questions about the participant’s age,
party affiliation and their “favorable/unfavorable” reaction to each of the
four major GOP Senate candidates.
The subject of the call is
then asked to name his first choice in the primary. “If the answer is ‘Kelly
Ayotte’ the push begins,” the complaint states. “The telemarketer then asks
misleading and dishonest questions about Ms. Ayotte that attempt to distort her
record and influence the person’s opinion of her candidacy.”
Ryan Williams, a spokesman
for the New Hampshire GOP, said anecdotal evidence suggests only Republicans
are getting the calls.
“He’s push polling with
Republicans, which obviously indicates he’s trying to meddle in our primary,”
Williams said.
New York Gov. David Paterson
(D) said at a news conference Monday that he is standing behind
Rep. Charles Rangel (D) despite charges from the House Ethics Committee.
“I support Congressman Rangel
100 percent,” Paterson said Monday, according to the Daily News.
“I support him in his
reelection bid,” Paterson continued. “Obviously there are charges that he has
to face and I think the resolution of that is something that we don’t know in
the future and until that time it’s been my honor to watch him for 40 years.”
A handful of other New York
Democrats, including Sen. Charles Schumer (D) and state Attorney General Andrew
Cuomo (D), who is running for governor, have been reluctant to express support
for Rangel over the past two days.
Meanwhile, Rangel isn’t
exactly laying low. He answered
questions from reporters for the third straight day Monday.
Asked about Schumer’s
statement that he intends to give Rangel the chance to state his case before
coming to a conclusion, Rangel said Schumer “has been my buddy for many many
years. And just because somebody can think of a question doesn’t mean I’m going
to respond to it.”
U.S. Chamber of Commerce
President and CEO Thomas Donohue on Monday blasted Senate Majority Leader Harry
Reid (D-Nev.) for moving forward on the Disclose Act, a bill that increases
reporting requirements for top campaign donors.
Donohue argues the legislation
infringes upon the First Amendment because it requires donors to state publicly
their political positions, which not everyone is comfortable doing.
Republican Ken Buck is now
walking back a comment he made after a campaign stop last month aimed at those
who question President Obama’s citizenship.
The audio of Buck, which was
captured by a Democratic Party tracker, surfaced over the weekend. He said: “Will
you tell those dumbasses at the Tea Party to stop asking questions about birth
certificates while I’m on the camera.”
The candidate said Monday he regrets using
the word, noting that he has been frustrated that questions over the
president’s birth certificate have overshadowed larger issues.
Buck’s Republican primary
opponent Jane Norton quickly seized on the comments. Her campaign put out a
statement calling Buck “a self-proclaimed tea partier who trashes tea partiers
when he thinks no one is looking.”
And Norton is planning a news conference for Monday afternoon to
“address Buck’s Tea Party betrayal.”