Just yesterday, Fox News reported about top House Democrats such as Maxine Waters and James Clyburn paying family members handsomely from campaign funds.
Karen Waters,
Maxine’s daughter received more than $1.2 million from Waters’ campaign for the past two
decades.
What has Karen's
function?
Slate
mailing is a practice where campaign pamphlets with a list of candidates and
the issues they stand for are mass mailed to voters. Critics have branded it deceptive and misleading.
In 2004, the Los Angeles Times revealed that the Waters campaign
had paid then $1 million to other family members for the past eight years.
Next is House
Majority Whip James Clyburn
Federal
Election Commission (FEC) filings revealed that Clyburn paid his grandson Walter A.C. Reed a sum of
$21,000 in campaign funds since April 1. Reed also received a $500 "travel
stipend" in August and a $223.87 payment for "vehicle repair" in
September from the campaign. Overall. The 'Friends of Jim Clyburn' a PAC
for Clyburn paid Reed $75,000 since October 2021.
Clyburn’s campaign
also paid $7,500 in rent in August to 49 Magnolia Blossom LLC, a firm
controlled by Clyburn’s daughter, Jennifer Clyburn Reed. Clyburn’s campaign has
paid Magnolia Blossom more than $70,000 since March 2020.
Clyburn's campaign
also distributed
more than $20,000 in checks to Angela Hannibal, Clyburn’s daughter, for
canvassing, truck rentals, catering and voter outreach programs between April
2018 and October 2019, according to his committee's records.
Angela's husband,
Cecil, has also received money from the campaign, pocketing nearly $70,000 for
community and district outreach and travel reimbursements between 2010 and 2012.
FEC records also
revealed that Clyburn has paid over $260,000 to family members since 2010 via
the ‘Friends of Jim Clyburn' PAC.
Next is Democrat
Connecticut Rep. Jahana Hayes
FEC
records also revealed that Hayes paid her son David Crenshaw $18,283
and her daughter Asia Clermont $ $21,299 from her campaign funds since entering
Congress in 2019.
Hayes’s campaign
committee “Friends of Jahana Hayes” paid $15,000 to Crenshaw and $2,551 to
Hayes’ daughter, Asia Clermont,.
Hayes also reimbursed
herself $250 dollars for “petty cash” perhaps violating the FEC regulation
about petty cash reimbursements.
Now for the Squad.
Socialist AOC’s
campaign paid
her boyfriend handsomely for "services." AOC also
engaged in questionable fundraising practices.
Ilhan Omar paid $2.9
million of her campaign fund to her
husband’s political consulting firm. The payments were for advertising,
campaign mailings, consulting, and travel, according to the campaign records.
It isn't just family
members, Democrats never fail to repay their campaign donors upon being
elected.
Last
month, the New
York Post reported that Gov. Kathy Hochul granted a government
contract to a New Jersey-based firm called Digital Gadgets for COVID-19 tests that
charged twice the price other test vendors were offering.
Digital Gadgets was
paid around $637 million for millions of tests by Hochul’s administration.
Hochul
backed the Penn Station redevelopment project that could offer more
than $1 billion in tax breaks to Vornado Realty Trust, a real estate
investment firm. The head of Vornado, Steve Roth, donated $68,700 to Hochul’s
campaign.
Hochul also backed an
$850 million, taxpayer-funded deal to build a $1.4 billion stadium for the
Buffalo Bills stadium. The deal includes a potential
contract with Delaware North, the major food concessionaire at the current
Buffalo Bills’ Stadium.
Some media outlets reported that Kathy's husband, Bill Hochul is senior
vice president and general counsel at Delaware North. Bill eventually recused himself
from Delaware North’s work in New York.
The above are blatant
examples of conflict of interest and corruption.
But since the
violators are Democrats, there isn’t much media outrage.
The examples provide
an insight into the functioning of the self-serving, self-promoting,
self-preserving, corrupt, and nepotistic Washington Democrat Establishment.
The establishment enables
and supports its members in exchange for their loyalty.
The establishment
also facilitates shady quid pro quo among members.
A prime example is
the Clyburn-Biden deal.
Clyburn's endorsement revived Biden’s faltering
‘campaign’ and caused his victory
in South Carolina in the Super Tuesday states a few days later. This helped
Biden clinch the Democrat Presidential nomination. In exchange, Biden’s
agencies ignore Clyburn's misuse of his campaign funds. Biden appointed Clyburn’s
daughter to lead a federal group targeting southeast US poverty
These above-mentioned
instances are the few that have come to light, there have to be myriad other
cases that are not even detectable. Perhaps campaigns slyly pay proxies
who then reroute the money to relatives.
Now about campaigns.
Every elected or
aspiring to be elected representative runs a campaign. The word 'campaign'
makes it sound like a small group of people, squeezed into a tiny office littered
with campaign banners and other paraphernalia.
Most modern campaigns, especially those of politicians of
experience are multimillion-dollar organizations and are a front for legalized
corruption.
The donor seeking
favors contributes generously to a campaign. The representative returns the
favor of passing laws or removing regulations or granting government contracts
that benefit the donor.
Over the years, the
art of lawful fraud, the words may seem like an oxymoron, has been mastered.
They hire their
family members, relatives, and friends for their campaigns and give them
impressive job titles that justify their handsome salaries. At times, contracts
are awarded to firms run by friends or family members. Personal expenses are
billed to the campaign
They do not even have
to be ‘employed’.
Hunter's
‘art’ was sold for $500,000, a price that the
works of masters such as Claude Monet and Edgar Degas receive. The buyer is
obviously anonymous, hence we will never know what they received in exchange.
Hunter also struck myriad shady business deals in China
and Ukraine
while his father was Vice President.
At times, retired and
active politicians receive lucrative speaking fees or publishing contracts, or podcast deals. The institutes or publishing firms or podcast platforms offering
these deals are mere fronts. It is perhaps the unknown investors of the outfits
who are paying the bribes.
While regular people
suffer due to inflation and high gas prices, politicians, their family members,
and cronies remain insulated.
While regular people
could be rendered unemployed due to the faltering economy or COVID lockdowns or
poor performance, allies and relatives of politicians are always shielded.
What is worse is that
these parasites who feed off this corrupt system have the audacity to
virtue signal, preach morality and insult regular people calling them bigots,
fascists, and extremists.
This two-tier system
causes people to be very cynical and suspicious about their government.
This is what caused
George Bernard Shaw to remark that politics is the last resort for the
scoundrel.
They often have absolute
power with absolutely no accountability.
Worse, the likes of
Clyburn, Waters, and AOC are expected to win during the mid-terms.
Also appears on American Thinker
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