'The Democratic Party Has a Problem': Bloomberg Hires Super Tuesday State Democratic Vice Chairs -
Former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, the billionaire businessman running for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination, hired party vice chairs in Texas and California to work on his campaign just before the states prepare to vote in the presidential primaries on March 3—a move that drew charges from progessives of an attempt buy influence from party elites.
“This does seem to fit a longstanding pattern of Bloomberg using his billions to help generate support among political elites,” Campaign Legal Center federal reform program director Brendan Fischer told The Intercept.
Intercept reporter Akela Lacy broke the news Friday morning.
“The Democratic Party has a problem,” said Jewish Currents writer Joshua Leifer of the reporting.
Texas Democratic Party vice chair Carla Brailey and California State Democratic Party vice chair Alexandra Rooker were hired in December and January, respectively, as senior advisors to the Bloomberg campaign.
According to Lacy’s reporting:
Both Brailey and Rooker are superdelegates who will likely vote for the Democratic presidential nominee at the party’s national convention this summer. Hiring the leadership of a state party doesn’t appear to break any campaign laws.
The apparent legality of the move—despite what was broadly seen as a clear example of corruption—befuddled observers.
“It boggles my mind that this doesn’t seem to break any rules,” tweeted Lacy’s Intercept colleague Alex Emmons.
Bloomberg’s hiring of the two vice chairs also struck observers as problematic because of the possibility of a brokered convention in Milwaukee this July which would allow superdelegates to vote from the second round on, giving the unelected party elites an outsized say in the ultimate nominee.
As Lacy reported:
Rooker is one of two members of Bloomberg’s campaign staff who also sits on the Democratic National Committee’s rules committee, which recommends rules for the convention, the convention agenda, the convention’s permanent officers, amendments to the party’s charter, and other resolutions. In November, the month he entered the presidential race, Bloomberg gave $320,000 to the DNC, his first contributions to the committee since 1998. (He was a registered Republican from 2001 to 2007, after which he became an independent. He registered as a Democrat in 2018.) He also donated $10,000 to the Texas Democratic Party, where Brailey has been vice chair since June 2018, as well as $10,000 to the California Democratic Party. Brailey, Rooker, and the Bloomberg campaign did not respond to requests for comment on their hiring.
DNC can seriously shove it.
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J I M I
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The workers are the ones with their hands on the levers of production, which means that workers are the ones with the real power.
If we want better wages, hours, and conditions, the boss has to listen when we stand together and fight collectively. Learn how to do just that over at https://iww.org
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Seated Statue of the Goddess Hathor
Life size statue of the goddess Hathor, depicted with cow horns and solar disk, from the Luxor Temple. New Kingdom, late 18th Dynasty, reign of Amenhotep III, ca. 1391-1353 BC. Now in the Luxor Museum.
(via egypt-museum-deactivated2021071)
Joanna Karpowicz — Anubis on the Train (acrylic on canvas, 2012)
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