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Tag Archives: Kurt Schaefer

The University of Missouri should be afraid … very afraid

07 Saturday May 2016

Posted by willykay in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

academic freedom, Kurt Schaefer, Univerdsity of Missouri, University of Missouri System Review Commission

The Missouri legislature has decided to take advantage of last year’s student demonstrations to establish a commission to help get the university on what the predominantly GOP body deems the straight and narrow. SCR 66 (pdf), which was just passed by the legislature, authorizes the creation of the University of Missouri System Review Commission to examine university functions, “including but not limited to the System’s collected rules and regulations, administrative structure, campus structure, auxiliary enterprises structure, degree programs, research activities, and diversity programs.”

The Commission will consist of eight members, four appointed by the (Republican) President Pro Tempore of the Senate, and four by the (Republican) Speaker of the House. There’s no provision for representatives from the minority party or any other type of minority, nor is there a mechanism to incorporate the views of university representatives. This failure has, of course, created some ill-feeling on the part of Democrats and minority lawmakers. And they should be concerned. As should be all of us who value academic freedom.

There are those who point out that the commission has no authority to enforce its recommendations. They are missing the point. Senator Kurt Schaefer (R-19), Chair of the Senator Appropriations Committee and a sponsor of the legislation, has made it clear that if the University doesn’t go along, it won’t get along – his committee, he has overtly declared, will hold the University budget hostage to ensure its compliance. Couple this threat with the very broad charge empowering the commission to make recommendations on just about all aspects of academic life and be very afraid.

Do you feel confident that the commission will not politicize the research process it plans to review? Remember that it was Schaefer, who threatens that the budget ax will reward recalcitrance on the part of UM, who  tried to stop a UM graduate student from completing her dissertation research on the impacts of the 72 hour abortion waiting period enacted by Missouri lawmakers last year, declaring that the research was “a marketing aid for Planned Parenthood.”

Do you think that the commission won’t take advantage of their control over university purse strings to micromanage administrative decisions? They’ve already extorted the university by withholding essential funds in order to compel UM to sever its relationship with Planned Parenthood. The university was forced to deny the organization admitting privileges at the UM hospital. Abortion clinics are required by state law to have hospital admitting privileges and the UM action effectively shut down the Columbia clinic.

Do we really want these rightwing fanatics dictating the curriculum in the university? They’ve tried to do it before, in the medical school of all places. The University was forced to cancel contracts with Planned Parenthood that allowed medical students to get on-the-job experience delivering women’s health care in Planned Parenthood clinics; the contracts were only reinstated after Planned Parenthood agreed that the students would not be taught about abortion.

Do we really want partisan lawmakers micromanaging hiring and firing choices at UM? Remember that this is the group that threatened to withhold funds in order to force the firing of Melissa Click, the journalism instructor whose behavior during the student protests excited wide criticism. The abrupt firing, which violated academic norms by failing to show cause in a hearing before an elected faculty body, was obviously coerced and, consequently, problematic enough to earn the attention of the American Association of University Professors which has condemned it as ” action fundamentally at odds with basic standards of academic due process.”

It seems more than likely, that through the Commission, Missouri’s Republican legislature is seeking to relegate to itself the power to bring politics even more forcefully into Missouri’s premier academic institution, while securing an even wider range of influence. Nothing at UM will be safe if we allow conservative ideologues and religious fanatics to politicize the university’s curriculum, student and faculty research, hiring and firing.  The result won’t be pretty.

The printer called, your bumper stickers are ready

30 Saturday Apr 2016

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Attorney General, bumper stickers, Kurt Schaefer, missouri

We received this:

Somebody doesn't like Kurt Schaefer (r).

Somebody doesn’t like Kurt Schaefer (r).

We understand it can get noisy in Columbia.

Previously:

April 2016 – candidate campaign finance reports – Attorney General (April 17, 2016)

GOP Planned Parenthood grandstanding will cost Missouri taxpayers (April 20, 2016)

Teresa Hensley (D) and Jake Zimmerman (D) at the University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law (April 2, 2016)

Kurt Schaefer just cost Missouri $8 million dollars (April 25, 2016)

GOP Planned Parenthood grandstanding will cost Missouri taxpayers

20 Wednesday Apr 2016

Posted by willykay in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

abortion, fiscal policy, Kurt Schaefer, Planned Parenthood

Republicans used to take credit for being fiscally responsible. In recent years, however, they’ve started to spend lots of taxpayer money on ideological gestures without getting much  of anything in return. The sad thing is that GOPers, along with everybody else, probably know that they’re wasting money, but they can’t resist the pander credits that they hope to gain.

The latest boondoggle could be  state Senator Kurt Schaefer’s (R-19) efforts to remove Planned Parenthood allocations from Medicaid federal funds. The pander credits he is trying to amass, as everyone agrees, are to be applied to his campaign for the office of attorney general:

… Schaefer leads a charge to punish Planned Parenthood for alleged traffic in human parts gleaned from aborted fetuses.  […] The issue of how Planned Parenthood handles fetal remains stems from a thoroughly discredited video shot under cover and heavily edited to show an agency official discussing a possible legal sale of fetal material to a person claiming to be a possible buyer. A later investigation by the Missouri attorney general’s office found no wrongdoing. Two activists involved in making the video are under indictment by a grand jury in Texas.
Schaefer is head of the Missouri Senate committee investigating Planned Parenthood, a role he apparently covets as part of his campaign [for the office of attorney general].

Apropos a subpoena issued to the CEO of the Missouri Planned Parenthood:

Ironically, it might not matter much from an election politics standpoint what Schaefer’s committee can learn from an appearance by the Planned Parenthood CEO. Merely having her under attack for several days will solidify the chairman’s bulldog bona fides.

Just to be clear, as Think Progress notes:

Planned Parenthood does not use federal funding to provide abortions — thanks to the Hyde amendment, taxpayer dollars have been illegal to use to provide abortion services for decades (except in very rare cases such as danger to the mother’s life, rape, or incest). Instead, federal funding, like that from Medicaid, goes to provide family planning services like birth control, STD testing, and cancer screenings for patients who normally wouldn’t have access to these services.

Missouri is not alone in efforts to gain right-wing brownie points by crippling Planned Parenthood. It is one of twenty-four states proposing to cut the agency’s funding from Medicaid in spite of background rumblings to the effect that such efforts are likely to face legal challenges. In an April 19 letter addressed to the Medicaid Director of each of the fifty states, the Director of the Center for Medicaid and CHIP Services raises the pitch  (pdf) of previous warnings:

Pursuant to § 431.51(b)(1)(i), states may establish provider standards or take action against Medicaid providers that affects beneficiary access to those providers only (1) based on reasons relating to the fitness of the provider to perform covered medical services or to appropriately bill for those services, and (2) with supporting evidence of the provider’s failure to meet the state’s reasonable provider standards. This is consistent with longstanding CMS policy that Medicaid beneficiaries are provided with competent care by qualified providers and have the same ability to choose among available providers as those with private coverage.
Providing the full range of women’s health services neither disqualifies a provider from participating in the Medicaid program, nor is the provision of such services inconsistent with the best interests of the beneficiary, and shall not be grounds for a state’s action against a provider in the Medicaid program.

Can you, like me, see losing lawsuits in the offing if Missouri goes ahead with efforts to cut funding to Planned Parenthood? And we all know who will pay to defend the meaningless showboating of Senator Schafer and his pals. I wonder if the majority of Missourians, apart from anti-abortion hysterics, really want to go out-of-pocket to finance Kurt Schaefer’s political ambitions?  Especially when there are so many things the state needs -decent roads and schools, for example – that Schaefer and his pals tell us we cannot afford?

Sue Allen: No longer under the radar

03 Sunday Apr 2016

Posted by willykay in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

ALEC, campaign finance, corruption, earnings tax, HJR 104, Kurt Schaefer, Maryland v. Wynne, missouri, Missouri Ethics Commission, Rex Sinquefield, Sue Allen

I first encountered GOP state Rep. Sue Allen a few years ago when, along with fellow GOP Reps. Cole McNary and Andrew Koenig, she “co-hosted,” a showing of the film, “Not evil, just wrong.” The film is a cleverly made compendium of many of the distortions and lies that have emanated from the climate change denialist right over the past few years. When I questioned some of its contentions in the Q & A session that followed, Allen became visibly annoyed and told me that this was an informational meeting for constituents and implied that I should shut-up if not get-out.  I explained that I was, in fact, a constituent of her co-host Andrew Koenig, and she retreated – without responding to my question – but visibly discombobulated. I refrained from asking her what she thought the word “constituent” meant.

I bring this up because the encounter helped form my impression of Allen who, a few years later, thanks to redistricting, became my representative in the people’s house of the state of Missouri. My image was of a crass Tea Party darling, willing to use intimidation and lies to sell the party-line. Imagine my surprise when Allen’s frequent email Capitol Reports rarely presented me with anything more controversial than accounts of visits from girl scouts to the capital or  descriptions of neutral legislative initiatives. Or if they weren’t neutral they were consistently  described as if they were. For instance, she recently noted that the House continued to work on “voter fraud”  – but she left it at that, not a word about the contentious hearings on the matter, while the crucial words “voter ID’ were nowhere to be found. Her conservative colors do show through, but any hint of the GOP radicalism that has been on display in the lege over the past few years has only rarely surfaced.

My impression that Allen was one of those blood-red-state types trying to pose as a less threatening soft pink was reinforced when I learned that she was one of three Missouri lawmakers identified by the Missouri Ethics Commission for being lavishly wined and dined by corporate lobbyists “with interests before the General Assembly” during a 2014 American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) junket in Dallas. At issue were efforts to hide the identity of the three recipients of the lobbyist largesse in subsequent mandatory reports. It wasn’t just the hint of corruption that hit home , but the fact that keeping the hardcore stuff under the radar, a longtime hallmark of ALEC and its legislative acolytes, also seemed to be Allen’s modus operandi.

Allen’s latest Capital Report (3/31), however, does attempt to deal openly if not very  honestly with a controversial issue: a bill filed by Allen, HJR 104, which would allow the entire state to vote on a purely municipal issue, abolishing city earnings taxes. Allen’s bill calls for a constitutional amendment which  would go directly to the state’s voters, bypassing the Governor’s desk and his potential veto.

I suspect that this move resulted in lots of unwelcome publicity for Allen.  Which is not surprising: when asked why she filed the bill, she responded that “the measure ‘is not something I’m spending a lot of time on so I’d rather you not address this with me’ […] Additionally, she said she filed the bill because someone asked her to, but she would not identify the individual who did so.” Might excite a little constituent outrage perhaps?

Allen’s newsletter screed seems desperate to justify this favor for an unnamed beneficiary. And what better excuse than the Constitution, as represented in a Supreme Court ruling in Maryland v. Wynne (May 1915) .  The ruling found that “disallowing local income tax credit for taxes paid in other states is unconstitutional.”  Or, as Allen put it:

House Joint Resolution 104 calls for a state-wide vote on requiring the earnings tax to be replaced by January 1, 2030 or 14 years. A recent Supreme Court ruling could require both Kansas City and St. Louis to give up large portions of their revenues, as gathered by the earnings taxes, in credits to other states. In addition, there could potentially be a requirement to refund millions to those taxed under this system. If either of these scenarios happen, both cities will have an immediate, large reduction in revenue with no apparent plan in place to replace the earnings tax. HJR 104 provides up to 14 years for a reasonable replacement plan to be put in place. This resolution is a proactive step toward lessening the potential impact a ruling from the Supreme Court could inflict on St. Louis revenues and will give local governments and voter’s time to come up with REAL solutions.

In the recent case of Comptroller of the Treasury of Maryland v. Wynne, the U.S. Supreme Court held that an individual’s resident state cannot tax an income without ensuring that income is not being double taxed. Currently, St. Louis does not give ANY tax credits for taxes paid to other areas which can result in taxes being levied from two authorities on the same income, which is unconstitutional under the U.S. Constitution’s commerce clause. For example, if you live in St. Louis but work in Illinois, your income could be taxed by Illinois and Missouri under the current law.

It is not actually true that, as Allen claims above, the ruling would “require both Kansas City and St. Louis to give up large portions of their revenues, as gathered by the earnings taxes, in credits to other states.” The Wynne ruling is complex, but the gist seems to be that there must be an accommodation that conforms to tests of internal and external consistency vis-a-vis interstate commerce to avoid double taxation on personal income subject to taxation in more than one jurisdiction. Both cities believe that they meet the tests.

Kansas City actually has a credit arrangement with  Kansas that ensures its compliance with the ruling – which probably  accounts for the fact that it was recently removed from Senator Kurt Schaefer’s (R-19) legislation to abolish Missouri earnings taxes. Nor is St. Louis Mayor Slay concerned by the constitutional issues; as he explained to  the members of the House, St. Louis passed a law in February that brought them into compliance with  Wynne – I guess Allen wasn’t at work that day. As far as residents of other Missouri jurisdictions, such as St. Louis County who work in St. Louis and pay  taxes there, I notice that the Missouri tax code allows them to deduct earning taxes if they so choose.

The constitutional argument belatedly pushed front and center by Senator Kurt Schaeffer (R-19) and, most recently, by Sue Allen, isn’t likely to hold water. An article published in the Pitch last January observed:

Schaefer’s argument about the constitutionality of the tax is a new tactic for him. He didn’t raise constitutional questions last summer, when he first broached the idea of ridding Kansas City and St. Louis of the earnings tax. Rather, he proposed the move as a punitive measure for those cities seeking to increase their minimum wage beyond the state-proscribed $7.65 an hour. In a June 12 letter to his colleagues, Schaefer proposed eliminating the earnings tax as a means of giving money back to employers and employees.

Along with punishing cities that don’t go along with GOP orthodoxy, there is very convincing speculation that big gifts from billionaire Rex Sinquefield, who has fought long and hard to eliminate the earnings tax, may explain some of Schaefer’s animus. Sinquefield made a direct gift of $750,000 to support of Schaefer’s candidacy for Attorney  General – along with”thousands more indirectly from Sinquefield through Grow Missouri, a free-economy political action committee that is funded in large part by Sinquefield.”

Which brings us back to Sue Allen.  Remember the unnamed individual who asked her to file a bill that would let rabidly conservative out-staters vote on St. Louis’ earnings tax?  Wonder who she’s so eager to do favors for? Guess what? According to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, “since December 2014, Allen has received $4,500 from Grow Missouri, a Sinquefield-backed group.”

So what can we infer from all this? When it comes to legislative “favors,” one hand greases the other, as they say. And although Allen herself is term-limited and will leave the legislature, her husband, Mike Allen, plans to run for her seat. It’s always worthwhile to keep those family hands well-greased and if it gets out that you have a taste for the oily stuff, if you possibly can, putting a constitutional label on  your grease pot will hide a multitude of sins.

Slightly edited for clarity.

Campaign Finance: Hail Columbia!

03 Wednesday Feb 2016

Posted by Michael Bersin in campaign finance

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Attorney General, campaign finance, Josh Hawley, Kurt Schaefer, missouri, Missouri Ethics Commission

Today at the Missouri Ethics Commission for Josh Hawley’s (r) 2016 campaign for Attorney General:

C151132 02/03/2016 HAWLEY FOR MISSOURI Ronald Sprouse 704 Longfellow Lane Columbia MO 65203 IMMVAC Founder 2/3/2016 $10,000.00

C151132 02/03/2016 HAWLEY FOR MISSOURI IMMVAC Inc. 6080 Bass Lane Columbia MO 65201 2/3/2016 $10,000.00

[emphasis added]

Inoculate that.

You’d think someone else in the republican primary has been continually upsetting people in Columbia.

Previously:

Campaign Finance: different interests (December 16, 2015)

Planned Parenthood, Kurt Schaefer (r), and ambulatory surgical centers, oh my…

28 Monday Dec 2015

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Kurt Schaefer

“The federal court in Jefferson City…entered a preliminary injunction against the State of Missouri Department of Health enjoining it from revoking Planned Parenthood’s state license for its clinic in Columbia, Missouri…”

From Judge Nanette Laughrey’s December 28, 2015 order:

In mid-July 2015, the Missouri Senate convened the Senate Interim Committee on Sanctity of Life, chaired by Senator Kurt Schaefer, to investigate Planned Parenthood’s presence in Missouri. The Committee conducted an investigation into PPKM’s licensing and the hospital privileges of the doctor performing abortions at PPKM’s facility in Columbia, Missouri.

The doctor performing abortions at PPKM held privileges at the University of Missouri Heath Care under the hospital’s “refer and follow” category of privileges. On August 17, 2015, Senator Schaefer sent a letter to then University Chancellor R. Bowen Loftin warning Chancellor Loftin that,

For decades the citizens of the state of Missouri have gone to great lengths to ensure that their taxpayer dollars never enable abortion services in this state. The University of Missouri system is a publically funded entity which last year alone received approximately one half of one billion taxpayer dollars from the State of Missouri. Whether DHSS is relying on the agreement granted by the University, as a publically funded entity, to Dr. McNicholas in order to enable the abortion license issuance is a matter of substantial public interest and concern. Additionaly [sic], such circumstance may also run afoul of Section 188.205, RSMo, which prohibits the use of public funds for the assistance or promotion of abortion procedures.

[Doc. 6-2, p. 2]. Senator Schaefer also serves on the Senate Appropriations Committee. On September 24, 2015, the University announced that effective December 1, 2015, it would eliminate the “refer and follow” category of privileges held by PPKM’s physician.

The next day, on September 25, 2015, PPKM President and Chief Executive Officer Laura McQuade received a letter from DHSS Administrator John Langston informing her that the University’s elimination of the “refer and follow” privileges meant that PPKM’s Columbia facility would not be in compliance with state licensure mandates as of December 1, 2015. Mr. Langston warned Ms. McQuade that the facility’s ASC license2 would be revoked on December 1 if the facility did not satisfy the hospital privileges requirement by December 1. [Doc. 6-1, p. 13]. On November 25, 2015, Ms. McQuade received a second letter from Mr. Langston stating that DHSS had not been notified of PPKM’s ability to satisfy the physician privileges requirement and that the Department was revoking the center’s license effective as of the center’s close of business on November 30, 2015.

[….]

….The record also reflects that PPKM was treated disparately as a result of animus toward PPKM. Unlike is customary at DHSS, the September 25 notice of deficiencies letter was drafted at levels high above Mr. Langston, who has responsibility over ASCs at DHSS and whose staff would normally be in charge of generating notices of deficiencies and overseeing plans of correction submitted by ASCs. [Doc. 33-3, p. 13 (Individual Dep. John Langston, at 37:1-9)]. Mr. Langston suggested that DHSS feared retaliation from Senator Schaefer if it did not act in accordance with the senator’s goals, as Senator Schaefer both chaired the Senate Interim Committee on Sanctity of Life and sat on the Senate Appropriations Committee. [Doc. 33-3, p. 9-10 (Individual Dep. John Langston, at 29:10-30:19)]. Prior to sending the September 25 letter, DHSS received many communications from Missouri legislators, right to life advocacy groups, and the press regarding PPKM’s licensing and the procedures governing the license. [See Doc. 33-2, p. 4-27, 75-83]. While these communications underscore the extent to which PPKM is a disfavored institution in Missouri, they provide no rational justification for the disparate treatment afforded the institution in addressing its licensing deficiency.

DHSS contends that PPKM cannot demonstrate an equal protection violation because it is not similarly situated to other ASCs. The Court addressed this argument above and concluded that it is incorrect. The Department’s only other argument is that its revocation was based on objectively verifiable criteria which indicated that PPKM no longer complies with the regulatory requirements to function as an ASC which makes the decision sufficient to withstand rational basis review. However, the circumstances surrounding the revocation suggest that the way the revocation was undertaken was “the product solely of animus.” Gallagher v. City of Clayton, 699 F.3d 1013, 1021 (8th Cir. 2012). While DHSS’s decision to revoke the license can be justified based on PPKM’s inability to satisfy the requirements of 19 C.S.R. § 30-30.060(1)(C)4 and Mo. Rev. Stat. § 188.080, these violations are, as discussed above, less significant than SCCC’s violations, which ran afoul of 19 C.S.R. § 30-30.020(1)(A)14-15, (B)1, 3, 6-7, 12-13, (C)7, 9, (E)3, (F)3, (H)2, (K)4-5, and Mo. Rev. Stat. § 660.317.

That is not to say that DHSS has no rational basis for enforcing 19 C.S.R. § 30-30.060(1)(C)4 and Mo. Rev. Stat. § 188.080. Clearly the Department has a strong interest in enforcing the statutes and regulations promulgated to govern licensing of ASCs. However, there must be a rational basis for the course of enforcement being undertaken by the Department. DHSS may not target individual disfavored institutions by insisting upon rigid regulatory compliance rejected by the statutory enforcement framework and the Department when dealing with more egregious deficiencies. Here DHSS has presented no rational basis to justify its treatment of PPKM.

[….]

For the reasons set forth above, Plaintiff’s motion for preliminary injunction, Doc. 5, is granted. Defendant is enjoined from revoking Plaintiff’s ASC license pending final resolution of this case.

Within 10 days, the parties will file a proposed scheduling order which ensures the final resolution of the case on the merits by May 1, 2016.

[….]

[emphasis added]

That’s quite interesting don’t you think? But then, we’re not at all surprised.

Previously:

An open letter to MU Chancellor R. Bowen Loftin (September 26/October 2, 2015)

Campaign Finance: different interests

16 Wednesday Dec 2015

Posted by Michael Bersin in campaign finance

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Attorney General, campaign finance, Josh Hawley, Kurt Schaefer, missouri, Missouri Ethics Commission

Today at the Missouri Ethics Commission for Kurt Schaefer’s (r) 2016 campaign for Attorney General:

C081145 12/16/2015 CITIZENS TO ELECT KURT SCHAEFER ATTORNEY GENERAL Supporters of Health Research and Treatments P.O. Box 11591 St Louis MO 63105 12/14/2015 $20,000.00

[emphasis added]

Well, that’s certainly a different interest.

And, Josh Hawley, one of the other republican candidates for Attorney General in 2016, also received a significant amount in a single campaign contribution, reported today at the Missouri Ethics Commission:

C151132 12/16/2015 HAWLEY FOR MISSOURI C Boyden Gray 1627 I St NW #950 Washington DC 20006 Boyden Gray & Associates Attorney 12/15/2015 $10,000.00

[emphasis added]

The C. Boyden Gray? Yep. It can’t get more establishment republican than that.

Pass the popcorn.

Previously:

Why would anyone trust Kurt Schaefer? (April 14, 2015)

Attorney General – July 2015 Campaign Finance Reports (July 20, 2015)

Campaign Finance: Are they gonna bring back the blimp rides? (August 1, 2015)

An open letter to MU Chancellor R. Bowen Loftin (September 26/October 2, 2015)

Campaign Finance: the giant checkbook awakes (October 9, 2015)

Kurt Schaefer (r) – October 2015 Quarterly Campaign Finance Report (October 18, 2015)

Because words that criticize bad behavior are so much more harsh than airstrikes? (December 7, 2015)

==========

Campaign Finance: no limits (August 22, 2015)

Understanding your job… (September 5, 2015)

Campaign Finance: What flavor? (September 6, 2015)

Campaign Finance: You paid what for what? (September 23/October 2, 2015)

Campaign Finance: Do you pick your faction, or do they pick you? (September 29/October 2, 2015)

Campaign Finance: there’s no such thing as a “moderate” republican (October 14, 2015)

Josh Hawley (r) – October 2015 Quarterly Campaign Finance Report (October 18, 2015)

Campaign Finance: What was that again about contributions under $5,000.00? (October 22, 2015)

Campaign Finance: can’t vote in the republican primary (November 13, 2015)

Campaign Finance: What else is new? (December 9, 2015)

Because words that criticize bad behavior are so much more harsh than airstrikes?

07 Monday Dec 2015

Posted by Michael Bersin in social media

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Attorney General, Daesh, guns, Kurt Schaefer, missouri, Obama, social media, Twitter

Via Twitter last night from one of the 2016 republican candidates for Attorney General:

Schaefer120615

Kurt U. Schaefer
‏@KurtUSchaefer If Obama would combat radical Islamic terrorism as aggressively as he combats the 2nd Amendment, ISIS could’ve been contained long ago. 8:05 PM – 6 Dec 2015

Ladies and gentleman, what passes for a leading intellectual light in your Missouri republican party.

What a maroon.

Kurt Schaefer (r) – October 2015 Quarterly Campaign Finance Report

18 Sunday Oct 2015

Posted by Michael Bersin in campaign finance

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Attorney General, campaign finance, Kurt Schaefer, missouri, Missouri Ethics Commission

Kurt Schaefer’s 2016 Attorney General campaign filed its third quarter campaign finance report with the Missouri Ethics Commission on October 15th:

C081145: Citizens To Elect Kurt Schaefer Attorney General
Committee Type: Candidate
Po Box 1614 Party Affiliation: Republican
Columbia Mo 65205 Established Date: 04/04/2008

[….]

Information Reported On: 2015 – October Quarterly Report

Beginning Money on Hand $1,384,148.14
Monetary Receipts + $146,410.00
Monetary Expenditures – $44,631.34
Contributions Made – $0.00
Other Disbursements – $0.00
Subtotal $101,778.66
Ending Money On Hand $1,485,926.80

Comparatively that’s not a huge fundraising quarter, but then with the amount of cash on hand it didn’t have to be.

The third quarter contributions:

Contributions to kurt Schaefer's (r) 2016 Attorney General campaign for the third quarter – from the campaign’s October quarterly campaign finance report filed with the Missouri Ethics Commission.

Contributions to Kurt Schaefer’s (r) 2016 Attorney General campaign for the third quarter – from the campaign’s October quarterly campaign finance report filed with the Missouri Ethics Commission.

Nothing says “establishment” like corporations, PACs, and other republican politicians.

What’s this? A modest contribution [pdf, pg. 5] from someone:

Rex Sinquefield
244 Bent Walnut
Westphalia MO 65085
retired
9/28/2015
$250.00

[emphasis added]

How historically uncharacteristic. It was a temporary anomaly.

Most of the money raised this quarter came from individuals and entities in Missouri:

The distribution of contributions from Missouri and from Out of State to Kurt Schaefer's  (r) 2016 Attorney General campaign for the third quarter – from the campaign’s October quarterly campaign finance report filed with the Missouri Ethics Commission.

The distribution of contributions from Missouri and from Out of State to Kurt Schaefer’s (r) 2016 Attorney General campaign for the third quarter – from the campaign’s October quarterly campaign finance report filed with the Missouri Ethics Commission.

Let’s take a look at some of the expenditures:

MISSOURI ETHICS COMMISSION
ITEMIZED EXPENDITURES OVER $100 SUPPLEMENTAL FORM
CITIZENS TO ELECT KURT SCHAEFER ATTORNEY GENERAL [pdf] 10/15/2015

Embroidery Plus 275 Karen Drive, Ste. E Holts Summit MO 65043 8/20/2015 embroidery $318.56

Embroidery Plus 275 Karen Drive, Ste. E Holts Summit MO 65043 8/7/2015 embroidery $351.96

Cross & Oberlie 916 Byrd Avenue Neenah WI 54956 8/3/2015 signs $566.02

Robert Knodell 110 Venus Holts Summit MO 65043 7/1/2015 Campaign Worker $10,000.00

Robert Knodell 110 Venus Holts Summit MO 65043 8/4/2015 Campaign Worker $10,000.00

Roberg Knodell 110 Venus Holts Summit MO 65043 9/2/2015 Campaign Worker $10,000.00

[emphasis added]

Old School! Signs!

Do you think we can count on robocalls in the republican primary? Just asking.

Previously:

Why would anyone trust Kurt Schaefer? (April 14, 2015)

Attorney General – July 2015 Campaign Finance Reports (July 20, 2015)

Campaign Finance: Are they gonna bring back the blimp rides? (August 1, 2015)

An open letter to MU Chancellor R. Bowen Loftin (September 26/October 2, 2015)

Campaign Finance: the giant checkbook awakes (October 9, 2015)

Campaign Finance: the giant checkbook awakes

09 Friday Oct 2015

Posted by Michael Bersin in campaign finance

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

campaign finance, Kurt Schaefer, Missouri Ethics Commission, Rex Sinquefield

Because, you know, an actual grassroots campaign would be unseemly. Today at the Missouri Ethics Commission for Kurt Schaefer’s (r) 2016 campaign for Attorney General::

C081145 10/09/2015 CITIZENS TO ELECT KURT SCHAEFER ATTORNEY GENERAL Rex Sinquefield 244 Bent Walnut Westphalia MO 65085 Retired 10/9/2015 $500,000.00

[emphasis added]

It’s been a while – Rex Sinquefield’s last large dollar campaign contribution was $100,000.00 to Slay for Mayor on March 1, 2015. We had noticed.

There was $250,000.00 for Kurt Schaefer’s (r) 2016 Attorney General campaign in October of 2014:

Campaign Finance: now we know where the rest of the million dollars went (October 16, 2014)

That’s a total of $750,000.00 for one statewide candidate from one individual. You can just feel the grassroots momentum…

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