barry & Co. Buying South Dakota’s House Seat?

chefdennis

Veteran Expediter
Here you go OVM, thread it or tell us the facts, you are connected out there!?!? :D

Are Obama & Co. Buying South Dakota’s House Seat?

Posted on October 25, 2010
by Ben Johnson
Are Obama & Co. Buying South Dakota’s House Seat? | Floyd Reports

South Dakota’s Democratic Congresswoman, Stephanie Herseth Sandlin, is facing the fight of her life this election, against Republican Kristi Noem. Sandlin was swept into the House in 2004, after then-Congressman Bill Janklow, a Republican who served four terms as governor, was convicted of manslaughter for speeding through a stop sign and killing a motorcyclist. Since her election, she has attempted to cultivate an image as a Blue Dog Democrat, but her support for the Pelosi-Reid-Obama agenda have undercut her support in the Republican-leaning state.

To make liberal prospects bleaker, Noem has raised more money than any Republican challenger in America – and to great effect. A Rasmussen poll released Friday showed Noem leading Sandlin by five points among likely voters, exactly the number currently undecided.

Sensing an electoral blowout, it appears the Democratic Party, from the county level all the way to the White House, has one answer: good, old fashioned vote-buying. The evidence seems to indicate this hotly contested Congressional election is behind an Obama administration decision that cost taxpayers $760 million – and that the same federal authorities who threw out the Black Panther voter intimidation case are looking the other way during a new round of election-year dirty tricks.

The Democrats’ midterm strategy is to turn out its base. For Herseth Sandlin, American Indians are the new black. South Dakota’s newspaper The Argus Leader notes: “Strong Native American turnout has been the difference in statewide races in past years, and it could be critical in upcoming races. The emergence of early voting has only intensified efforts to get out the vote in Indian Country.”

The Congresswoman has made a special plea to this constituency, writing: “By all accounts, this will be a close election. Every vote will count and your vote can make a difference…Early voting has already started on several reservations. I would greatly appreciate your support on Election Day.” Among her campaign promises is a pledge to “[e]nact the very first Indian Agriculture Act as a part of the farm bill to bring the full benefits of all USDA programs to the Reservations.”

Coincidentally, the Obama administration negotiated a $760 million settlement for American Indians who claim they were discriminated against by the USDA, just in time for the election.

To make matters more interesting, the lead plaintiffs in the case, George and Marilyn Keepseagle, farm 500 acres in the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation that straddles the border between the Dakotas. Many of the plaintiffs live in South Dakota:

Sarah Vogel, a Bismarck attorney in the case, estimated that several hundred farmers and ranchers in the Dakotas are eligible. “There probably are more from our region than any other,” she said.

Given Obama’s months-long midterm appeal to blacks, Hispanics, feminists, and young voters – and Eric Holder’s use of the Justice Department to steer money to favored Democratic groups – the settlement looks like another corrupt ploy to turn out left-wing voters on election day.

As events on the ground show, bribery seems to be the Democrats’ statewide strategy.

“Will Vote for Food”

While the region’s would-be farmers await their $50,000 or $250,000 settlement checks, the state’s Democratic Party loses no opportunity to reward all potential tribal voters. The Argus Leader reports:

Democrats in South Dakota are holding three early-vote rallies on [American Indian] reservations this week that will feature “feeds” to attract potential voters. That activity continues a long tradition of pairing food with voter rallies in areas of the state where Democrats garner as much as 95 percent of the vote. (Emphasis added.)

It seems to make little difference that federal authorities have repeatedly stated such activity is illegal. Previous observers have declared campaign rallies, where Democratic Party officials hand out free food and then take grateful recipients to cast early ballots, cross the line into bribery.

According to state media, South Dakota “Attorney General Marty Jackley and U.S. Attorney Brendan Johnson reminded both parties not to offer food for votes but they did not say whether the Democratic events violated the law.” Jackley is currently investigating “feeds” that took place at three Indian reservations, all held by the Democratic Party, two of them attended by Herseth, herself.

However, the state law seems clear. The Argus Leader continues, “State law forbids candidates and campaigns from ‘offering anything of value’ to get people to vote – not just to vote for a particular candidate or issue, but to vote in general.” In 1998, U.S. Attorney Karen Schreier (a Democrat) penned a joint letter with Attorney General Mark Barnett, a Republican stating that “simply offering to provide” food or gifts “in exchange for showing up to vote is clearly against the law.” Barnett sent a separate letter months later reiterating: “any giveaways or incentives offered as an encouragement for people to vote are prohibited. The statute is very broad and should be so construed.”


State officials have asked the Obama Justice Department to intervene. The Associated Press noted, “Jim Sword, the state’s attorney for Fall River and Shannon counties, sent the Department of Justice a memo outlining potential voting abuses.”

If recent history is any indication, he may as well have sent smoke signals to the North Pole.

Christopher Coates, who headed the Voting Rights division of the Justice Department, has testified that the president’s appointees have a “deep-seated opposition to the equal enforcement of the” law “for the protection of white voters.” Deputy Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Julie Fernandez told a roomful of Voting Rights employees, “We have no interest in enforcing this provision of the law [to purge ineligible voters from the rolls]. It has nothing to do with increasing turnout, and we are just not going to do it.” Undoubtedly, Fernandez, Loretta King, and the rest of the racial spoils system mafia will argue free food increases “turnout.”

Perhaps not surprisingly, this lax attitude has emboldened the state’s Democrats to flout the law. If the president will not keep Black Panthers from wielding nightsticks at polling places, he will not stop Congresswomen from wafting fried chicken on the reservation.

Similar “Will Vote for Food” events are going on nationwide, largely targeting Democratic constituencies.

However, compared to the administration’s $760 million payoff, the feeds seem are small potatoes. In light of the billions of dollars pending in Justice Department settlements with other American Indians, Hispanics, and women, alleged Democratic attempts to purchase minority votes for a mess of pottage seem like chicken feed. While South Dakota Republicans investigate the reservation “feeds,” a future Republican Congressional majority should investigate whether the Obama administration is engaged in a far greater travesty: transferring wealth from those who have earned it to heavily Democratic constituencies, including those likely to vote in South Dakota.
 

chefdennis

Veteran Expediter
Then you have this:

Torn Between Two Lovers: Democrat Stephanie Herseth Sandlin (SD)

At the end of the day, does she care who's putting food on her table?

Posted by LaborUnionReport (Profile)
Sunday, October 24th at 7:00AM EDT
Torn Between Two Lovers: Democrat Stephanie Herseth Sandlin (SD) | RedState


You know, one of the (many) problems with Washington is that all-too-often politicians are too easily bought by special interests and end up selling out their constituents (and America). Historically, it’s been a bi-partisan disease that goes something like this:

1. Person decides to go into politics.
2. Person gets elected and goes to Washington.
3. Newly-minted politician meets lobbyists who wine and dine said politican.
4. Politician falls head over heels in love with lobbyists.
5. Politician marries lobbyist.

Say what?!?

[...Okay, so number five doesn't happen with politicians from every state....Just the ones, it seems, from South Dakota.]

You see, this is is where the lines get really blurry. When a politician marries a lobbyist, it sort of seems like having a fox in the chicken coop. Very quickly, the question can easily become not if there is too much outside influence, but how much? And, should that member ever lose re-election, does that person return to their home state? Or, do they assume a job as yet another lobbyist? And, if the latter is the case, whose interests is that member serving now—the voters or a prospective employer?

That, in a nutshell, is the question South Dakota needs to figure out about Democrat Stephanie Herseth-Sandlin from South Dakota. Is she really working for South Dakota or does she have other interests—namely, special interests at heart?

Herseth-Sandlin is South Dakota’s current at-large Congresswoman that is trying to keep from being ousted from the halls of Congress by Republican Kristi Noem. Besides the fact that Herseth-Sandlin votes solidly with Nancy Pelosi and her fellow Democrats 92% of the time, the bigger problem with Herseth-Sandlin is that she has more entanglements to special interests than most.

You see, she’s not only taking money from special interests, she’s also married to former Democrat Congressman Max Sandlin who, after losing his re-election to Congress, did what a lot of politicians seem to do—became a lobbyist.

In March 2007, the lawmaker married lobbyist and ex-Rep. Max Sandlin, a Texas Democrat who lost his seat to Rep. Louie Gohmert (R) in 2004. Since his defeat, Sandlin has been a registered lobbyist for Greenberg Traurig and the International Government Relations Group, which now goes by the name Mercury Public Affairs.

According to Senate lobbying records, the former Member represents a number of big-name clients, including Peabody Energy, Air Canada, Advance Auto Parts, the National Association of Broadcasters and Vanguard Health Systems — companies with substantial legislative interests during the 111th Congress.

Senate records show that Max Sandlin and his firm were paid $160,000 in 2009 by Baptist Health Care to lobby on its behalf, including for an “increase in [the] new market tax credit” in a Democratic-backed stimulus package that Herseth Sandlin ultimately voted for.

The National Association of Broadcasters paid Sandlin and his firm $320,000 over the past two years to lobby on a variety of issues, including a bill co-sponsored by his wife, the Local Radio Freedom Act.

And Advance Auto Parts employed Sandlin and his firm last year to lobby on the Employee Free Choice Act, legislation co-sponsored by Herseth Sandlin. The contentious “card check” bill, which would make it easier for workers to unionize, is a top target of manufacturers and others in the business community.

Republicans say Herseth Sandlin’s committee assignments make it difficult for her to avoid conflicts of interest. She is member of the Agriculture, Natural Resources, Veterans’ Affairs and Energy Independence and Global Warming panels, which have broad jurisdiction over many of her husband’s clients.

Like most Democrat incumbents these days, Herseth-Sandlin’s top contributors are a far-left menagerie of unions and abortionists who want to ensure their money doesn’t let them get too far out of Herseth-Sandlin’s mind.

Contributor: Total: Indivs: PACs
EMILY’s List $318,301 $291,137 $27,164
Skadden, Arps et al $82,100 $75,600 $6,500
Laborers Union $60,000 $0 $60,000
American Assn for Justice $50,000 $0 $50,000
AmeriPAC: The Fund for a Greater America $50,000 $0 $50,000
Blue Dog PAC $50,000 $0 $50,000
National Air Traffic Controllers Assn $49,000 $0 $49,000
American Fedn of St/Cnty/Munic Employees $47,550 $2,050 $45,500
Sheet Metal Workers Union $47,500 $0 $47,500
American Crystal Sugar $47,000 $0 $47,000
American Federation of Teachers $46,706 $0 $46,706
Intl Brotherhood of Electrical Workers $45,000 $0 $45,000
International Assn of Fire Fighters $44,500 $0 $44,500
Teamsters Union $42,000 $0 $42,000
United Transportation Union $40,000 $0 $40,000
National Rural Electric Cooperative Assn $39,572 $0 $39,572
BPI Technology $37,500 $37,500 $0
NARAL Pro-Choice America $36,500 $1,500 $35,000
National Assn of Realtors $36,000 $1,000 $35,000
PAC to the Future $35,000 $0 $35,000

Over the course of her brief career, Sandlin’s dunked her beak more than once into the union water trough. Correction: Herseth-Sandlin’s beak has been dipped in the union trough quite a bit (which probably explains her vote for the job-destroying Employee Anti-Choice Act):

Industry Total
Lawyers/Law Firms $550,410
Women’s Issues $544,159
Leadership PACs $492,374
Candidate Committees $358,550
Democratic/Liberal $330,148
Public Sector Unions $327,606
Crop Production & Basic Processing $298,663
Building Trade Unions $254,200
Health Professionals $245,980
Retired $233,600
Transportation Unions $231,150
Industrial Unions $175,750
Real Estate $148,913
Insurance $148,696
Securities & Investment $147,447
Lobbyists $131,880
Agricultural Services/Products $126,000
Electric Utilities $123,272
Commercial Banks $116,152
Education $113,996

Perhaps the fine people of South Dakota believed Stephanie Herseth-Sandlin cared about their interests once upon a time. However, one has to wonder where her loyalties lie now: With South Dakota or with the DC lobbyists.

You can help Kristi Noem put the interests of South Dakota (and America) first by going here and either volunteering to help her campaign, or by making a donation.
 
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