Trump campaign used secretive shell company led by Jared Kushner to illegally hide spending: complaint

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On Thursday, Business Insider reported that the watchdog group Campaign Legal Center is alleging former President Donald Trump’s family and campaign associates used a shell company to illegally conceal how they were spending election money.

The new allegations against the Trump family are detailed in a supplement to an existing federal complaint.

“The supplement, filed Thursday morning with the Federal Election Commission, is in part based on Insider’s reporting in December about American Made Media Consultants, a secretive shell company that operated inside Trump’s 2020 campaign committee,” said the report. “American Made Media Consultants, the shell company, along with a political firm owned by former Trump campaign manager Brad Parscale, ‘served as conduits that hid the ultimate recipients of nearly half of the campaign’s overall spending,’ the updated complaint states. ‘These schemes disguised which firms or individuals were working for Trump’s committees, how much and when they were being paid, and the purposes of those payments,’ it continued.” Continue reading.

Oops: Jared Kushner Reportedly Created a Shell Company to Secretly Pay Trump Family Members and Spend Half the Campaign’s Cash

And first daughter-in-law Lara Trump was the president.

Donald Trump and his family have spent the last four years making the airtight case that they view the presidency as simply a means to enrich themselves and their associates. They probably don’t particularly like that reputation and, yet, it hasn’t stopped them from funneling taxpayer money to their private business, gouging the Secret Service, and raising legal defense funds that the fine print says could go directly to their pockets. Oh, and, according to a new report, setting up a shell company that spent hundreds of millions of campaign dollars to pay Trump family members along with other expenditures it seemingly wanted to keep under wraps.

According to Business Insider, first son-in-law Jared Kushnerpersonally approved the creation of the company, incorporated as American Made Media Consultants Corp. and American Made Media Consultants LLC, in April 2018. From there, Eric Trump’s wife, Lara Trump, was named president, with Mike Pence’s nephew John Pence serving as vice president. If you’re wondering why the shell company, described as Business Insider as acting “almost like a campaign within a campaign” was necessary, well, it’s not entirely clear, but it sure sounds like the express purpose was the ability to shield “financial and operational details from public scrutiny,” as it allowed the campaign to avoid federally mandated disclosures concerning what it was spending considerable amounts of money on. And by considerable we mean nearly half of the $1.26 billion raised for Trump’s reelection. Which seems like a lot!

Within the larger campaign, some leaders told Business Insider they were in the dark regarding the AMMC arrangement, saying that they were generally aware the company was used to purchase TV, radio, and digital advertising but had no idea exactly how much each vendor was keeping for itself. While some advisers have accused former campaign manager Brad Parscale of mismanaging money, the bulk of the cash spent by AMMC—$415 million—occurred after Parscale was fired on July 15. (Parscale has defended his spending as campaign manager.) Continue reading.

Corey Lewandowski denies GOP is engaging in voter suppression

The former Trump campaign manager says Republicans are merely focused on the integrity of the process.

Donald Trump’s first-ever campaign manager denied the president’s reelection campaign is engaging in voter suppression as it enters election week trailing in polls. 

In an interview on “Fox News Sunday,” Corey Lewandowski brushed aside such accusations that have stemmed from Trump and the Republican Party looking to limit the collection and processing of a flood of mail-in ballots, as well as videotaping voters at a ballot drop box in Philadelphia, asserting that Republicans are looking to find voter fraud.

“Look, this is about the integrity of the process,” Lewandowski said, arguing that he didn’t believe anyone in the country should have a problem with the campaign suing to obtain the signatures of voters in Democratic-leaning Clark County, Nev. Continue reading.

Trump is closing out the campaign by showing complete contempt for his own supporters

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Sen. Martha McSally, an Arizona Republican, has paid her bootlicking dues. She’s repeatedly gone out of her way to show obeisance to Donald Trump, most famously in January when she yelled “liberal hack” repeatedly at a CNN reporter who asked her if the Senate should consider evidence before rushing to acquit Trump during his impeachment trial. 

But despite years of bowing and scraping and, of course, voting to acquit Trump despite his obvious guilt, McSally has earned no loyalty in return from her orange master. She’s in a tough race against former astronaut Mark Kelly, a Democrat, and has consistently trailed in the polls. At a recent Arizona rally, Trump didn’t bother to hide his disdain for McSally’s standard political desire to address her own potential voters.

“Martha, just come up fast. Fast. Fast. Come on. Quick,” Trump barked at her. “You got one minute! One minute, Martha! They don’t want to hear this, Martha. Come on. Let’s go. Quick, quick, quick. Come on. Let’s go.” It was clear that, as always, Trump resents every moment when the spotlight’s not on him, even in the context of helping a sycophant. Continue reading.

Trump’s final ad buy betrays just how broke his campaign really is

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On a call Monday, Trump campaign manager Bill Stepien revealed the campaign’s total ad buy for the last two weeks of the presidential race would be a whopping a paltry $55 million … split between no fewer than 11 states.

Um, just wow. And that’s not only the Trump campaign, it represents coordinated spending with the Republican National Committee (RNC) too. Far from being a muscular way to close out the race, it feels more like a cry for help. By comparison, Biden campaign manager Jen O’Malley Dillon said last week that she still anticipates raising another $234 million through the election.

The 11 states included on the target list for both entities are: Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Iowa, Maine-2, Michigan, North Carolina, Nevada, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. Continue reading.

NBC Commentator and GOP Shill Hugh Hewitt Is Paid By Trump Campaign

NBC’s Meet the Press hosted right-wing radio host and NBC News commentator Hugh Hewitt, who talked up President Donald Trump’s reelection chances and touted his “sort of powerful energy on conservative media” for Republicans this week after being released from the hospital. In addition to the absurdity of hosting a dishonest shill like Hewitt, host Chuck Todd did not disclose that Hewitt has a financial tie to Trump’s campaign: Last month, the Trump Make America Great Again Committee twice rented Hewitt’s newsletter to raise money. 

Hewitt is the host of a program on Salem Radio Network, a columnist for The Washington Post, and a commentator for NBC News. He is a pro-Trump and Republican hack who recently tweeted that “every Catholic, indeed every person of any faith, has to realize the left despises them and that the Democrats shelter this virulent bigotry and pretend it’s something else” (the Democratic presidential nominee is Joe Biden, who is Catholic).

The Daily Beast reported last year on how “Hewitt has fallen in line with the rest of the conservative media ecosystem as a reliably Trumpian defender of the president’s bizarre and potentially criminal behavior.” Continue reading.

Parscale steps away from Trump campaign as wife denies physical abuse

The former Trump campaign manager describes being under “overwhelming stress,” while his wife says her apparent allegations of domestic violence were “misconstrued.”

Brad Parscale, a senior adviser to Donald Trump’s campaign who was involuntarily detained by police this weekend, said he is stepping away from the reelection effort and seeking help for what he called “overwhelming stress” on him and his family.

In a statement provided to POLITICO on Wednesday, Parscale’s wife, Candice, also denied that Parscale physically abused her, despite a police report in which said she told authorities the contrary.

“The statements I made on Sunday have been misconstrued, let it be clear my husband was not violent towards me that day or any day prior,” she said. Continue reading.

AG Ellison, Health Experts, Community Leaders Slam Trump’s Failed Leadership on Health Care Ahead of Pence Visit


ST. PAUL, MINNESOTA – Ahead of Pence’s visit to Minneapolis this afternoon, DFL Party leaders and health experts held a press call slamming the Trump administration for its failed leadership on health care, particularly Trump’s attacks on the Affordable Care Act in the middle of a global health crisis, and his attempts to gut protections for people with pre-existing conditions. Leaders also addressed Trump’s attempts to use “law and order” to divide and distract from his failed presidency. The call featured Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison, Minnesota Nurses Association First Vice President Bernadine Engeldorf, former Obama health care advisor Andy Slavitt, State Senate candidate Lindsey Port (District 56), who had COVID-19, State Senate candidate Dr. Aleta Borrud (District 26), and Minneapolis resident Jessica Intermill, who has a pre-existing condition.

Excerpts from call:

Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison: 

“We’ve now surpassed 200,000 Americans who’ve passed away, among those is my own mom… But you could also include the brother of our lieutenant governor, you can include the father of Ilhan Omar, our congresswoman in the fifth district. This thing is personal and there are so many people we have lost to COVID that it’s getting to the point that everybody knows somebody who lost someone. 

“The government could have done something about it. It simply didn’t have to be this way. And the truth is, it has to do with who we choose to lead our country, and our state, and our cities. But it really does start with the top. You know, we have fifty different public health strategies going on because of the federal government, because of Donald Trump and Mike Pence, who just said: ‘We don’t even believe in it. We’re gonna fight tooth and nail with the people who do know what they’re talking about, like Anthony Fauci. We’re going to go after states that are trying to do the right thing.’”

Minnesota Nurses Association First Vice President Bernadine Engeldorf: 

“We know our healthcare is in crisis today, particularly with the current leadership. Nurses are on the forefront 24/7, and do feel that their voices are important in our health care today. Trump basically has failed to contain the COVID-19, mainly because he didn’t listen to experts. Apparently not believing science, didn’t take it seriously, and didn’t have a plan in our approach of care during this pandemic. Even during the pandemic, he still tried to repeal our health care for millions, including protections for many as four in 10, who are Americans with pre-existing conditions. 

“Trump still claims that the virus will miraculously disappear. He supports treatments that are not accurate or not truthful or not going to help diminish the pandemic. He has not supported social distancing and wearing of the mask as we can see in many of the events he participates in.

“And these issues have been given renewed importance. With the passing of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and the Trump’s administration’s current case before the Supreme Court on the future, the ACA. We know that Joe Biden and Kamala Harris will want to build the ACA, expand affordable coverage, lower prescription drug costs, and ensure a no-cost COVID vaccine. Nurses certainly stand in support of that.”

State Senate candidate Lindsey Port (District 56): 

On health care: “I am a mom with two elementary-aged kids in a hybrid schedule. I run a nonprofit. I’m a candidate for the Minnesota State Senate. And I’m a survivor of COVID-19…It’s at this moment, during a global pandemic we’ve failed horrifically to contain, that the Trump administration is fighting in court to end the protections of coverage for pre-existing conditions by dismantling the ACA. If they are successful, more than 90,000 Minnesotans could find themselves unable to get insurance coverage simply because they contracted COVID. The kidney complications I’ve suffered could become a pre-existing condition making my family liable for thousands of dollars in medical care that our insurance company could then deny. Insurance companies are already trying to fight us on this coverage. And if the Trump administration gives for-profit insurance companies the right to decide what they want to cover, we will be in a world of trouble.”

On public safety: “I think it’s a really important question, because this is certainly the conversation we’re having in the suburbs. This election cycle is this law and order and community safety question. I don’t understand how we can look at 200,000 Americans dead over six months and not call that a public safety issue. Health care, access to health care, and managing this pandemic is 1,000%, a public safety and community safety issue. In my district, when we’re talking about this, people are concerned about how their kids are going to go to school safely. They’re concerned about access to affordable housing. They’re concerned about access to health care and prescription drug prices. They’re absolutely concerned about relationships between our community and the police. And that is definitely a part of this conversation. But it is not divorced from the pandemic. And the conversation we’re having in our community in the suburbs is about smart investments that we can make in our community that actually make us safer. And those are things like mental health and public health resources. They are school counselors, they are investments in affordable housing, and they are access to health care, which is certainly the number one crisis we are facing at this moment.”

Former Obama health care advisor Andy Slavitt: 

On health care: “Look, we all know we’re going through a very traumatic, difficult time in our history. We failed at some basic things. We failed to contain the virus when it came to our shores. We failed to plan appropriately, to make sure that we had enough testing. We failed to adjust as things grew and changed. But in this time, we really failed to provide people with the leadership or the confidence that we were moving in the right direction… There’s not a Republican way to manage a pandemic, there’s not a Democratic way to manage a pandemic, there’s a good way to manage them and a bad way to manage a pandemic. And hundreds of thousands of people are gone without so much as a sorrowful word is not the kind of leadership we need.”

On public safety: “I’d encourage you to read Joe Biden’s statement last night, you know, in calling for both justice, but also an end to violence, and no violence… You know, I served with Joe Biden, he is someone who diffuses these situations. My fear is that in these types of situations, President Trump and Vice President Pence come and use them as distractions, number one, and then also, in the process, create more heat and more fear. Joe Biden doesn’t think that’s the answer. Kamala Harris doesn’t think that the answer, there’s no conceding whatsoever to fear, we should never concede to fear. We go through tough moments as a country, we need leaders who can get us through those moments.”

State Senate candidate Aleta Borrud (District 26): 

“I’m a doctor trained in public health. And I know that the highest responsibility of our elected leaders in this global health emergency is to provide clear, consistent and fact-based messages to the public about what we need to do to stop the spread of COVID. Governor Walz, his administration, in fact, have done this. They’ve delivered consistent messages from the beginning. But this has been countered by the willful and dangerous misinformation coming from this president. And this is misinformation that has been echoed so irresponsibly by many of Minnesota’s Republican leaders. My frontline medical community of Rochester, home of the Mayo Clinic, deserves better than what this Trump administration is delivering. Our medical providers are fearful to go home to their families after caring for patients. Because of this, they deserve better. All the workers who are sick and dying because they lack adequate PPE across this country deserve better. And actually, our voters deserve better. I talked to so many people who are now confused about masks. You know, are they safe? Is it going to hurt my heart failure? Do they actually work? voters also tell me that when a vaccine becomes available, they are afraid to take it because they’re not sure that it will be safe or effective. The Trump administration is undermining the people’s faith in all of our public institutions.” 

Jessica Intermill, Minneapolis resident: 

On health care: “I’m here to share my story, which starts 10 years ago, way before the pandemic, I was a healthy 31-year-old. My husband and I decided it was time to start our family. And about four weeks into the pregnancy, I could tell something was wrong. Pain in my joints got a little bit worse each day. And by the time I was seven months pregnant, my disease was so advanced that when I saw a rheumatologist for the first time, from across the room, he was able to diagnose me with rheumatoid arthritis. I went home and cried. And 22 days later I delivered our daughter.

“If you see me on the street today, you won’t be able to see the holes that my disease has eaten into my bones. You won’t see the fistfuls of pills that I take every day to keep me healthy. You won’t know that my care in the eight and a half years since I was diagnosed, cost $496,000. You won’t know that just one drug costs $46,000 every year. But the thing about a chronic illness is you can’t put it down. I have to pay these costs. I don’t get to pretend it’s not there during a pandemic. I don’t get to not be immunocompromised anymore. My disease doesn’t care that one drug, the $46,000 a year drug, that’s $125 per day for the rest of my life COVID or not.

“I can’t afford that without insurance. I don’t know anyone else who can.

“A car accident doesn’t care how much it costs to take the ambulance to the hospital. COVID doesn’t care how much it costs to keep you on a respirator. And it’s clear now that President Trump doesn’t care either. His continuing attacks on the ACA, his refusal to put forth any plan, even while he’s attacking coverage for pre-existing conditions, even when he’s trying to get rid of lifetime limits. It shows that he cares more about corporate profits than he does about people. He doesn’t care whether my daughter has a mom who’s healthy enough to care for her.”

On public safety: “Maybe this is a mom answer, but I don’t know how you say that you’re not going to listen to the election of the American people and maybe not cede power in any sort of peaceful way and call yourself the law and order president. I mean, I don’t know how you don’t pay attention to what the FDA guidance is about a safe vaccine and call yourself the law and order president. It’s not real. It’s a distraction.

Trump Blew A Big Cash Advantage But Still Puts Campaign Dollars In His Own Pocket

Even as the firms of his current and former campaign managers took pay cuts, Trump funneled another $251,409 into his own cash registers last month.

WASHINGTON ― President Donald Trump forced both his current and former campaign managers to take pay cuts in the last two months, but nevertheless funneled another quarter-million dollars into his own cash registers.

Even as his reelection operation lost a once-dominating fundraising advantage to Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden, new filings with the Federal Election Commission show that Trump’s campaign and the Republican National Committee spent another $203,000 at his hotel a few blocks from the White House and another $37,542 to rent space at his Trump Tower in Manhattan ― although the campaign is based at a high-rise in Arlington, Virginia. Total reported payments in August from the campaign and the RNC to the president’s own businesses amounted to $251,409.

Since he took office in January 2017, the political committees under Trump’s control have spent a total of $7,231,392 at Trump’s various businesses, according to a HuffPost analysis of FEC records. Continue reading.

Pro-Trump youth group enlists teens in secretive campaign likened to a ‘troll farm,’ prompting rebuke by Facebook and Twitter

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One tweet claimed coronavirus numbers were intentionally inflated, adding, “It’s hard to know what to believe.” Another warned, “Don’t trust Dr. Fauci.”

A Facebook comment argued that mail-in ballots “will lead to fraud for this election,” while an Instagram comment amplified the erroneous claim that 28 million ballots went missing in the past four elections.

The messages have been emanating in recent months from the accounts of young people in Arizona seemingly expressing their own views — standing up for President Trump in a battleground state and echoing talking points from his reelection campaign. Continue reading.