New Mexico Democrat corrects financial disclosure after misreporting income

Rep. Michelle Lujan GrishamMichelle Lynn Lujan GrishamGeorge Floyd’s death ramps up the pressure on Biden for a black VP Biden should name a ‘team of colleagues’ Top Democratic pollster advised Biden campaign to pick Warren as VP MORE (D-N.M.) misstated her income from a consulting group that she co-founded on a 2013 financial disclosure, prompting her to amend the form.

Lujan Grisham initially reported in the 2013 disclosure that she made between $50,001 and $100,000 in dividends from the Delta Consulting Group, which runs New Mexico’s high-risk insurance program, Politico reported Saturday.

But her tax returns for that year show that she made $138,000 in “passive income” from the company. 

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A spokesperson for Lujan Grisham’s office told Politico that it was an “honest mistake,” and that the financial disclosure had been amended. 

Lujan Grisham is facing off against two other candidates in the state’s Democratic gubernatorial primary, which is set to take place on Tuesday.

She released her tax returns on Thursday, just days ahead of the primary.

Politico reported earlier this week that Delta Consulting Group, which Lujan Grisham founded in 2008 with longtime political ally Debbie Armstrong, received millions of dollars to run New Mexico’s high-risk insurance program, even as similar offerings were being phased out in other states. 

Critics have accused Lujan Grisham of pressing the state to keep the high-risk program open, despite the Affordable Care Act offering similar coverage at a lower cost.

Lujan Grisham sold her stake in the company in June 2017, months after she announced that she would run for New Mexico governor.

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Holder redistricting group backs lawsuits for 3 additional majority-black congressional districts

A group backed by former U.S. Attorney General Eric HolderEric Himpton HolderTrump official criticizes ex-Clinton spokesman over defunding police tweet Obama to speak about George Floyd in virtual town hall GOP group launches redistricting site MORE is fighting for additional majority-black congressional districts in Alabama, Georgia and Louisiana according to three new lawsuits filed Wednesday.

The National Redistricting Foundation (NRF), an arm of Holder’s National Democratic Redistricting Committee, says it’s working to get black voters an equal opportunity to elect their chosen candidates.

The lawsuit, filed on behalf of black residents in the states, alleges that each state violated the Voting Rights Act in redistricting in 2011 by preventing black voters from being able to elect representatives of their choice to the U.S. House of Representatives.

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In Alabama, NRF alleges that Republicans carefully distributed black voters between three congressional districts and packed African-American voters into Congressional District 7 now held by Rep. Terri SewellTerrycina (Terri) Andrea SewellAlabama Democrats call for state to end holiday commemorating Confederate leader Democratic candidates gear up for a dramatic Super Tuesday Bill banning menthol in cigarettes divides Democrats, with some seeing racial bias MORE (D), which is already a majority-minority district. The suit contends that lawmakers should have created a new majority-minority district.

Georgia lawmakers, meanwhile, allegedly failed to draw an additional majority-minority congressional district where black voters were geographically compact, instead spreading voters among three other districts to dilute black voters’ voting power, according to the suit.

In Louisiana, the lawsuit alleges state lawmakers packed black voters into the state’s sole majority-minority district and divided black voters between several congressional districts, instead of creating another majority-minority district.

“The current maps are clear violations of the Voting Rights Act that deny African Americans the equal opportunity to elect their candidates of choice,” Holder said in a statement. 

“The creation of additional districts in which African-Americans have the opportunity to elect their preferred candidates in each of these states will be an important step toward making the voting power of African-Americans more equal and moving us closer to the ideals of our representative democracy.”

But Matt Walter, president of the Republican State Leadership Committee, argued that Democrats are trying to win congressional seats through litigation. 

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“Fast and Furious Eric Holder is again resorting to cheap politically-motivated stunts aimed at taking away authority from legislators accountable to the people in an attempt to draw district lines after Democrats have lost nearly 1,000 state legislative seats since 2010,” he said in a statement on Wednesday.

“The cynical lawsuits filed today by Holder and the Democrats are crass attempts to rally the left-wing base and to elect more Democrats through litigation, instead of running winning campaigns on policies and ideas that voters actually want.”

Numerous states are facing legal challenges alleging racial or political gerrymandering in state legislative districts or the U.S. House.

Updated 5:58 p.m.

 

'Should Be a No-Brainer': Progressives Urge Democrats to Muster Guts to Block Pompeo

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As President Donald Trump’s torture-supporting secretary of state pick Mike Pompeo testifies before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Thursday—amid a flood of opposition from anti-war groups, environmentalists, and LGBTQ rights organizations—commentators and activists have argued that the only remaining question is whether Democrats will follow the lead of progressive activists and block Pompeo, or ignore their base and rubber-stamp yet another disastrous Trump nominee.

Writing ahead of Pompeo’s Senate hearing on Wednesday, The Intercept‘s Ryan Grim noted that the GOP only holds a one-member advantage in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and “with Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) having already announced his opposition, that means a united Democratic front could reject Pompeo in committee.”

“Pompeo’s confirmation is far from certain. United opposition from Senate Dems can block him from Trump’s War Cabinet.”
—5 CallsIt will not be the first time Senate Democrats have been forced to vote on whether Pompeo—a “committed Islamophobe,” climate denier, and war hawk—should head one of the government’s most prominent departments.

Last year, 14 Democrats—including Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) and Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.)—joined every Republican except Paul in voting to confirm Pompeo as CIA chief.

At least one Democrat who voted to confirm Pompeo last year, Sen. Brian Shatz (D-Hawaii), has admitted he was wrong to do so and vowed to oppose him this time around, citing his “alarming tendency towards military provocation and brinkmanship.”

Ultimately, Grim argues, the best way for Democrats to block Pompeo’s confirmation may be to ensure he is voted down in committee, which will require every Democrat to vote no.

“A nominee can still be brought to the floor for a vote despite having been shot down in committee, but nobody has been successfully confirmed that way in at least 40 years,” Grim observed. “A loss in committee could make it easier for moderate Democrats to vote against Pompeo.”

As Pompeo attempted to insist during his opening statement during Thursday’s hearing that he is not, in fact, a hawk—contradicting his lengthy record of calling for regime change in North Korea and Iran—more than 180 advocacy groups nationwide urged Americans to keep up the pressure on Democratic senators to stop his confirmation.

“This should be a no-brainer,” MoveOn.org spokesperson Karthik Ganapathy told The Intercept, highlighting in particular Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), who voted to confirm Pompeo as CIA director. “Not only is it good policy for Sen. Feinstein to oppose a warmongering extremist as the next leader of our nation’s diplomats, it’s also smart politics.”

In a statement ahead of Pompeo’s Senate hearing on Thursday, Win Without War director Stephen Miles highlighted the widespread grassroots opposition to Pompeo and urged Senate Democrats to stop a man with such “aversion to diplomacy” from becoming America’s top diplomat.

“More than 180 national organizations representing tens of millions of Americans and diverse communities across the country and covering a wide swath of issues—from national security and women’s health, to climate change and human rights—have now publicly opposed Pompeo’s nomination,” Miles said. “And it’s no wonder Pompeo has garnered such strong opposition…he is simply unfit to represent the United States on the world stage.”

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