Showing posts with label Chaka Fattah. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chaka Fattah. Show all posts

Saturday, August 1, 2015

DEMS STRUGGLE TO FIND UNTAINTED REP FOR APPROPIATIONS COMMITTEE

House Minority Leader 
Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-CA)
9%
 is replacing embattled Democratic 
Rep. Chaka Fattah (D-PA)
11%
 (D-PA), who’s held a leadership position on the House Appropriations Committee.

Yet, the man who is slated to replace him, Rep. Mike Honda (D-CA), is the subject of a substantial investigation into ethical wrongdoing of his own, which allegedly involves a “pay-to-play” scheme discovered out of a probe into his official congressional and re-election committee’s improper mixing of government and campaigning business.
Fattah, for his part, was indicted this week on 29 counts of racketeering, fraud, and conspiracy, along with four of his associates,
The Office of Congressional Ethics was created by then House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in 2008 in what she called an attempt to “drain the swamp” of rampant corruption by officials in Washington, D.C. Yet Pelosi has not done anything to prevent her fellow Democrat Honda from rising to this powerful committee position.
Pelosi’s creation of this committee had a large founding in her personal targeting of former Rep. Tom Delay (R-TX), who after eight long years of trial was exonerated last Octoberafter a Texas court found that the evidence in the case was “legally insufficient to sustain DeLay’s convictions.”
Will Pelosi live up to her founding office’s ethical standards and prevent Honda from representing a committee which stands to eliminate ethics violations in the nation’s capital?
Honda’s troubles were amplified this past week when a binder dubbed “1,000 cranes” emerged listing 1,000 of the embattled congressman’s top donors who were pawns in an alleged showing of pay to play politics in which Honda sought to “fast track” the acquisition of $1 million — $1,000 from 1,000 people — in exchange for having his team complete transactional work and provide prioritized treatment for constituents who were interested in acquiring visas or other services in a more expeditious manner.
The binder reportedly emerged last week during the House ethics announcement that they would extend their probe into Honda’s alleged misconduct, which involved the mixing of government work and campaigning. The San Francisco Chronicle’s senior political writer Carla Marinucci points out that Honda’s binder was named “1,000 cranes” after an ancient Japanese tale that sees cranes as a symbol of luck and good fortune. Honda’s top donors were reportedly identified either as “cranes” or “friends of MH.”
The investigation into the ethics matter was prompted after allegations surfaced suggesting Honda’s Chief of Staff, Jennifer Van der Heide, had blurred the lines between her official government duties and Honda’s reelection campaign by coordinating with Honda’s campaign staff for a State Department event which targeted the congressman’s fellow South Asian constituents.
The perceived ethics violation surfaced during his 2014 reelection campaign against fellow Democratic rival, and former Obama trade official, Ro Khanna. However, it did little to dissuade voters from reelecting Honda for an eighth term, which he won by a slight 5,000 vote margin.
Khanna, who is a Yale law graduate, author, and university lecturer, announced in May that he will again seek the 17th Congressional district seat which Honda now occupies.
Follow Adelle Nazarian on Twitter @AdelleNaz and on Facebook.

Friday, July 31, 2015

Corruption's gripping the city and state


Chaka Fattah was called “a future power” when he first became a state senator. But did he use that power for his own gain? (YONG KIM / STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER)


CALL IT A PANDEMIC of public corruption.

It's gripping Philadelphia and Pennsylvania.

Elected leaders are probed, charged, convicted, jailed, etc. in stupendously striking succession
.
A stark irony? The city and state where American democracy was born is setting the national pace for illegality in office.

You get the damage this causes, right?

It undermines faith in government, faith in politics, faith in all elected officials.

It spurs cynicism. It fuels frustration with those who fail at creating progress but succeed spectacularly at creating scandal.
And we wonder why voter turnout is at its lowest point in 72 years.

And, yeah, I know U.S. Rep. Chaka Fattah has legal rights and presumed innocence until proven otherwise and blah, blah, blah.

But charges against him, including money laundering, bank fraud and bribery in "a racketeering conspiracy," sound like he was at the center of a "Fattah & Friends" mob family in which everyone got a taste.

I've known Fattah since the '80s, when he was a member of the Legislature.

I covered him when he ran for mayor. I wrote about his efforts, especially in education, in Congress. He knows how to work levers of government for good - and allegedly for evil.

In 1990, I wrote that as a freshman state senator he was a "hot prospect" who worked hard, pushed Philly issues and was "likely a future power."

I was right. I just forgot what power can do to too many who achieve it.

Let's not do the whole list. There's not enough space.

Let's just note: recently, four Philly state House members and a former Philly Traffic Court judge snagged in a "sting case"; another former Traffic Court judge busted for fixing tickets for bribes; a Philly state senator caught misusing funds.

Oh, but the ooze of awful doesn't stop at City Line Avenue.

The former mayor of Harrisburg was just indicted for racketeering, theft, bribery.

The current mayors of Reading and Allentown are under FBI investigations.

The former state treasurer, Rob McCord, resigned, pleaded guilty to extortion.

Two former state Supreme Court justices, Joan Orie Melvin and Seamus McCaffery, disgraced and gone from the state's highest bench.

The current state attorney general, Kathleen Kane, facing possible charges, alleged to have used secret grand jury material to embarrass a political foe.

All this in a state where a few years back, dozens of lawmakers, leaders and aides were caught in separate scandals, Bonusgate and Computergate, using millions in tax dollars for political gain.

There was a point when eight legislative leaders were in prison at the same time.

A national study from Indiana University in Bloomington puts Pennsylvania fifth among states for corruption, behind Mississippi, Louisiana, Tennessee and Illinois.

But the study's flawed. It stopped in 2008 and only counted federal charges. Since then and counting state charges, we must be at or near the top.

Think it matters?

A study by the nonpartisan Center for American Progress says three of the four most financially disadvantaged school districts in the nation are in Pennsylvania: Philadelphia, Reading and Allentown.

U.S. Census data say Philadelphia is the poorest big city in America, with the highest rate of deep poverty.
A Pew study puts Pennsylvania among the lowest states in job-creation.

Bad politics leads to bad policy.

And we have lots of bad politics. And party leaders and others who work so hard to raise so much money for campaign after campaign, year after year.
I wish that half that
 energy and effort was aimed at purifying the process. Campaign-contribution limits and term limits would be a start.

Gov. Wolf says Pennsylvania suffers a democracy deficit. I say it suffers an integrity deficit. The two are connected. And somebody should convene a summit.



Thursday, July 30, 2015

Democrats replace Fattah Appropriations Committee with Mike Honda (under ethics probe)

You just can’t make this shit up if you tried. Corrupt Democrat Chaka Fattah who has been indicted on racketeering charged. The corrupt Philadelphia Democrat has been replaced by Democrats as their leader on the Appropriations Committee. So who did Democrats select to become their leader on the House Appropriations Committee? None other than California Democrat Mike Honda who is currently under ethics investigation. This your 21st century Democrat party. Replace one crook with another.
Democrats replace Fattah Appropriations Committee with Mike Honda (under ethics probe)
Investigators with the Office of Congressional Ethics are looking into allegations against Rep. Michael M. Honda, the Democrat who has represented California’s South Bay since 2000.
The probe follows a September 2014 report by San Jose Inside that exposed internal emails between Honda’s longtime chief of staff, Jennifer Van der Heide, and his then-campaign manager about the invite list for an upcoming State Department roundtable. The February 2013 emails, given to the newspaper by an ex-Honda staffer, appeared to violate House rules regarding campaign activity by discussing contributors and fundraising efforts related to an official event.
Two days later, supporters of Ro Khanna, the Democrat vying against Honda for his seat in 2014, filed a complaint. Although only one of the 20 people who attended the State Department roundtable had ever contributed to Honda, Khanna and his supporters accused the congressman of a “pay-to-play arrangement,” in addition to pressuring staffers to assist the re-election campaign.
Honda’s office did not comment on the allegations in the letter to OCE, but acknowledged the investigation.
“The congressman and his staff continue to cooperate fully with the OCE’s review of the matter,” Honda spokeswoman Lauren Smith said in an email to CQ Roll Call. “Out of respect for the process, we cannot confirm specifics or discuss any details at this time.”

Via: Fireandreamitchell.com

Continue Reading.... 

Wednesday, July 29, 2015

House Dem loses committee post due to indictment, but get a load of his replacement

Pennsylvania Democrat indicted on federal racketeering charges

Rep. Chaka Fattah (D-Pa.) has been indicted on dozens of federal charges surrounding his unsuccessful run for Philadelphia mayor in 2007, the Department of Justice (DOJ) announced Wednesday.
The 11-term Democrat, along with four associates, was indicted on 29 federal counts, including bribery, money laundering, falsification of records and multiple counts of bank fraud, among other charges.
Assistant Attorney General Leslie R. Caldwell said Fattah and the others "embarked on a wide-ranging conspiracy involving bribery, concealment of unlawful campaign contributions and theft of charitable and federal funds to advance their own personal interests.”
“When elected officials betray the trust and confidence placed in them by the public, the department will do everything we can to ensure that they are held accountable," Caldwell said in a statement. "Public corruption takes a particularly heavy toll on our democracy because it undermines people’s basic belief that our elected leaders are committed to serving the public interest, not to lining their own pockets.”
The DOJ identified the other four facing charges as Herbert Vederman, 69, a lobbyist based in Palm Beach, Fla.; Bonnie Bowser, 59, Fattah’s Philadelphia-based district director; Robert Brand, 69, of Philadelphia; and Karen Nicholas, 57, of Williamstown, N.J.
The DOJ alleges that Fattah borrowed $1 million from a wealthy donor during his 2007 mayoral bid, returning $400,000 in unused funds and devising a scheme to repay the remaining $600,000 using charitable and federal grants filtered through a non-profit — the Educational Advancement Alliance — created and headed by Fattah.
The DOJ also alleges that Fattah used funds from both his mayoral and congressional campaigns to pay down his son's student loan debts. The repayments, totaling roughly $23,000, were paid by a political consulting company that had received the money directly from the campaign, the DOJ alleged.
Fattah's office did not immediately respond to a request for comment Wednesday morning.
The Pennsylvania Democrat, a senior appropriator who's ranking member of the committee's Commerce and Justice departments subpanel, stepped down from that position within hours of the announcement Wednesday.
House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) issued a brief statement praising Fattah's commitment to the middle class and characterizing the charges as "deeply saddening." "Congressman Fattah has been a tireless and effective advocate for America’s hard-working families across more than 20 years of distinguished service in the House," Pelosi said. 
“Congressman Fattah has rightly stepped down from his position as Ranking Member on the House CJS Appropriations Subcommittee pending the resolution of this matter.”

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