Primary Bombshell?: Claims of Harrassment Against Treasurer Flowers (Updated)

Primary Bombshell?: Claims of Harrassment Against Treasurer Flowers (Updated)

I remarked to my source that I thought the primary in the Treasurer's race was going to be a very close. My source replied ".... assuming something doesn't break in, say, the next three weeks." Then he said.. "that is foreshadowing." That was yesterday. This is today:
Former deputy state treasurer Erika Benner has accused her former boss, state Treasurer Chip Flowers, of making harassing and threatening statements in text messages and phone calls after an incident before a July Fourth parade in Dover. [...] "Tell him to come to my house," according to the text Benner provided that she said was sent by Flowers on the evening of July 4. "I picked up something from cabelas last week that should ude (sic) just fine. Tell him I'm begging him. He fu---- with the wrong ni---."
I just knew that Cabela's was bad news the minute it opened.
Wednesday Open Thread [8.13.14]

Wednesday Open Thread [8.13.14]

First Read: "Well, that didn't take long. Less than 48 hours after The Atlantic published Hillary Clinton's critical comments about Obama's foreign policy, she walked them back. Spokesman Nick Merrill said in a statement that Clinton called the president to 'make sure he knows that nothing she said was an attempt to attack him, his policies, or his leadership,' adding that the two will 'hug it out' in Martha's Vineyard tonight. As we've noted, Clinton's always been more hawkish than the president, but the handling of the interview and this apology just seem like more politically head-scratching decisions as she continues her book tour. The bottom line: This is not the first time Clinton and Obama are going to have a public split as Democrats transition from one standard-bearer to another. But is every one of those moments going to be as tortured as this one?" This was the first time I seriously considered not supporting Hillary AND seriously considered whether, should a credible candidate challenge her, like Warren or O'Malley, she could win the nomination. Hillary wants to walk a tight rope and appear hawkish and strong, but when she does that, she sounds like a Neocon or John McCain. And I will not be voting for a Neocon. So Hillary better get her act together. Meanwhile, what is going in Kansas? Sometimes the public just tunes out an incumbent and decides they are done with him. There are three such incidences this year: Corbett in PA, Quinn in IL, and now Brownback in KS.
House Incumbents Spending Taxpayer $$’s To Fend Off Primary Challengers?

House Incumbents Spending Taxpayer $$’s To Fend Off Primary Challengers?

It sure looks that way. Both Valerie Longhurst and Dennis E. Williams have sent out official House correspondence to their districts that are little more than taxpayer-funded campaign pieces. There may well be others who have done the same. The supposed deniability comes in that these are allegedly legislative updates to constituents. They are sent on their personal House letterhead, in House envelopes, and likely through state mail. And they are prepared in-house by state employees on state time. They tout the alleged accomplishments of the legislators, and, as campaign pieces are prone to do, try to mislead voters on issues where the incumbents are vulnerable. Oh, and so far, they've only been sent out by incumbent House members facing primaries. When I worked in the Senate, we were forbidden from doing this. During the brief time that I worked for the House, then-Speaker Terry Spence allowed us to send such mailings. Of course, it's likely not coincidence that this policy was set during the election season that the Rethugs were desperately trying to hold onto their majority, and if they did it, he had to let us do it. Truth be told, most of July and August were spent on preparing and sending these mailings. Only one person can authorize such mailings: The Speaker of the House. It's likely legal, as the General Assembly routinely exempts itself from laws that apply to everyone else. In fact, apparently it's technically legal to send out these sorts of mailings up to 35 days prior to an election. But I submit that it's a wasteful misuse of taxpayer funds.