Tom Steyer Aide Allegedly Tried to Pay for Endorsements
Two different Iowa politicians said they received the offer.
An aide to billionaire Tom Steyer’s presidential campaign reportedly privately offered campaign contributions to numerous Iowa politicians in exchange for their endorsement.
Two Iowa politicians told The Associated Press on the record that they received financial offers from a Steyer aide in an effort to entice them to support the billionaire’s White House bid. One of the politicians named Pat Murphy, a former state House speaker, as the Steyer aide who made the offer. Several other state lawmakers who spoke anonymously with the AP said Murphy offered them campaign cash for their endorsement.
“It was presented more as, he has provided financial support to other downballot candidates who’ve endorsed him, and could do the same for you,” said Democratic Iowa state Rep. Karin Derry of her conversation with Murphy.
Former Democratic state Sen. Tom Courtney also told the AP that he received a financial offer from a Steyer aide but did not identify the individual who made the offer.
“Tom, I know you’re running for Senate. I’m working for Tom Steyer,” Courtney recalled of his conversation with the aide. “Now you know how this works. … He said, ‘You help them, and they’ll help you.'”
“I said, ‘It wouldn’t matter if you’re talking monetary, there’s no amount,'” Courtney said. “I don’t do that kind of thing.”
The offer “left a bad taste in my mouth,” Courtney said.
The AP’s Thursday report comes after The Post and Courier reported Monday that Steyer’s deputy South Carolina state director Dwane Sims had stolen voter data Democratic California Sen. Kamala Harris’s campaign collected. Sims tendered his resignation from the campaign Monday.
Campaign finance experts told the AP that paying cash for endorsements violates campaign finance law if such transactions aren’t clearly disclosed as payments for endorsements.
Steyer campaign spokesman Alberto Lammers told the AP in a statement distancing the Steyer campaign from Murphy that the campaign did not authorize the aide to make financial offers for endorsements and that the Steyer campaign has no plans to make any contributions to Iowa politicians this year.
“Our campaign policy is clear that we will not engage in this kind of activity, and anyone who does is not speaking for the campaign or does not know our policy,” Lammers said.
Steyer has been accused of using his wealth to gain an unfair advantage in the Democratic primary. He’s dumped nearly $48 million of his own money into his campaign since announcing his bid in July.
The Steyer campaign did not return the Daily Caller News Foundation’s request for comment.
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Image: Reuters.