Be INFORMED

Monday, October 31, 2011

Herman Cain campaign may have violated campaign finance laws

   By Laura Clawson    Mon Oct 31, 2011     Daily Kos

Herman Cain's campaign may be raising $5 million per month now, but things weren't always so flush. Back in February and March, Prosperity USA, a nonprofit organization run by top Cain aides Smokin' Mark Block and Linda Hansen, provided start-up funding for Cain's campaign, the Journal Sentinel reports:

A more detailed checking account says the Cain campaign owed nearly $15,000 for an "Atlanta invoice," about $17,000 for chartered flight service and $5,000 for travel and meetings in Iowa, Las Vegas, Houston, Dallas and Louisiana. The document says the Cain campaign had been billed $3,700 for iPads purchased on Jan. 4.

A series of small-ticket items for travel and expenses by Block are listed as "not billed to FOH but due from them."

This would be totally illegal, of course, and, making things worse:

It is not known if Cain's election fund eventually paid back Prosperity USA, which now appears defunct. The candidate's federal election filings make no mention of the debt, and the figures in the documents don't match payments made by the candidate's campaign.

One question implied by the Journal Sentinel report is whether Prosperity USA was in fact founded as the precursor to a Cain campaign: Block founded the organization just last year and in the brief window of time between its founding and when Cain became a candidate, it was paying costs associated with his travel to give speeches to conservative groups and to meet with conservative funders like David Koch.

Though sexual harassment allegations against Cain will dominate today's news cycle, this story is going to be another gift that keeps on giving for Cain's opponents and a media that thrives on scandal.

Originally posted to Laura Clawson on Mon Oct 31, 2011
Also republished by Daily Kos.

Tax Wall Street to Heal America

Published on Monday, October 31, 2011 by OtherWords

The nation's nurses are calling for a tax on financial transactions to begin raising the revenue needed to fix the nation's growing social crisis. by Deborah Burger

National Nurses United, America's largest union of RNs, is sounding an alarm.

We've organized rallies in New York, Boston, Washington, Los Angeles, Chicago, San Francisco, and Las Vegas, as well as in Minnesota, Michigan, Texas, and Florida, other states and cities. We've held demonstrations at 60 congressional field offices. And we've joined the Occupy Together movement as first aid volunteers in more than a dozen sites, including on Wall Street, where it all started.Our protests are for our patients and for our country. We won't stop until an agenda to rebuild Main Street is secured. (photo: Mike Fleshman)

Through these actions and others, we're drawing attention to a national emergency and calling for a tiny but potentially powerful tax on financial transactions. This simple step would amass up to $350 billion annually in this country as part of a global push for revenue desperately needed here and elsewhere around the world.

Why are we making this tax a huge priority? For nurses, patient care extends beyond the bedside.

Consider this heartbreaking story. Steven Cross, a single dad, departed his Lakeville, Minnesota home last month after it was seized by the bank. He was one of the millions of Americans — through a combination of stagnant wages, massive unemployment, Wall Street gouging, and bank fraud — forced out of their homes in recent years. He left his 11-year-old son behind with his neighbors, telling them in a note, "I don't want him to remember me as homeless." Actually, more than memories were at stake. According to a recent survey conducted in California, two out of five of homeless people are at risk of dying a "premature death."

The richest 1 percent is doing us in. No one knows that better than us nurses. People are getting sick as a result of the system's collapse. Poverty and financial demise are engulfing communities while the wealth of a tiny minority continues to grow.

Early heart attacks, stomach ailments in children, acute anxiety in all age groups, and strokes are on the rise. All of these conditions are stress-related, induced by the conditions imposed on a society dedicated to fulfilling the needs of the richest 1 percent.

There was a 39-percent increase in suicide attempts in families experiencing foreclosure in four hard-hit states, according to a study conducted by researchers at Princeton and Georgia State universities. The 1 percent is bad for our health. Nurses see it every day in our hospitals and communities, and even in our own families. That's why we're protesting. We'll keep it up for the duration, until we see progress toward getting crucial new resources into our communities.

America's child poverty rate of 22 percent — and rising — is more than a national disgrace. It's a recipe for disaster. But it can begin to be addressed by revenue from a tax on stocks, bonds, derivatives, and speculative activity.

President Barack Obama must decide which side he is on, Wall Street or Main Street. If he's on Main Street's side, he needs to join the global movement in support of a tax on financial speculation. National Nurses United is sponsoring a major protest at the Treasury Department on Nov. 3, where we'll send this message to Obama, as well as Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, who's been telling Europe not to institute a financial transaction tax.

We need a tax like this. It would be a small amount for Wall Street to pay back to a reeling Main Street. It would be a down payment on the larger sum needed to put this country on its feet — to get the chronically jobless back to work, reduce school overcrowding, and provide quality health care for all Americans. To do all that, we'll need to find new sources of revenue. There's no other way to rescue our communities, save our families, and make our children healthy.

The alternative is bleak for us all — for those struggling like Steven Cross in Minnesota and for the 1 percent. Our protests are for our patients and for our country. We won't stop until an agenda to rebuild Main Street is secured.

Deborah BurgerDeborah Burger is a registered nurse and a co-president of National Nurses United

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