Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Ashley. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn Ashley. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Thứ Ba, 9 tháng 4, 2013

Was McConnell's Senate Staff Digging Up Dirt on Ashley Judd?

gty ashley judd Mitch McConnell nt 130409 wblog Was McConnells Senate Staff Digging Up Dirt on Ashley Judd? Was McConnells Senate Staff Digging Up Dirt on Ashley Judd?

Along with the mystery surrounding who secretly recorded Mitch McConnell and his staff discussing campaign strategy at his campaign headquarters is another issue the tapes raise: the possibility that the Kentucky senator's legislative staff was helping dig up dirt on Ashley Judd and other potential opponents.

Democrats are seizing on it, but it's still unclear whether McConnell's staff did anything wrong.

In the recording, obtained by Mother Jones magazine, the aide doing the presentation thanks a group of people:

"So I'll just preface my comments that this reflects the work of a lot of folks: Josh, Jesse, Phil Maxson, a lot of LAs, thank them three times, so this is a compilation of work, all the way through. The first person we'll focus on, Ashley Judd - basically I refer to her as sort of the oppo research situation where there's a haystack of needles, just because truly, there's such a wealth of material," the aide says to laughter from the group. "Ah, you know Jesse slogged through her autobiography. She has innumerable video interviews, tweets, blog posts, articles, magazine articles."

"Jesse" may refer to Jesse Benton, McConnell's campaign manager, but the word "LA" probably refers to Legislative Aides or Legislative Assistants, people who work in his senate office.

Two other possible Senate staffers are Phillip Maxson, who is listed on the National Journal Almanac as Legislative Assistant, Projects Director, and "Josh," which may refer to Josh Holmes, McConnell's Senate chief of staff. It's common and legal for senate staffers to work on a campaign, but only if they take vacation time when they are working on the campaign and are volunteering.

In a statement this afternoon, the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee criticized "McConnell's use of taxpayer-funded legislative aides to do opposition research for his reelection campaign."

"Mitch McConnell is desperate to play the victim," DSCC Executive Director Guy Cecil said in a statement. "The DSCC doesn't know if this tape came from a disgruntled Senate staffer who was forced to dig up dirt on their boss' potential opponents or another source, but its content is a clear example of how Mitch McConnell is the living, breathing embodiment of everything that is wrong with Washington. It is beneath the office of Minority Leader to engage in this kind of trivial politics."

The ethics rules read explicitly that, "Senate employees are free to engage in campaign activity, as volunteers or for pay, provided they do so on their own time, outside of Senate space, and without using Senate resources."

"Because Senate pay should be commensurate with Senate duties performed, when an employee intends to spend additional time on campaign activities beyond regular working hours and any accrued annual leave, a Senator should either reduce the salary of or remove the employee from the Senate payroll, as appropriate," the rules read.

Larry Noble, the head of Americans for Campaign Reform, said the work can just not be done "on Senate time."

"If they are referring to Senate staff working on this, the question is: Were they working on opposition research for the campaign while they were on the Senate payroll, while they were being paid by the Senate?" Noble said.

The meeting took place on Feb. 2, which was a Saturday, giving credence to the argument these staffers were volunteering their time, but as Noble points out it "doesn't mean the research was done on the weekend."

Noble said they also can't use any "any of the resources of the Senate office," adding, "There is no indication they were."

Benton, McConnell's campaign manager, would not comment only saying: "We're not commenting on the substance of illegally obtained recordings."

McConnell's Senate staff would not comment, instead directing all questions to the campaign.

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Thứ Năm, 28 tháng 3, 2013

Actress Ashley Judd won't run for US Senate

FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) — Actress Ashley Judd says she won't run for U.S. Senate in Kentucky against Republican Leader Mitch McConnell.

Judd made the announcement in a Twitter message late Wednesday afternoon.

Judd had hinted last week that she was nearing a decision about the race.

The former Kentucky resident now living in suburban Nashville, Tenn., has said little publicly about her intentions.

However, she has been meeting with several Democratic leaders, including Gov. Steve Beshear, to discuss a possible run.

Defeating McConnell would be the Democrats' biggest prize of the 2014 election.

His seat is one of 14 that Republicans are defending while Democrats try to hold onto 21. Democrats hope to retain or add to their 55-45 edge.

Judd has starred in several movies including "Kiss the Girls" and "Dolphin Tale."


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Ashley Judd Won't Run for Senate in Kentucky

ABC News' Michael Falcone and Shushannah Walshe report:

After months of flirtation, actress Ashley Judd announced on Wednesday that that she will not pursue a Senate bid against Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky.

She made the announcement in a series of tweets late Wednesday afternoon:

"After serious and thorough contemplation, I realize that my responsibilities & energy at this time need to be focused on my family. Regretfully, I am currently unable to consider a campaign for the Senate. I have spoken to so many Kentuckians over these last few months who expressed their desire for a fighter for the people & new leader. While that won't be me at this time, I will continue to work as hard as I can to ensure the needs of Kentucky families are met by returning this Senate seat to whom it rightfully belongs: the people & their needs, dreams, and great potential. Thanks for even considering me as that person & know how much I love our Commonwealth. Thank you!"

A source familiar with Judd's decision-making process said the news that Kentucky Secretary of State Allison Lundergan Grimes has also been considering a Senate run "gave her the space to really make a decision and decide what was best for her."

The source said Judd has known she was not running for "the past few days" but only decided to make her decision public on Wednesday.

As late as last Friday, Judd was still hinting at a run, referring to her potential run against McConnell and foreshadowing what she presumed would be a barrage of attack ads from his campaign. She told a conference audience in Cincinnati that she used to be averse to hearing criticism, which she said was ironic because she was "about to get $40 million worth of it."

In the same speech, she also joked that her mother, country star Naomi Judd, couldn't wait to turn her garage into campaign headquarters.

Rep. John Yarmuth, D-Ky., who was one of Judd's most vocal boosters, issued a statement on Wednesday through his spokesman.

"Congressman Yarmuth has said all along he would be surprised if Ashley Judd did not make this race and he's certainly surprised and while he's disappointed because he believed Ashley Judd would be a strong candidate against Sen. McConnell he's confident that a strong candidate will emerge to take on Sen. McConnell who is the least popular senator in the country," Yarmuth spokesman Stephen George said in a statement to ABC News.

George added that Judd and Yarmuth spoke earlier this week where she did "express some reservations about the race," but he added they had been speaking throughout the process and that was not unusual."

Judd's interest in the race spurred widespread national attention, including from former President Bill Clinton who spoke to both Judd and Grimes about the seat, encouraging them both to take a hard look at the race.

ABC News reported last week that Clinton encouraged Judd to enter the race and promised he would help her, according to several Kentucky political sources. That conversation happened sometime between the November election and President Barack Obama's second inauguration.

Earlier this month Clinton also met with Grimes after he spoke at an event for former Kentucky Sen. Wendell Ford in Owensboro, Ky., according to multiple political sources in the state. Clinton encouraged Grimes to consider taking on McConnell, adding as he did with Judd that he would support her.

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Ashley Judd won't run: Why no one wants to take on Mitch McConnell

The senior senator from Kentucky isn't as weak as his poll numbers indicate

After all the hype her theoretical campaign produced, actress Ashley Judd announced Wednesday that she would not challenge Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) for his seat in 2014.

The announcement leaves Kentucky Democrats without a prime candidate to oppose McConnell, as many other potential contenders have also declined to get in the ring. The Democratic Party's reluctance comes despite the fact that McConnell has earned the ignominious title of least popular senator in the country.

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Months ago, McConnell's miserable approval rating had both Democrats and Tea Party activists excited about their odds of unseating him. A December survey from the Democratic firm Public Policy Polling found that 55 percent of Kentucky voters disapproved of his job performance, the worst mark for any senator the company had polled. In another poll from January, only 17 percent of respondents said they'd vote for him next year, and just one-third of Republicans.

So why did Judd, after all that hype, join the other candidates on the sidelines?

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"After serious and thorough contemplation, I realize that my responsibilities & energy at this time need to be focused on my family," Judd wrote in a series of tweets on Wednesday. "Regretfully, I am currently unable to consider a campaign for the Senate."

However, Judd's decision to bow out suggests that McConnell, though not necessarily popular, remains relatively strong. PPP's poll showed that he still led every potential Democratic challenger he was pitted against.

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"The reason McConnell does decently well in the head to head matchups despite his poor approval numbers is that even though a lot of Republicans dislike him, most of them would still vote for him in a general election before they would support a Democrat," PPP's Tom Jensen wrote.

The state backed Mitt Romney by a 23-point margin over President Barack Obama last year, and elected Sen. Rand Paul (R) in 2010 by an eleven-point margin.

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A promised threat from McConnell's right is similarly in doubt. Democrats have said they'll help Tea Party activists launch a primary challenge, but no candidate has emerged. One potential challenger was caught lying about his ties to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

McConnell has courted Tea Party leaders and politicians to head off that effort, including Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), who helped raise $230,000 for his campaign at an event Monday. Paul has also indicated that he would support him.

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Thứ Tư, 27 tháng 3, 2013

Will Ashley Judd Run in 2016?

gty ashley judd ll 130327 wblog Will Ashley Judd Run in 2016?Rick Diamond/Getty Images

Could non-Senate candidate Ashley Judd be biding her time for a better race opportunity? One Kentucky Democratic source who is close to Judd says yes.

"I do think there have been a number of people who have said to Ashley this was not the race and the Rand Paul race [would be] the right race," this source says.

RELATED: Ashley Judd Won't Run for Senate in Kentucky

Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul is up for re-election in 2016 and per Kentucky law (unlike other states) a candidate cannot run for both Senate and president of the United States simultaneously. Paul is widely believed to be considering a 2016 presidential bid, but even if he does not, this same source says Judd has been counseled by both Washington, D.C., and Kentucky advisers that this is the better race for her to enter "in order to give her time to establish residency, secure the grassroots, and that is impossible with the current timetable."

Jonathan Miller, one of Judd's advisers in Kentucky as well as the former state treasurer, told ABC News Judd made the decision very recently.

"She called me in the last couple of days to let me know, she called her early supporters," Miller said. "As little as a week ago we were talking strategy and big plans. It's quite a recent decision to pull out, but from the beginning she has always harbored doubts … she's been carefully deliberating and during the deliberation process she came to realize it would be a gruesome couple of years, and she didn't want to put herself and her family through that. One thing she did say is, she was energized by the whole process, energized in a much greater way."

Miller expects her to get involved in Kentucky public service and to campaign "quite vigorously" for whoever enters the race against McConnell.

Miller said a group of "really close friends, family advisers, guardians of Ashley's interests, D.C. professionals, and Kentucky activists like myself" helped her make the decision and gave her "a lot of feedback about what a difficult personal race it would be as well."

So, did speculation that the 34-year old Secretary of State Alison Lundergan Grimes wants to enter the race help make Judd's decision? Miller says no.

"I think the feeling has been from the beginning that Grimes would not run against Ashley and now she will make her own decision. I don't think there was ever the prospect of a serious primary."

Miller says it truly came down to Judd's realizing what a "difficult and grueling campaign against McConnell" it would be and that "weighed against her the most."

Shortly after Judd announced, via Twitter today, that she would not be running for the Senate, long-time Kentucky Democratic strategist Dale Emmons, a former campaign aide to Grimes, said the "person most disappointed today is Mitch McConnell."

"She caught him flat footed and Karl Rove is trying to get his jaw off the floor!" Emmons told ABC News.

Emmons helped Grimes get elected in 2011 and said she has the "skill set to be successful."

He says if she decides to go for it "a lot of us will be behind her, enthusiastically supporting her," but it's a "decision she has to make, ultimately it's a very personal one for her and her husband to decide."

Another Kentucky Democratic source who was in the Judd camp points out there is "a lot of pressure on Alison Lundergan Grimes now."

Grimes has publicly said she would make a decision when the Kentucky state legislature wrapped up its session. That happened yesterday at midnight.

Read more on Grimes here.

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