FEC: Trump-Stormy case ‘not a campaign finance violation’

ptif219

Verified User
More proof that Brag is doing this for publicity and that it has nothing to do with the law. This will go no where


https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/...-stormy-case-not-a-campaign-finance-violation


A key member of the Federal Election Commission today rejected the Manhattan district attorney’s indictment of former President Donald Trump as a violation of federal election laws.

“It's not a campaign finance violation. It's not a reporting violation of any kind,” said FEC Commissioner James E. “Trey” Trainor.


In trying to stretch the law to make it look like a violation, he added, District Attorney Alvin Bragg “is really trying to make a square peg fit into a round hole.”

In a 34-count indictment of Trump, the first criminal case ever against a former president, Bragg charged that a $130,000 payment made by former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen to porn star Stormy Daniels, which Cohen went to jail for in a plea deal, violated several campaign finance laws that splashed onto Trump.

But, said Trainor, the FEC and Justice Department already considered the case and tossed it.

With that as background, Trainor told Secrets today that it will be hard for a judge or jury to come up with a different conclusion since it’s the FEC and DOJ that prosecute federal campaign finance law. He reiterated that in a Tuesday tweet that showed the FEC hearing room, and he wrote, “This is where campaign finance violations are tried.”
 
Trmp's ex-lawyer says Trump cannot win the case. However, he says the Document case is a slam dunk. Trump will likely lose a couple to maybe all his trials. His rape trial starts in a couple of weeks. Why do you back a living walking crime spree? What is wrong with you rightys? Trump is a black mark on the US and needs cleaning.
 
Trmp's ex-lawyer says Trump cannot win the case. However, he says the Document case is a slam dunk. Trump will likely lose a couple to maybe all his trials. His rape trial starts in a couple of weeks. Why do you back a living walking crime spree? What is wrong with you rightys? Trump is a black mark on the US and needs cleaning.

:tardthoughts:
 
FEC: ...
A key member of the Federal Election Commission

So it was not the FEC, as your title claimed, but one member of the FEC. We already know the FEC political appointees were divided, with Republican political appointees steadfastly voting against investigating trump, no matter what the evidence is. That left the commission always deadlocked when it came to trump.

They even refused to hear the evidence, and threw any reports of evidence into the trash, unread.

So Trainor has no idea what the evidence is, because he has refused to hear it.
 
So it was not the FEC, as your title claimed, but one member of the FEC. We already know the FEC political appointees were divided, with Republican political appointees steadfastly voting against investigating trump, no matter what the evidence is. That left the commission always deadlocked when it came to trump.

They even refused to hear the evidence, and threw any reports of evidence into the trash, unread.

So Trainor has no idea what the evidence is, because he has refused to hear it.

You mean the hate Trumpers did not care there was no evidence they wanted to go after Trump because of their hate
 
Trmp's ex-lawyer says Trump cannot win the case. However, he says the Document case is a slam dunk. Trump will likely lose a couple to maybe all his trials. His rape trial starts in a couple of weeks. Why do you back a living walking crime spree? What is wrong with you rightys? Trump is a black mark on the US and needs cleaning.

I back him because you've spent six years trying to destroy him and you keep losing.......focus all your attention on him for another six years, please......
 
I back him because you've spent six years trying to destroy him and you keep losing.......focus all your attention on him for another six years, please......

You back a guy that a grand jury of citizens ,looked at evidence and determined Trump had committed 34 felony counts worth of crime!
 
You mean the hate Trumpers did not care there was no evidence they wanted to go after Trump because of their hate

Who hates Trump? I find him a disgusting person and not qualified for political office. That is not hate, but wanting America to survive. I do not hate anyone.
 
More proof that Brag is doing this for publicity and that it has nothing to do with the law. This will go no where

Trump is not being charged with campaign finance violations but with deceptive business practices--claiming payoffs of three people were legal expenses.

If paying off Stormy and not reporting it as a campaign expenditure was not a violation, why did Cohen plead guilty and get prison time?
 
More proof that Brag is doing this for publicity and that it has nothing to do with the law. This will go no where


https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/...-stormy-case-not-a-campaign-finance-violation

For Fuck's sake people!

The Nation’s Top Election Official Has Overdosed on the Trump Kool-Aid!

Trey Trainor, is pushing baseless conspiracies that the election was stolen from Trump, and he has been doing this since NOV. 2020!

201117-lachlan-trey-Trainor-tease_emgtiz


Trey Trainor may not be a household name. But as head of the Federal Election Commission, he has oversight of the campaign finance system that underpins federal elections. And in recent days, he’s been floating baseless election fraud conspiracy theories sourced entirely to a Trump attorney who believes the Fed is out to tank the American economy in order to enrich George Soros.

“I do believe that there is voter fraud taking place” in key states in the 2020 presidential election, Trainor told the conservative outlet Newsmax last week. The allegations were quickly seized upon by the president’s allies, including his son Donald Trump Jr., in their efforts to overturn the results of an election that experts both in and out of the federal government have said was remarkably secure and reliable.

Such proclamations carry a bit of extra weight when coming from the chair of the FEC. But Trainor’s sole source for it appears to be the word of Sidney Powell, a right-wing attorney who’s representing the Trump campaign in its efforts to block the certification of President-elect Joe Biden’s election victory.

“If she says there is rampant voter fraud... I believe her,” Trainor wrote of Powell, who has alleged that U.S. monetary policy is in hock to Soros and amplified “QAnon” conspiracy theorists.

Campaign finance experts recoiled at Trainor’s apparent embrace of the dubious allegations. “My biggest concern with Commissioner Trainor is his partisanship, and to the extent that overlaps with the conspiracy theorizing about election fraud, that’s a concern,” said Paul Seamus Ryan, the vice president of litigation with the group Common Cause, in an interview on Tuesday.

But the comments were just the latest in a recent shift at the FEC, spearheaded by both Republican and Democratic commissioners, to expand its role to some degree beyond the commission’s traditional campaign finance enforcement mandate. Fueled by concerns over foreign election interference in 2016 and spurious voter fraud charges this year, the nation’s chief political money enforcer appears to be eyeing an expanded policy purview, even as the commission he served on has been prevented by internal dysfunction and a critical staff shortage from carrying out its most basic functions.

Trainor, a Texas election lawyer, is Trump’s first addition to the FEC, and since he was confirmed, he has dramatically shifted the ideological makeup of the panel. Though the commission hasn’t been able to do much in terms of rulemaking or proactive enforcement, Trainor has used his perch to rail against pro-transparency groups that have repeatedly sued the FEC in an effort to force the enforcement of federal election rules—or, in Trainor’s telling, to effectively remake those rules through the courts.

His comments about supposed election fraud came just days before a Senate committee hearing on nominees, one Democrat and two Republicans, to fill the commission’s three empty seats. The FEC was rendered largely inoperable this year with the departure of Republican commissioner Caroline Hunter. Without a four-member quorum to rule on major issues surrounding campaign finance and election law compliance, the FEC was unable to take any substantive administrative actions in an election year that shattered records in the amount of money that both parties brought to bear.

The three new FEC commissioners would allow the commission to resume its normal functions. But its chairman’s dubious allegations of fraudulent voting—and the larger narrative of such irregularities that President Trump has spread in his last-ditch effort to cling to power—have the potential to overshadow more substantive concerns about the FEC’s actual mission.

Even prior to Trainor’s election fraud conspiracies, the FEC has been criticized in recent years for drifting from its core mission of administering and enforcing campaign finance laws. In particular the body was accused of drifting into areas of election administration that are not central to its charter—and in fact are more in line with the jurisdiction of other federal bodies such as the U.S. Election Assistance Commission.

On the Democratic side, FEC commissioner Ellen Weintraub has been vocal about probing issues less commonly associated with the FEC’s policy domain. “Allegations of voter fraud in federal elections, and the threat of foreign interference in federal, state, and local elections,” Weintraub wrote, “require the FEC to expand its purview to include issues beyond its traditional mandate,” she wrote last year to Rep. Rodney Davis (R-IL), the top Republican on the House committee that oversees the FEC.

Davis’ response channeled critics who say that expanded approach exceeds the FEC’s domain. "I am unaware of any changes to federal statute made by Congress that would allow for an 'expanded role' of the Federal Election Commission by [Weintraub’s] definition,” he wrote.

That was more or less the position held by Hunter, Trainor’s predecessor on the FEC. In her response to Davis, she said that the commission’s jurisdiction was limited to “enforcing provisions of federal law pertaining to how candidates, parties, PACs, and certain other actors raise, spend, and disclose funds related to federal elections.”

Election law experts do see some room for the FEC to get more involved in election administration issues that have to do with the raising and spending of money in federal political contests. Rick Hasen, a law professor at the University of California Irvine, said his problem with Trainor’s statement on supposed election fraud “is not the weighing in, it is the substance of what is said.”

“Trainor has made unsupported claims of voter fraud that are pernicious and undermine voter confidence in the fairness and integrity of the election,” Hasen wrote in an email. “Some of his statements seem as extreme as President Trump’s and as unsupported by the evidence.”

But those hoping for a hearing on Wednesday that sticks to the core challenges facing the FEC, the prospect of a diversion from those key issues is troubling—particularly with the president and his attorneys continuing to pursue increasingly bizarre legal challenges to the 2020 election.

“The focus should be on the business of the FEC and the suitability of these nominees to do that important work, not on crazy conspiracy theories about nonexistent election fraud,” said Common Cause’s Ryan. But, he added, “nothing would surprise me.”

https://www.thedailybeast.com/trey-...-official-has-overdosed-on-the-trump-kool-aid
 
Critics of the FEC, including many former commissioners and campaign finance reform supporters, have harshly complained of the FEC's impotence, and accused it of succumbing to regulatory capture where it serves the interests of the ones it was intended to regulate. The FEC's bipartisan structure, which was established by Congress, renders the agency "toothless." Critics also claim that most FEC penalties for violating election law come well after the actual election in which they were committed. Additionally, some critics claim that the commissioners tend to act as an arm of the "regulated community" of parties, interest groups, and politicians when issuing rulings and writing regulations. Others point out, however, that the commissioners rarely divide evenly along partisan lines, and that the response time problem may be endemic to the enforcement procedures established by Congress. To complete steps necessary to resolve a complaint – including time for defendants to respond to the complaint, time to investigate and engage in legal analysis, and finally, where warranted, prosecution – necessarily takes far longer than the comparatively brief period of a political campaign.
 
On September 14, 2017, Trump nominated Trainor to be a member of the Federal Election Commission for a term expiring April 30, 2023. Trainor's nomination languished in the Republican-controlled Senate for years, with Trump re-nominating him twice (in 2019 and 2020). During his FEC confirmation hearings, he refused to recuse himself from matters related to the Trump campaign.

On May 19, 2020, the Senate voted to invoke cloture on his nomination by a 50–43 vote and later that day confirmed his nomination by a 49–43 vote. Trump's nomination of Trainor broke a precedent; traditionally, presidents have made nominations to the FEC in pairs (simultaneously nominating one Republican and one Democrat); Trump's decision to nominate Trainor alone was criticized by Democrats.

Trainor's confirmation gave the FEC a quorum, with four of the six commission seats filled (two Republicans, one Democrat and an independent who mostly sides with the Democrat). This theoretically allowed the FEC to move forward on a large backlog of enforcement matters that had effectively halted FEC activity for months during a presidential election year. However, the FEC was still expected to deadlock frequently (as the commission had done for more than a decade) along party lines, since many actions of the commission require a unanimous vote.

On June 18, 2020, Trainor was elected as chair for the remainder of 2020, with Steven T. Walther selected as vice chair.

In interviews in September 2020 with the Religion News Service, as well as Michael Voris of the right-wing Catholic website Church Militant, Trainor said that churches could endorse political candidates, contrary to common understandings of the Johnson Amendment, which bars tax-exempt nonprofits from endorsing political candidates. He justified this by pointing to Trump's 2017 executive order that the amendment should not be enforced. In the same interviews, Trainor called the separation of church and state a "fallacy" and accused Catholic bishops of "hiding behind" the church's nonprofit status to avoid involvement in the 2020 U.S. elections, which Trainor called a "spiritual war." FEC Commissioner Ellen Weintraub disagreed with Trainor's statements on the Johnson Amendment (saying that the amendment remains law and "cannot be undone with an executive order") and took issue with his depiction of elections as "spiritual wars."
 
Two Democrats on the Federal Election Commission are criticizing Republican members after the commission deadlocked and did not take action against former President Donald Trump’s campaign related to the $130,000 hush money payment to Stormy Daniels on the eve of the 2016 election.

“Because of Trump’s apparent role in orchestrating the transaction, we supported (the commission’s Office of the General Counsel) recommendations to find reason to believe that he and the Committee accepted, and the Committee did not report, illegal contributions,” Commission Chair Shana Broussard and Commissioner Ellen Weintraub wrote in a statement.

Michael Cohen, Trump’s former fixer, pleaded guilty in federal court in 2018 for arranging a nondisclosure agreement for which he paid Daniels $130,000, a campaign contribution violation during the 2016 election cycle, since the payment was made in service of the campaign and exceeded the federal limit.

Prosecutors previously said that in executing the payments, Cohen “acted in coordination with and at the direction of” Trump, who has denied having affairs with two women. Cohen also pleaded guilty to five counts of tax fraud and one count of making false statements to a bank.

Later that year, Cohen was sentenced to three years in prison for crimes that included arranging payments during the 2016 election to silence women who claimed affairs with Trump after Cohen attributed his offenses to “my duty to cover up his dirty deeds.”

“Several of our colleagues instead voted to dismiss the allegations,” Broussard and Weintraub added in their statement. “The Commission therefore did not have enough votes to pursue well-grounded charges that the former President of the United States knowingly and willfully accepted contributions nearly 5,000% over the legal limit to suppress a negative story mere days before Election Day.”

The six-member commission’s vote – which was taken last month, but the results of which were first made public Thursday – was 2-2. Broussard and Weintraub voted yes, Independent Steven Walther did not vote, and Republican Allen Dickerson recused himself.

Republicans James “Trey” Trainor and Sean Cooksey voted no, arguing that the federal government had already punished Cohen and the agency has other issues to pursue.

“In sum, the public record is complete with respect to the conduct at issue in these complaints, and Mr. Cohen has been punished by the government of the United States for the conduct at issue in these matters,” Trainor and Cooksey said in a statement.

“Thus, we concluded that pursuing these matters further was not the best use of agency resources,” they continued. “The Commission regularly dismisses matters where other government agencies have already adequately enforced and vindicated the Commission’s interests.”

Trump praised the vote to end what he called the “phony case against me” and criticized Cohen.

“I thank the Commission for their decision, ending this chapter of Fake News,” he said.

Daniels, whose real name is Stephanie Clifford, says she and Trump had an affair in 2006, after he married Melania Trump and she gave birth to their son, Barron. Trump has denied the affair.

https://www.cnn.com/2021/05/06/poli...-hush-money-payment-stormy-daniels/index.html
 
Has anyone noticed how TRUMP Corrupted the FEC with Cronies to overlook his election crimes and other future criminal intentions?

Trump loves to cheat by stacking his poker hand- full of TRUMP cards!

He did this in every branch of the government while he is in office- and continues to do this by endorsing criminals, liars, and cheats in political races- even after leaving office to help him win re-election and interfere with all the investigations he is under.

Just wanted to know who all is paying attention here- and being honest about it!
 
Last edited:
Back
Top