UPDATE (4/3): After posting yesterday about the
Indiana Senate primary, I was contacted by Sen. Richard
Lugar’s son David Lugar and political consultant Pat
Hynes about errors in my post.
It is true I mixed up the efforts of two super PACs that are
buying ads to support Lugar in Indiana: 1) Hoosiers for
Economic Growth and Jobs; and 2) Indiana Values Super PAC.
Also, David Lugar confirms that he has no association with the
Indiana Values Super PAC.
I inferred that there was, because the super PAC used the same
address that was once listed for Lugar’s lobbying firm.
However, a fourth quarter 2011 lobbying disclosure filed about
the same time as the super PAC’s formation lists a different
address for The Lugar Group.
There was no need for me to make additional assumptions about
the Indiana Values Super PAC, and I sincerely apologize to
David Lugar.
—————-
Long-time Indiana Senator Richard Lugar is fighting for his
political life against a challenge from Tea Party State Treasurer
Dick
Mourdock. And conservative groups such as FreedomWorks and the
Club for Growth have turned it into the most heated Senate primary
in America.
Lugar, who was first elected to the Senate in 1976, is being
challenged by these conservative organizations for what they
consider to be his insufficiently conservative
record. More specifically, they point to his vote for the creation
of the Department of Energy, his vote for the Bush-era Medicare
Part D, and his support of the 2008 Economic Stimulus Act.
Media reports
show Sen. Jim DeMint, a conservative leader in the Senate known
for keeping a low profile, has taken the unusual step of
transferring at least $500,000 from his Senate Conservatives Fund
to the Club for Growth to fund attack ads currently running on
Indiana television, such as this one.
In response, a pro-Lugar Super PAC launched
its own attack ad. However, its target isn’t Mourdock. Instead,
it’s focused on the Club for Growth’s president, Chris Chocola, who
is from Indiana and who hasn’t been in Congress since 2006 when he
was defeated by Rep. Joe Donnelly, who will be the Democrat
candidate for Lugar’s Senate seat.
Another pro-lugar Super PAC running ads is Indiana Values Super
PAC, Inc. shows its treasurer is Andrew Klingenstein, a former
staffer Lugar who is
registered at the address of David Lugar’s lobbying firm:
The Lugar Group, LLC. At 555 12th St. NW #770, Washington,
D.C.
Also, the super PAC’s 2011 FEC
report for Indiana Values, which covers the last two weeks
of December, lists a $10,000 contribution from Robert J. Kabel on
December 21 and a $17,000 expenditure for a poll conducted by
Public Opinion Strategies.
According to the Federal Election Campaign Act, non-connected
PACs are required to register with the FEC within 10 days, once
contributions or expenditures exceed $1,000. But while that poll
was commissioned on December 13, Indiana Values’ state of
organization report with the FEC wasn’t signed and postmarked until
January 5. This appears to be a violation of FEC rules.
This may be another problem Lugar has to wrestle with, after he
received good news on Friday that his 604 acre farm, which Lugar
considers too “rustic” to live on,
can be used as Lugar’s address for voting purposes. Until now,
Lugar was being pummeled for living fulltime in suburban Washington
and not maintaining a home and voting address in the state he
represents.
Primaries in 2012 have already been
bad news for incumbents across the country, with angry Tea
Party voters showing up to the polls. Perhaps Indiana is next.
