Posted on 08/20/2014 4:48:57 PM PDT by thetallguy24
Were going to have to be the skunk at the party, the rain on the parade again. Our mission necessitates absolutely requires that we raise issues certain politicians and some of their supporters dont want raised. This will no doubt make some people angry, but we invite then to review the facts, which are a matter of public record. This is a time for clear-headed thinking not lemming-like over the cliff emotion and reaction.
While many have rushed to defend Governor Rick Perry on the surface matter of the indictment alone, we are compelled to talk about disturbing underlying facts that Republicans should deal with soon issues that have everything to do with the dramatic need for improved transparency in state government. When the dust settles on the indictment and the subsequent legal proceedings, many of the wounds from this ordeal will be self-inflicted.
While we agree partisan politics are at play in this indictment, we also strongly believe the GOP, its leadership, and the loyal base must put an end to the tired and wrong-headed narrative that whatever Republicans do in office is off limits for criticism. You know, the old simplistic Democrats always bad Republicans always good story line? That is simply not good enough in a world screaming out for principled leadership. We need leaders that bleed integrity, not just talk about it.
The indictment First, there is no question that Perry had the line-item veto power as granted by the Texas Constitution. Gov. Perry indeed had the authority and the grounds to eliminate the $7.5 million two-year state funding for the Travis County District Attorneys Public Integrity Unit. (Frankly, we had hoped Gov. Perry would use his line-item veto power more often to curb wasteful spending in Austin, but thats a subject best saved for another day.)
Second, officials do not check their First Amendment rights to free speech at the door when they are elected to office. Gov. Perry had the right to speak out about the Travis County DAs very public and scandalously drunken behavior and the shame she brought to her office. He had every right to call for her resignation.
The criminal justice process will now proceed to determine whether Gov. Perrys public calls for DA Rosemary Lehmberg to resign and his subsequent threats to cut funding to the office if she didnt constituted a quid pro quo condition that perhaps crossed the line into abuse of office. That is for the legal process to grind out.
Background for the Legal Process It is important to note that DA Lehmberg and other Democrat Travis County officials recused themselves from the case (they are not prosecuting it). Heading up the legal process is Judge Bert Richardson, a conservative Republican appointed to the 379th District bench by Gov. George W. Bush. (Richardson is also the GOP nominee for the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, Place 3 Nov. 2014 ballot.) After examining the evidence, Judge Richardson found sufficiency for the two charges against Perry had been met. A year ago, he appointed a special prosecutor, Mike McCrum, a former federal prosecutor and Dallas police officer who began his career as a federal prosecutor during the George H. W. Bush administration. In 2009, McCrum was recommended to become US Attorney for the Western District by US Senators John Cornyn and Kay Bailey Hutchison. As is Judge Richardson, McCrum is from San Antonio /Bexar County and not from the Austin/Travis County area.
The Messy, Self-inflicted Part isthe side of this saga that could become politically (and legally) problematic for Gov. Perry. Questions about motive are now being raised questions about why Perry may have wanted a chance to appoint the Travis County DAs replacement.
While we make no judgment here about Gov. Perrys motives, we can say there is a basis for raising the questions, and it centers on the Cancer Prevention Research Institute of Texas (CPRIT). CPRIT was authorized by voters in 2007 in a state constitutional amendment election. The amendment authorized the state to issue up to $3 billion in bonds to fund cancer research, prevention programs and services in Texas. Since then, allegations of conflicts of interest and cronyism have surrounded CPRIT and its less than transparent process of doling out millions of dollars in grant funds.
The CPRIT Investigation The Travis County DAs Public Integrity Unit has been investigating CPRIT due to its jurisdiction over alleged state government corruption. In fact, just a few months ago, DA Lehmbergs office indicted CPRITs former director over his allegedly improper disbursement of an $11 million grant to Peloton Therapeutics. The trial is expected to commence after the November 2014 General Election.
Hardhatters.com investigative reporter Daniel Sylvia explained: Essentially, the group who has the final authority on who receives these (CPRIT) grants is composed of a couple of politicians and people appointed by politicians. A situation such as this could be a breeding ground for conflicts of interest, corruption, and/or cronyism all charges CPRIT has faced since its inception. Proper oversight was missing from CPRIT from the very beginning. With Republicans in charge of all statewide offices and both the House and Senate, this lack of oversight can hardly be laid at the feet of Democrats.
Why This Matters: A scathing January 2013 CPRIT audit report released by State Auditor John Keel cited a weak evaluation process for grant applications, poor verification of compliance with funding agreements, and lack of controls on spending. Three troubling grants cited by the audit:
1) $20 million grant to a Houston area incubator in 2012 without a science review;
2) $11 million award in 2010 to a Dallas-based biotechnology firm, Peloton Therapeutics, without both scientific and business reviews;
3) $25.2 million grant in 2010 to a nonprofit group that did not exist at the time. The grant was later transferred from the University of Texas-M.D. Anderson Cancer Center to a newly-formed non-profit group, CTNeT. The audit says CPRIT did not have documentation supporting the recommendation to award the original grant, nor had authority to transfer the grant after the original award.
CPRIT reforms were passed in the 83rd legislative session, but many loopholes remain. The 2013 reforms dont wipe clean the messy record, nor do the reforms diminish the shocking public records showing the grants and the political contributions from the grant winners. It simply looks and smells like a pay to play scheme. Its this appearance of evil Gov. Perry and others should have cleaned up long, long ago. If they had, the Democrats would have no grounds to raise the CPRIT investigation as a motive, thus the indictment story would have no legs.
To read Mr. Sylvias well-sourced and revealing follow the money article, click here. Titled Cash, Cancer and CPRIT, Sylvia includes charts (compiled from public records) that identify those who received grant funding, the amounts awarded, and the state officials who received campaign donations from some of those same grant recipients.
After you read the article and review the charts, you will no doubt understand why the Perry indictment story will grow legs especially as he prepares to run for President in 2016. If not for the genuine, ethical issues with CPRIT, we believe the indictment of Gov. Perry would simply end with a thud, but now the entirely predictable and preventable fall-out from CPRIT will have to run its course. Only time will tell the who and the what of collateral damage.
Grassroots America has been very vocal about the need to end corporate welfare and cronyism in Austin and to pass state government ethics and transparency reforms. The marriage between government policy-makers and political favoritism should be severed in Austin, and it is the Republicans who should initiate the divorce proceedings. The time spent excusing the sins of the past would be better spent ripping the for sale sign off the Capitol with a strong, meaningful ethics reform compact with the people of Texas.
To repeat, we need leaders who bleed integrity, not just talk about it.
That’s fair enough, first things first. B^)
I wasn’t a fan of Perry for several reasons, historically he was kind of a squish on things I care about.
But on this he has my support 100%. The criminalization of politics is itself a gross abuse of power, it is the stuff of corrupt totalitarians. This is the kind of thing that destroys rule of law, and leaves a banana republic in its wake.
The writer admits Perry had the right to do what he did. Everything he wrote after that is word-fog. If they can take down Perry with something so transparent, then they can take down anyone they choose.
You'll need eye-bleach, she's ugly with the kind of ugly that comes with bitterness.
Travis County Prosecutor's office needs to get rid of the politics.
/johnny
As we discussed earlier, our new Lt. Gov. Patrick will be working diligently to defrock the Travis County DA's office, and they know it.
I think this is their last big bang of glory before they know the party's over.
Yes, Perry would appoint a replacement until such time as there was a scheduled regular state election. In a Texas county where I lived, the district attorney died. Perry appointed one until the next regular election. My husband was the Republican Chairman of that county and he contacted Perry to ask Perry to consider a certain attorney in the county. That attorney was appointed by Perry.
I recall when the law was passed to create this agency to promote cancer research - I thought at the time the state shouldn't be in the business of cancer research - also, we don't have money to get into research for anything. However, the legislature did create this agency. If the legislature did not write into law the procedure for oversight, that was their fault, not Perry's fault.
State law gives the governor the power to veto any bill, period. His reason for doing it doesn't matter.
Texas was a Democrat state for many years in its early past. The line of Democrat governors filled the thousands of government jobs with Democrats and those early people filled the city/county. Thousands of decedents of these early Democrats still live there and that is why Travis County has remained a Democrat county.
Because our government is in Travis County, the District Attorney of Travis County can indict anyone in our government. No other District Attorney in this state can do that - only the Travis County one can do that. That is why Tom Delay in our US House, was indicted in Travis County by the Democrat Travis County District Attorney. There has never been a Republican District Attorney in Travis County.
You again? Crawled out of your hole to dump on Perry? You did the same thing creating trash about State Attorney General Greg Abbott until your chosen incompetent candidate QUIT. He was a loser and so are you - go pound sand.
$500,000 from Soros to help this thing along.
I think while we’re poking around we should looks at the Baptist FCS or whatever that got 200 million to settle those OTM kids overrunning the border these last months.
As I recall, he requested deactivation of his FR account. Yeah, it was some time ago.
Wow. If the reaction in this thread is any indication, the Travis Co. DA has given Perry an unfathomable gift. Any comment negative of Perry is now circle the wagons zotworthy on FR?
Just wow. What a difference from last time around. It must be nice to get a pass on some real concerns about your credentials because of trumped up charges that won’t go anywhere.
I had already decided to lay off Perry this time around. He’s better than Jeb or Crispy will be, even as I’d prefer Cruz or Palin. My guess is that Perry needs to walk back his “heartless” comment more than “oops”, and I suspect he will.
But still. If you disagree about Perry, you deserve the Zot? Really? How far we’ve come if the machinations of Austin commies send us thumb-sucking to rally round the flag. We, of all people, should be above being so easily manipulated.
You’re wrong about Jo Ann Fleming. I’ve worked with her in the past. She may have been tone deaf in this article, but she is a tireless backer of conservative causes in Texas. I mean conservative as defined by the likes of people on websites like FR. Part of the problem in Texas politics has been the mountain of money vested in the triumvarate of Perry, Dewhurst, and Straus. Dewhurst is gone, Abbot will inherit Perry’s place, and the proper next point of attack is Straus. There is good reason for conservatives to be wary of the money game that has iced them out and kept Democrat chairs in power in a government composed of 2/3rds Republicans.
Jo Ann Fleming works around the clock to de-throne Straus. Calling her names based on her looks is truly classless. Yes. Do look her up online. See how she traveled the state with Ted Cruz, working full time to get him elected. See how she went to dozens of local campaign forums to push candidates to the State House that wouldn’t be under Straus’ thumb.
You’re a self inflating goober
Nice work...I had not seen these
Nice picture. I am a Perry fan.
:)
I think you are overreacting. I and several others here would strongly support Cruz over Perry. What has us so angry right now, is the Travis County smear machine is about to pull a Tom Delay on him. Perry isn't perfect, but he is an honorable man, who has done a decent job here as my governor. He doesn't deserve this, and many of us here are doing something about it.
Exactly..... I hope some of the spineless GOP state reps and senators realize this the next time this comes up for a vote. It could be them.
Whether I agree with him politically or not is not zotworthy.
The original poster has a history of attacking Texas politicians with the sleaziest and most dishonest of hit pieces written by hacks with an agenda.
Perry gets my support against the ugly, feral drunks in the Travis County Prosecutor's office.
/johnny
Straus’s key buddy representatives lost in the primary so that should do him in.
This isn’t the first time for Tall to dump on a Texas elected official. He did it over and over to Texas Attorney General Abbott when Tall’s candidate was running. In his wheelchair, Abbott stands tall between Texas and Eric Holder. So, in my opinion, Tall has a sordid history here.
Those of us who are long-time Texas residents have good reasons for referring to him as "Governor Goodhair." Like Johnny, I'm not a big fan of his for a multitude of reasons. However, if it comes down to him vs. Jeb and the other GOPe's being pushed by Rove & Company, he'll have my vote.
O/T, a huge problem in DC is that the Legislative Branch no longer fulfills its role as a co-equal with the Executive and Judicial branches. They've taken on a subservient role to the Executive Branch, especially when the President is of the same party that controls the House or the Senate.
The obvious exception was the last couple of years of the Clinton Administration. While Clinton was seen as triangulating, the House and Senate fulfilled their role as co-equals in the federal government. When they didn't roll over for Clinton, he grudgingly saw the light.
The author is a hack who will kneecap Perry at every chance, all in the name of Jesus, of course.
“Perry gets my support against the ugly, feral drunks in the Travis County Prosecutor’s office”
Yes and we can all agree that Austin is Libtard Central in Texas. If its coming out of Austin it can’t be good for republicans.
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