Democratic Primaries
Related: About this forumIs it okay that Joe Biden paid family members from campaign?
YES. It's legal!
This article is bullshit:
It is perfectly legal to pay family members with campaign funds or put them on the payroll as long as they provide a bona fide service and their salary is fair. Dozens of members of Congress, from both sides of the aisle, have employed family members on their campaigns.
https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2020/03/bernie-sanders-joe-biden-enriched-their-families/607159/
Politicians have family working for campaigns or contracting for campaigns.
Bernie had family members working for his campaign. That's in the article, too! And so what?
It's only a big deal when the money changing hands doesn't represent the actual work...like paying someone a gazillion dollars for being unqualified and a national security risk...like say Jared Kushner...and those guys are working for the government, not merely a campaign.
Biden and Sanders are a million times better than Trump. There is ZERO reason to attack either of them for paying the market value for services or actual work from qualified persons.
primary today, I would vote for: Joe Biden
napi21
(45,806 posts)would have a stranger.
primary today, I would vote for: Joe Biden
LastDemocratInSC
(3,825 posts)primary today, I would vote for: Joe Biden
Hortensis
(58,785 posts)All across the nation, for family members campaigning for offices at all levels, not just presidential races. It's common for relatives to take big losses to help, if they can.
primary today, I would vote for: Joe Biden
jaxexpat
(7,681 posts)Obvious is obvious.
primary today, I would vote for: Undecided
TexasTowelie
(116,518 posts)I'm not comfortable with any candidate that uses their campaigns to enrich their relatives. However, I do draw a distinction as to whether those family members are paid with campaign donations versus taxpayer money when those family members land government jobs. On that note, I'll mention that you didn't include this sentence in your excerpt.
I think that some latitude can be accepted for directing campaign funds to a family member, but hiring someone who draws a salary provided by taxpayers is far worse since the taxpayers contribution is not voluntary while a donation to a campaign is voluntary.
primary today, I would vote for: Joe Biden
TomCADem
(17,732 posts)And that Valerie Biden has worked for other campaigns, including Wesley Clark's 2004 campaign. Has Levi Sanders worked for anyone besides his Dad recently? The article notes that working for Bernie has been the sole source of income for Bernie's son, wife, step-daughter, and if you add his foundation, his son-in-law all within the past five years!
Thanks for the information!
By 2000, Carina, then serving one term as a Vermont state representative, was also working for Sanders. During the time she was in office, from 2000 to 2004, Sanderss congressional reelection campaigns paid her $51,032 in salary and expenses, though the payments were irregularshe would sometimes get multiple payments on a single day, and then not get paid for a month or more. (In 2018, Carina ran unsuccessfully for mayor of Burlington with the backing of Our Revolution, the progressive group that Sanders started after the 2016 election, although he is not formally associated with it.) Carina, through Sanderss presidential campaign, declined to comment.
Starting in the late 90s, Jane was an alternative commissioner on the Texas Low Level Radioactive Waste Disposal Compact Commissiona gubernatorial-appointed position on a commision that had been created after Sanders led efforts to dump nuclear waste in a small border town named Sierra Blanca. Jane, who didnt have experience with nuclear-waste or land issues, was paid roughly $5,000 annually. Not listed on Sanderss financial disclosures, the payments first came to light when he released several years of their joint federal tax returns in 2016. Sanderss state tax returns might have more informationbut so far, he hasnt released them, even though he relented last spring and released federal returns that hed been withholding.
Sanders has also benefited from his campaign account over the years, spending $8,000 in the late 90s, and then $445,000 in 2015, on purchases of his own book. In his 2016 Senate personal financial disclosure, Sanders said he received only $6,700 in royalties from the 2015 purchase. Other politicians do thisbut when, for example, the Republican National Committee bought Donald Trump Jr.s book in bulk last year, the author didnt also profit off money raised in his name, with his own authority to spend it.
The personal and professional converged once again after Sanderss first presidential campaign ended. In 2017, Jane started the Sanders Institute, envisioned as part think tank, part advocacy group. She tapped her son David Driscoll, who had worked as an executive at two private companies, as executive director, and he was approved by the board. He hadnt worked for a nonprofit before, but was paid a salary of $100,000. The institute raised about $1.2 million, according to tax returns and public statements it released. But neither its full donor list nor the number of donations it received is public. Bernie and Jane Sanders said that they made a $25,000 initial donation, and Our Revolution gave a $105,000 loan. The organization shut down after Sanders began his second race for president; most of its paperwork remains undisclosed. The most significant thing the institute did was host a December 2018 gathering for top supporters and press in Vermont that was essentially an informal kickoff to his anticipated campaign.
primary today, I would vote for: Joe Biden
Don1
(1,659 posts)Someone on the other side would pick different nits.
Division and bashing are not helpful.
primary today, I would vote for: Joe Biden
The Magistrate
(96,043 posts)Let us know when you propose to act in accord with your own advice to others.
"From Bernies perspective, dropping out of a race once you have no chance of winning is peculiar behavior that can only be explained by the work of a hidden hand. For most politicians, though, it is actually standard operating procedure. Only Sanders seems to think the normal thing to do once voters have made clear they dont want to nominate you is to continue campaigning anyway."
"When things are not called by their right names, what is said cannot make sense. When what is said does not make sense, what is planned cannot succeed. When plans do not succeed, people become uneasy. When people are uneasy, punishments do not fit crimes. When punishments do not fit crimes, people cannot know where to put hand or foot."
primary today, I would vote for: Joe Biden
TwilightZone
(28,771 posts)Look in the mirror.
primary today, I would vote for: Joe Biden
Squinch
(52,533 posts)primary today, I would vote for: Joe Biden
Mr.Bill
(24,758 posts)Right now it's okay if Joe Biden picks his nose and eats his boogers on camera.
primary today, I would vote for: Joe Biden
Don1
(1,659 posts)primary today, I would vote for: Joe Biden
Paka
(2,760 posts)The hypocrisy comes when the msm calls out Senator Sanders for the same thing.
primary today, I would vote for: Undecided
It's just more mud slinging.
To put my cards on the table, unity right now is extremely important. But Sanders is attacked with invalid point on a daily basis. All that will do is make those who believe the propaganda hate Sanders and those who recognize it is propaganda get pushed away. Therefore, the bashing causes division.
primary today, I would vote for: Joe Biden
primary today, I would vote for: Undecided
The Magistrate
(96,043 posts)So long as he persists in showboating, and so long as he is kept in countenance by devoted supporters, 'Bernie' does harm to the prospects of turfing out this cheap thug Trump.
Once Sanders accepts reality and leaves go his illusions, no one is likely to say one harsh word towards him. Or pay him much attention at all. One suspects this is why he will not abandon his destructive course....
"From Bernies perspective, dropping out of a race once you have no chance of winning is peculiar behavior that can only be explained by the work of a hidden hand. For most politicians, though, it is actually standard operating procedure. Only Sanders seems to think the normal thing to do once voters have made clear they dont want to nominate you is to continue campaigning anyway."
"When things are not called by their right names, what is said cannot make sense. When what is said does not make sense, what is planned cannot succeed. When plans do not succeed, people become uneasy. When people are uneasy, punishments do not fit crimes. When punishments do not fit crimes, people cannot know where to put hand or foot."
primary today, I would vote for: Joe Biden
Demsrule86
(70,981 posts)primary today, I would vote for: Joe Biden
Squinch
(52,533 posts)I don't mean when Mrs. Sanders was criticized for asinine decisions she made on the campaign trail. I mean where Mrs. Sanders was criticized for being on the campaign.
Thank you in advance for the myriad links.
primary today, I would vote for: Joe Biden
Historic NY
(37,803 posts)primary today, I would vote for: Joe Biden
primary today, I would vote for: Joe Biden
primary today, I would vote for: Joe Biden
MrsCoffee
(5,822 posts)as long as they provide a bona fide service and their salary is fair.
Its a little different to contract a relative who already has a business established than to tap an unqualified family member and pay them six figures.
primary today, I would vote for: Joe Biden
The Magistrate
(96,043 posts)Would not allow family and associates so much as a cup of coffee purchased with campaign funds. Whether it was legal or not would not matter.
This is what comes of posturing as a moral exemplar. People who do are properly held to the standard they apply to others, and 'Bernie' has made far too much hay out of braying that others are corrupt to be allowed even the smallest monetary peccadilloes. The amounts do not matter, and the fact that this behavior was engaged in over a period of fifteen years at least simply establishes it is 'a continuing pattern of conduct', and not a one-off which can be rectified by apology, and refraining from such acts in future.
My own attitudes towards 'honest graft' are quite lenient, but I charge few people with being corrupt, and find scolds and crusaders particularly offensive. Life is an organic thing, full of curves and waves and spirals. Scolds and crusaders seek to impose a crystalline form upon it, and sooner or later must commence whacking off or squeezing in the organic shapes that do not fit their mineral framework.
"From Bernies perspective, dropping out of a race once you have no chance of winning is peculiar behavior that can only be explained by the work of a hidden hand. For most politicians, though, it is actually standard operating procedure. Only Sanders seems to think the normal thing to do once voters have made clear they dont want to nominate you is to continue campaigning anyway."
"When things are not called by their right names, what is said cannot make sense. When what is said does not make sense, what is planned cannot succeed. When plans do not succeed, people become uneasy. When people are uneasy, punishments do not fit crimes. When punishments do not fit crimes, people cannot know where to put hand or foot."
primary today, I would vote for: Joe Biden
Squinch
(52,533 posts)primary today, I would vote for: Joe Biden
NurseJackie
(42,862 posts)Thank you!
primary today, I would vote for: Joe Biden
Demsrule86
(70,981 posts)on Joe...his sister worked for a a firm that got money for ads? Really that is all you have? The sister's daughter worked in the campaign and was hired by Obama-really? That is it? That is hardly the same thing as the lifetime of money Sanders paid Jane (himself after they married)... I can't believe you would post something that unintentionally shows Sanders in such a bad light...of course it skips entirely over the college issue with Jane and her daughter. It also skip over the fact that Jane received money as a result of the deal to send nuclear waste to a poor brown area in Texas for years; She was on some board. Large sums were paid to family members out of the Sanders' Charitable foundation too.
And as for Joe, most of this article is about Hunter where Biden is concerned...he had jobs that author hints were because of his Dad's status-not one hint that Biden had anything to do with helping Hunter get these jobs. Well Hunter was grown and that has nothing to to do with Biden...when I read this I came away with this opinion;Joe Biden is squeaky clean while Sanders has given his family member paychecks out of charitable or campaign funds for decades. Despite the attempt to play 'what about' in this article, the bottom line is Biden did not become a millionaire while in the Senate and never played the market either viewing it as a conflict of interest. I find some of Sanders activities with family and money as detailed in this article and from other sources as well troubling.
primary today, I would vote for: Joe Biden
Demsrule86
(70,981 posts)desperately for something to smear Biden with...as Sanders is irrelevant now that he has lost the primary, there are few recent articles other than at right wing sites attacking Biden from legitimate sources. But all you managed to do is show how Sanders talks the talk but doesn't walk the walk.
primary today, I would vote for: Joe Biden
MineralMan
(147,396 posts)to work on campaigns.
I am much more concerned about hiring people who voted for Jill Stein in 2016. That is far more worrisome to me.
Perhaps it's OK with some, but I find it disqualifying, personally.
primary today, I would vote for: Joe Biden
PubliusEnigma
(1,583 posts)Bernie owes Donald Trump.
primary today, I would vote for: Joe Biden
ismnotwasm
(42,440 posts)I, personally dont care if politicians hire family.
Bernie Sanders has positioned himself as an outsider, a lone warrior against forces he claims to despise. He deliberately gives the impression of moral superiority, of radical change, a pied piper with all the right answers against a system that is nothing but wrong. In speech after speech Bernie Sanders has implied that he, alone, has a solid moral compass.
One would think he would be as meticulous about that moral compass in his hires as he is in his speeches.
primary today, I would vote for: Joe Biden