- A man who allegedly made an online threat to 'assassinate' Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., faces five charges in connection with the U.S. Capitol insurrection, authorities said.
- Chip Roy, a Republican who represents parts of Austin and the Hill Country, has demanded that U.S. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., apologize for suggesting in a tweet that U.S.
Do Democrats really want Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez to be the face of their party?
A 34-year-old man is arrested for allegedly taking part in the storming of the US Capitol and threatening to assassinate congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.
The freshman congresswoman finds herself at the center of two new controversies; Wendy Osefo, Democratic political analyst, and Republican New York City Councilman Joe Borelli join the debate.
EXCLUSIVE -- Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., has been hit with another Federal Election Commission (FEC) complaint, this one alleging she and her campaign manager operated a 'subsidy scheme' that ran afoul of campaign finance laws.
4 casino avenue franklin roosevelt park. The crux of the complaint, which was given exclusively to Fox News in advance of its filing Wednesday, accused Ocasio-Cortez and her campaign manager, Saikat Chakrabarti, of overseeing a 'shadowy web' of political action committees (PACs) that allowed them to raise more cash than they could have legally. It also alleged that a limited liability company (LLC) was created to avoid federal expenditure requirements by offering Ocasio-Cortez and other Democratic candidates political consulting services at a price so low that the company apparently shut down before the election was even over.
The complaint named Ocasio-Cortez, Chakrabarti (now her chief of staff), the Justice Democrats PAC, the Brand New Congress PAC and Brand New Congress LLC as the overlapping entities that aimed to 'subsidize cheap assistance for Ocasio-Cortez and other candidates at rates far below market value.'
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez with Saikat Chakrabarti in June 2018, in New York City. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews, File)
Ocasio-Cortez dismissed the complaint when approached for comment by Fox News Wednesday afternoon, saying: 'I mean, it's conservative interest groups just filing bogus proposals' before walking into a House Financial Services Committee meeting.
At the center of the complaint is Brand New Congress LLC, a now-defunct company owned by Chakrabarti that aimed to recruit up to 400 candidates for national office and 'fully run all of their campaigns,' according to a post on the Justice Democrats PAC website.
'Chakrabarti was trying to create the Uber for politics,' said Dan Backer, the conservative attorney behind the complaint. 'Uber functions because of a massive subsidy from venture capital. Here, it's subsidized by these PACs to deliver a valuable service that people need and want, but can't be delivered at the real cost of it.'
The Virginia-based attorney has made political hay with recent complaints against Ocasio-Cortez. This is Backer's second FEC complaint against her in less than a month. He used the first as somewhat of a springboard to launch the Stop the AOC PAC, which he said has raised a few thousand dollars and conducted polling in her New York City district.
Both Ocasio-Cortez and Chakrabarti were named in the complaint. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File)
Backer's Stop the AOC PAC isn't his first political action committee. In recent years, he's registered organizations such as the Stop Hillary PAC, the pro-Donald Trump Great America PAC, and the Stop Pelosi PAC.
Backer said Brand New Congress LLC was guilty of providing campaign contributions known as 'in-kind' expenditures by only charging candidates for a portion of the total cost of the service. Essentially, Backer claimed the company operated at a loss to provide its approved candidates with campaign services on the cheap.
This was a problem, he said, because of a series of 1990s-era FEC Advisory Opinions which essentially explained that goods and services provided to political campaigns must be paid for at fair market value – otherwise they could be considered in-kind contributions.
It was unclear what Chakrabarti and Brand New Congress charged for their services -- and Backer said this was another part of the problem. He said the private company wouldn't be subject to the same disclosure and transparency laws that PACs are.
In a May 2018 blog post, the Justice Democrats PAC admitted it was offering services at a rate that would never turn a profit, and that was exactly the point.
'[The] goal of creating the LLC was not to make a profit,' the post read, 'and as such, we made our prices as low as possible while still satisfying the FEC's requirement that we are charging something reasonable because, again, if we weren't we would essentially be doing heavily discounted work for candidates and that is illegal and immoral since fighting dark money is literally what we want to do.'
Also driving the complaint were the overlapping leadership roles of Ocasio-Cortez and Chakrabarti on the implicated organizations. Ocasio-Cortez was in charge of her campaign while simultaneously serving as a board member of the Justice Democrats PAC.
Her dual role isn't unusual, according to Brendan Quinn, a spokesman for the Center for Responsive Politics. He said it hasn't been out of the ordinary for members of Congress to sit on boards of multiple PACs, nor is it illegal or improper.
Backer said Chakrabarti, however, 'was on all sides of the scheme.' He owned Brand New Congress LLC, sat on the board of the Justice Democrats PAC and co-founded the Brand New Congress PAC—all while serving as Ocasio-Cortez's campaign manager.
Coming to a conclusion in the complaint may be a lengthy process, though.
'The FEC has only four commissioners out of its usual slate of six,' said Corey Goldstone, media strategist at the Campaign Legal Center, which identifies as a nonpartisan watchdog group. 'Since federal law requires at least four votes on the six-member commission to take official action, the FEC can barely lift a finger even when violations are clear and obvious. In this case, it's not clear there was any wrongdoing, and the allegations seem speculative. We haven't seen evidence that the PACs improperly subsidized work for the campaign or have reason to believe that laws were broken.'
Backer said he expected the gridlock at the FEC and planned to sue if his complaints sit for 120 days and litigation is allowed under law.
'At the end of the day,' Backer said, 'It would be wonderful if the FEC would get off its dysfunctional ass and rule on these things.'
Fox News' Alex Diaz and Perry Chiaramonte contributed to this report.
Freshman Democrat Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is asserting what she perceives as her newfound legislative powers. Rep. Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) declared on February 22, 2019, 'Yup. If you don't like the Green New Deal, then come up with your own ambitious, on-scale proposal to address the global climate crisis. Until then, we're in charge – and you're just shouting from the cheap seats.'
Yup. If you don't like the #GreenNewDeal, then come up with your own ambitious, on-scale proposal to address the global climate crisis.
Until then, we're in charge – and you're just shouting from the cheap seats. https://t.co/h3KSJhHqDN
— Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (@AOC) February 23, 2019
Greenpeace co-founder Dr. Patrick Moore, who has turned against the organization and is now a prominent climate skeptic, ripped Rep. Ocasio-Cortez for her comments:
'Pompous little twit,' Moore replied to her on Twitter. Moore continued, 'You don't have a plan to grow food for 8 billion people without fossil fuels, or get the food into the cities. Horses? If fossil fuels were banned every tree in the world would be cut down for fuel for cooking and heating. You would bring about mass death.'
Pompous little twit. You don't have a plan to grow food for 8 billion people without fossil fuels, or get the food into the cities. Horses? If fossil fuels were banned every tree in the world would be cut down for fuel for cooking and heating. You would bring about mass death.
— Patrick Moore (@EcoSenseNow) February 23, 2019
#
Related Links:
Marc Morano on Fox & Friends – Broadcast February 8, 2019 – Brian Kilmeade and Ainsley Earhardt
Morano: ‘This plan is plagiarism pure and simple. They borrowed it from the 1960s and 1970s. In my book, I detail how different environmental scares — over population, resource scarcity, even global cooling — had the same solutions: wealth redistribution, central planning, sovereignty limiting, and just a massive government intervention.'
Anchor Brian Kilmeade: The Green New Deal l'ooks like something that was put out by a 10th grader?'
MORANO: 'Actually 10th is being very, very generous.'
Ocasio In Charge Trump
KILMEADE: 'Let's go seventh.'
EXCLUSIVE -- Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., has been hit with another Federal Election Commission (FEC) complaint, this one alleging she and her campaign manager operated a 'subsidy scheme' that ran afoul of campaign finance laws.
4 casino avenue franklin roosevelt park. The crux of the complaint, which was given exclusively to Fox News in advance of its filing Wednesday, accused Ocasio-Cortez and her campaign manager, Saikat Chakrabarti, of overseeing a 'shadowy web' of political action committees (PACs) that allowed them to raise more cash than they could have legally. It also alleged that a limited liability company (LLC) was created to avoid federal expenditure requirements by offering Ocasio-Cortez and other Democratic candidates political consulting services at a price so low that the company apparently shut down before the election was even over.
The complaint named Ocasio-Cortez, Chakrabarti (now her chief of staff), the Justice Democrats PAC, the Brand New Congress PAC and Brand New Congress LLC as the overlapping entities that aimed to 'subsidize cheap assistance for Ocasio-Cortez and other candidates at rates far below market value.'
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez with Saikat Chakrabarti in June 2018, in New York City. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews, File)
Ocasio-Cortez dismissed the complaint when approached for comment by Fox News Wednesday afternoon, saying: 'I mean, it's conservative interest groups just filing bogus proposals' before walking into a House Financial Services Committee meeting.
At the center of the complaint is Brand New Congress LLC, a now-defunct company owned by Chakrabarti that aimed to recruit up to 400 candidates for national office and 'fully run all of their campaigns,' according to a post on the Justice Democrats PAC website.
'Chakrabarti was trying to create the Uber for politics,' said Dan Backer, the conservative attorney behind the complaint. 'Uber functions because of a massive subsidy from venture capital. Here, it's subsidized by these PACs to deliver a valuable service that people need and want, but can't be delivered at the real cost of it.'
The Virginia-based attorney has made political hay with recent complaints against Ocasio-Cortez. This is Backer's second FEC complaint against her in less than a month. He used the first as somewhat of a springboard to launch the Stop the AOC PAC, which he said has raised a few thousand dollars and conducted polling in her New York City district.
Both Ocasio-Cortez and Chakrabarti were named in the complaint. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File)
Backer's Stop the AOC PAC isn't his first political action committee. In recent years, he's registered organizations such as the Stop Hillary PAC, the pro-Donald Trump Great America PAC, and the Stop Pelosi PAC.
Backer said Brand New Congress LLC was guilty of providing campaign contributions known as 'in-kind' expenditures by only charging candidates for a portion of the total cost of the service. Essentially, Backer claimed the company operated at a loss to provide its approved candidates with campaign services on the cheap.
This was a problem, he said, because of a series of 1990s-era FEC Advisory Opinions which essentially explained that goods and services provided to political campaigns must be paid for at fair market value – otherwise they could be considered in-kind contributions.
It was unclear what Chakrabarti and Brand New Congress charged for their services -- and Backer said this was another part of the problem. He said the private company wouldn't be subject to the same disclosure and transparency laws that PACs are.
In a May 2018 blog post, the Justice Democrats PAC admitted it was offering services at a rate that would never turn a profit, and that was exactly the point.
'[The] goal of creating the LLC was not to make a profit,' the post read, 'and as such, we made our prices as low as possible while still satisfying the FEC's requirement that we are charging something reasonable because, again, if we weren't we would essentially be doing heavily discounted work for candidates and that is illegal and immoral since fighting dark money is literally what we want to do.'
Also driving the complaint were the overlapping leadership roles of Ocasio-Cortez and Chakrabarti on the implicated organizations. Ocasio-Cortez was in charge of her campaign while simultaneously serving as a board member of the Justice Democrats PAC.
Her dual role isn't unusual, according to Brendan Quinn, a spokesman for the Center for Responsive Politics. He said it hasn't been out of the ordinary for members of Congress to sit on boards of multiple PACs, nor is it illegal or improper.
Backer said Chakrabarti, however, 'was on all sides of the scheme.' He owned Brand New Congress LLC, sat on the board of the Justice Democrats PAC and co-founded the Brand New Congress PAC—all while serving as Ocasio-Cortez's campaign manager.
Coming to a conclusion in the complaint may be a lengthy process, though.
'The FEC has only four commissioners out of its usual slate of six,' said Corey Goldstone, media strategist at the Campaign Legal Center, which identifies as a nonpartisan watchdog group. 'Since federal law requires at least four votes on the six-member commission to take official action, the FEC can barely lift a finger even when violations are clear and obvious. In this case, it's not clear there was any wrongdoing, and the allegations seem speculative. We haven't seen evidence that the PACs improperly subsidized work for the campaign or have reason to believe that laws were broken.'
Backer said he expected the gridlock at the FEC and planned to sue if his complaints sit for 120 days and litigation is allowed under law.
'At the end of the day,' Backer said, 'It would be wonderful if the FEC would get off its dysfunctional ass and rule on these things.'
Fox News' Alex Diaz and Perry Chiaramonte contributed to this report.
Freshman Democrat Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is asserting what she perceives as her newfound legislative powers. Rep. Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) declared on February 22, 2019, 'Yup. If you don't like the Green New Deal, then come up with your own ambitious, on-scale proposal to address the global climate crisis. Until then, we're in charge – and you're just shouting from the cheap seats.'
Yup. If you don't like the #GreenNewDeal, then come up with your own ambitious, on-scale proposal to address the global climate crisis.
Until then, we're in charge – and you're just shouting from the cheap seats. https://t.co/h3KSJhHqDN
— Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (@AOC) February 23, 2019
Greenpeace co-founder Dr. Patrick Moore, who has turned against the organization and is now a prominent climate skeptic, ripped Rep. Ocasio-Cortez for her comments:
'Pompous little twit,' Moore replied to her on Twitter. Moore continued, 'You don't have a plan to grow food for 8 billion people without fossil fuels, or get the food into the cities. Horses? If fossil fuels were banned every tree in the world would be cut down for fuel for cooking and heating. You would bring about mass death.'
Pompous little twit. You don't have a plan to grow food for 8 billion people without fossil fuels, or get the food into the cities. Horses? If fossil fuels were banned every tree in the world would be cut down for fuel for cooking and heating. You would bring about mass death.
— Patrick Moore (@EcoSenseNow) February 23, 2019
#
Related Links:
Marc Morano on Fox & Friends – Broadcast February 8, 2019 – Brian Kilmeade and Ainsley Earhardt
Morano: ‘This plan is plagiarism pure and simple. They borrowed it from the 1960s and 1970s. In my book, I detail how different environmental scares — over population, resource scarcity, even global cooling — had the same solutions: wealth redistribution, central planning, sovereignty limiting, and just a massive government intervention.'
Anchor Brian Kilmeade: The Green New Deal l'ooks like something that was put out by a 10th grader?'
MORANO: 'Actually 10th is being very, very generous.'
Ocasio In Charge Trump
KILMEADE: 'Let's go seventh.'
MORANO: 'I would go as low as third grade. I mean, this is a — just a big bowl of crazy wish list of everything you could imagine.
Green Raw Deal: Big Bowl of Crazy – ‘Global warming' is merely the latest environmental scare with the same solutions of wealth redistribution and central planning‘
Ocasio In Charge Definition
Broadcast February 13, 2019 – The Blaze – Eric Bolling's America
Marc Morano says there's NO current Cabinet member willing to stand up to the U.N., Al Gore, or MSM on science of global warming. The ONLY person is Trump himself.