Rick Perry indicted by grand jury on two charges

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Big Gubmint

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Lumi

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I've been holding on to this for a few months, now is a good time to launch

A Texas Two-Step: When Rick Perry Backed Al Gore


Justin Sullivan / Getty Images
Texas Governor Rick Perry speaks during the 2011 Republican Leadership Conference in New Orleans on June 18, 2011

There's an inconvenient political truth for Texas Governor Rick Perry: he was his state's 1988 campaign chairman for then U.S. Senator Al Gore's first run at the presidency.

The way their partnership has dissolved and their paths diverged in the past three decades speaks eloquently to the way American politics has been reshaped. Gore has sailed left, while Perry's political odyssey has seen him tack in the other direction ? and to the opposing party. The two men opted for different paths across a dynamic, changing political landscape, and while one man fell short of the White House, the other now contemplates that prize.


The tale begins in 1984, four years before Perry took the helm of Gore's Texas campaign, when Gore, then 36 and a congressional wunderkind from Tennessee, followed in his father's footsteps by winning a U.S. Senate seat. That same year, Perry, who was 34 and from much humbler roots as the son of a Texas Rolling Plains cotton farmer, won a seat in the Texas house of representatives. Both young men were handsome sons of the South and proudly touted their philosophical bearings in the regionally dominant conservative wing of the Democratic Party.

In 1988, seizing on the opportunity afforded by a lineup of southern primaries on Super Tuesday, Gore announced his bid for the Democratic nomination for President. Ronald Reagan's second term was drawing to a close, and Republicans were set to nominate the next in line, then Vice President George H.W. Bush. The Democratic field was wide open, with a raft of candidates to the left of Gore, who was dubbed the "southern centrist" by the press. The young Senator, described by the New York Times as "solidly built, dark and indisputably handsome," lined up a list of conservative Democratic big-name supporters, including Senators Howard Heflin of Alabama, Terry Sanford of North Carolina, Bennett Johnson of Louisiana and Sam Nunn of Georgia and Governors Jim Hunt of North Carolina and Buddy Roemer of Louisiana. (In 1991 Roemer, like Perry, left the Democratic Party for the GOP; he is now also reportedly considering a Republican presidential run.)

Gore shared the views of his fellow southern centrists ? he opposed the federal funding of abortion, supported a moment of silence in schools for prayer, approved funding of the Nicaraguan contras and was against the ban on interstate handgun sales. It was a platform a conservative West Texas Democrat like state representative Perry could stand on, and he signed up to chair the Senator's Texas campaign.

(See "Rick Perry and the Echoes of George W. Bush.")
Several more-liberal state Democratic Party leaders cast their lots with two of the other candidates, Missouri Congressman Dick Gephardt and Massachusetts Governor Michael Dukakis. But Gore worked the Texas legislative ranks for support, winning the backing of Texas House Speaker Gib Lewis and Lieut. Governor Bill Hobby. Lewis was especially important to appointing legislators to vital positions on fiscal committees. And so it was not surprising that 27 members of the Texas legislature, including Perry, a young two-term legislator, joined the duo in their support for Gore.

For Perry, picking Gore ? an ambitious young Senator with a reputation as a hip "Atari Democrat" fond of high-tech innovation and new styles of communication ? was a bold move. He could have chosen to stay on the sidelines, and few would have noticed his lack of an endorsement in the race. But it was consistent with Perry's penchant for hitching his wagon to whoever or whatever would move him up the political track ? in this case, the statehouse leadership of Hobby and Lewis. However, Perry's Texas elders picked the wrong horse. On Super Tuesday, March 8, Gore placed third behind Dukakis and Jesse Jackson in Texas.

A decade later, Perry said the 1988 presidential primary election helped push him to his party switch. In the fall of 1988, he voted for Bush over his party's nominee, Dukakis. "I came to my senses," he told the Austin American-Statesman in 1998. Perry's efforts for Gore left few public footprints, and contemporaries on both sides of the aisle have few memories of the alliance. A longtime Hobby staffer suggested it was likely that Perry's co-chair title in Gore's 1988 Texas campaign was little more than an honorific, not a recognition of any organizational responsibility. His role was limited to a single appearance, Perry told the San Antonio Express-News in 2001, adding that he had served at the request of Lewis. But it was a fact of his political biography that would be waved in his face in the 2010 Republican gubernatorial primary race by Tea Party candidate Deborah Medina and U.S. Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison, and it likely will be raised again if he chooses to seek the GOP presidential nomination. Perry has never denied the association but has treated it as a road-to-Damascus moment. "On the surface, Al Gore appeared to be the more conservative of the candidates," Perry told the Express-News, adding, "Fortunately, we found out who the real Al Gore was, and I was long on the side of the angels by then."

http://content.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,2081596,00.html
 

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DAVID AXELROD: 'PERRY INDICTMENT LOOKS PRETTY SKETCHY'

Texas Republican Governor Rick Perry was indicted by a grand jury Friday for using his budget powers to force the removal of a District Attorney arrested last year in a humiliating and very public drunk driving incident. Saturday morning, however, Perry finds himself with the unlikeliest of defenders. Using his Twitter account, David Axelrod, a senior aide and confidante to President Obama, wrote: "Unless he was demonstrably trying to scrap the ethics unit for other than his stated reason, Perry indictment seems pretty sketchy."

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Even Ben White of the left-wing Politico came to Perry's defense. The left-wing economics writer tweeted Saturday, "It seems quite perverse to indict a governor for exercising his clearly delineated constitutional authority[.]"

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Travis County grand jurors charged Perry, an almost certain 2016 presidential contender, with two felonies: abuse of power and coercion of a public servant. The charges are the result of Perry using his veto power to eliminate a $7.5 million appropriation for the office of Travis County District Attorney Rosemary Lehmberg, after the Democrat refused to resign.

During her arrest, Lehmberg, whose blood alcohol content was nearly three times the legal limit, was caught on video screaming at police officers to the point where she had to be restrained.

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Lehmberg was eventually fined and sentenced to 45 days in jail. Despite this, the Democrat county of Travis stood by her and have now retaliated with the indictment against Perry, even though the line item veto is a constitutional power granted the governor of Texas.

Perry is expected to turn himself in and this likely means the release of his mug shot to the media.

Axelrod is almost certainly signalling to fellow Democrats and his allies in the media (like Politico) that this indictment is a political loser for the Left. It could also blowback on Obama whose actual constitutional abuses have earned criticism even from some Democrats.

Follow John Nolte on Twitter @NolteNC
 

hedgehog

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I live in Texas and don't dislike Rick Perry but he is not my favorite either, this cunt DA is playing politics, she has no leg to stand on, I'm really pulling for Rick to win....another reason I hate liberals, fucking assholes
 

THE KOD

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I live in Texas and don't dislike Rick Perry but he is not my favorite either, this cunt DA is playing politics, she has no leg to stand on, I'm really pulling for Rick to win....another reason I hate liberals, fucking assholes

hedge as usual you have no clue what the facts are.


if you do please state the facts as you know them.


Rick is a total dumb ass hated by many many in Texas that have any sense.

corruption has been the name of the game for him as Gov.


but you dont deal in facts now do ya.
 

Duff Miver

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I live in Texas and don't dislike Rick Perry but he is not my favorite either, this cunt DA is playing politics, she has no leg to stand on, I'm really pulling for Rick to win....another reason I hate liberals, fucking assholes

This same DA indicted Tom Delay (rep, Texas) and he was convicted. Her record is 100% convicting Texas politicians.

Delay: Busted and convicted

Perry: Busted, awaiting trial.
 

Skulnik

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This same DA indicted Tom Delay (rep, Texas) and he was convicted. Her record is 100% convicting Texas politicians.

Delay: Busted and convicted

Perry: Busted, awaiting trial.

Travis County?s Politicized DA Gets Perry Indicted (Updates: Perry Responds) ? Obama?s Henchman Cackles

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BRYAN PRESTON
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August 15, 2014 - 4:41 pm

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This is ridiculous.

AUSTIN (KXAN) ? A grand jury has handed up an indictment against Gov. Rick Perry in connection with the investigation into an effort to force Travis County District Attorney Rosemary Lehmberg to resign.


Perry wanted Lehmberg to resign because she had been busted for drunk driving. It?s not good to have a drunk driver, captured on camera abusing the officers who arrested her, heading up the Public Integrity Unit.

At the center of the issue is a complaint about intimidation stemming from Perry?s threat to veto of $7.5 million in state funding to the Public Integrity Unit run by Lehmberg?s office. The threat came after she pleaded guilty to drunk driving and served a 45-day sentence; Perry called on her to step down but she refused to resign her position. Perry then vetoed the funding for the PIU.

A grand jury was called to determine whether or not Perry broke the law when he threatened to veto the funding. As a result they issued indictments on two felony charges: abuse of official capacity and coercion of public servant. If found guilty on the charges, Perry could be sentenced to a maximum 109 years in prison.

The office is funded by the state. As governor, Perry has veto power. Full stop.

This indictment is political. Every bit as political as the kangaroo court charges that former District Attorney Ronnie Earle, a Democrat, lodged against numerous Republicans over the years ? both because that office is politicized, and Travis County is full of guttersnipes and fools.

But that doesn?t mean that the charges will get thrown out. The legal jeopardy to Perry is quite real.

Earle got former Rep. Tom Delay, Republican, convicted on crimes that were not even committed in Travis County, and were not even crimes at the time they were supposedly committed.

Those convictions were eventually thrown out, but not before Earle had totally destroyed Delay?s career and tainted the entire Republican Party ? which was the goal all along.

More: This is the official Perry wanted to depart the Public Integrity Unit, Travis County District Attorney Rosemary Lehmberg. Her drunk driving arrest really ought not to send Gov. Perry to prison, but this is Travis County we?re talking about. The threat to him is real.


Update: This is the same playbook the Democrats ran against Delay, no doubt about it. On the heels of the indictment, Texas Democrats are already calling for Perry to resign. These are the same people who have looked the other way while the DA, Rosemary Lehmberg, has remained in office even after her drunk driving escapades.

The Democrats will get a mugshot of Perry before long. They will use that to destroy his reputation and taint all Republicans.

It?s a hail Mary pass for the Wendy Davis campaign, of course. These people cannot win in this state on issues. So they are politicizing the legal system in on of their few strongholds.

Update: Perry responds (h/t Business Insider):

Not long after news of the indictment broke Friday evening, Perry?s office released a statement maintaining his innocence and declaring he ?will ultimately prevail.?

?The veto in question was made in accordance with the veto authority afforded to every governor under the Texas Constitution,? said Mary Anne Wiley, Perry?s general counsel. ?We will continue to aggressively defend the governor?s lawful and constitutional action, and believe we will ultimately prevail.?

Update: Any doubt that this entire episode is political?
 

Duff Miver

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Earle got former Rep. Tom Delay, Republican, convicted on crimes that were not even committed in Travis County, and were not even crimes at the time they were supposedly committed.

Those convictions were eventually thrown out, but not before Earle had totally destroyed Delay?s career and tainted the entire Republican Party ? which was the goal all along.......

Any doubt that this entire episode is political?


Any doubt that Perry is going down just like Delay? LOL!! :142smilie
 

hedgehog

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Such a cunt, the charges are not going to stick, Perry is big boy this bitch is going to get it for this
 

Duff Miver

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An indictment is a formal accusation of charges. An arrest can occur before or after the indictment.

Not to worry, the arrest warrant is coming. And here's why Perry will bite the big weenie:


First, he used the veto to threaten a public officeholder. This is abuse of the power of his office.
Presidents and governors frequently use the possibility of vetoes to change the course of legislation. But that is considerably different than trying to force an elected officeholder to resign. What Perry did, if true, can be politely called blackmail, and, when he sent emissaries to urge Lehmberg to quit even after his veto, he may have indulged in bribery. According to sources close to the grand jury, Perry dispatched two of his staffers and one high-profile Democrat to tell Lehmberg if she left her office the governor would reinstate the PIU budget. One report indicates there may have been a quid pro quo of a new, more lucrative job for the DA, which is why this case has nothing to do with his right to use the veto.

But that's where Perry will focus his public defense.

Of course, he will also continue his argument this is another manifestation of partisan politics in Austin. That claim is as misleading as his veto rhetoric. There wasn't a single Democrat involved in the investigation and indictment. In fact, Perry appointed the presiding judge in the case, Billy Ray Stubblefield of the 3rd Judicial District. Stubblefield named retired Judge Bert Richardson of Bexar County (San Antonio) to handle the grand jury investigation, and Richardson picked Mike McCrum to be the special prosecutor in the case. McCrum, who withdrew his name from consideration for U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Texas, had the support of the two Republican Texas U.S. Senators and the state's Democratic officeholders, which hardly makes him a Democratic Party hack. (A Washington gridlock over the confirmation process in the U.S. Senate caused him to withdraw.)
 
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