All posts tagged "marc elias"

'Very big deal': Georgia OKs rules that could allow local officials to 'subvert' elections

Voting rights activists sounded the alarm Tuesday as the GOP-controlled election board in Georgia approved a measure on Tuesday that could allow local officials to dispute county election results.

Under the new rule, according to The New York Times, local officials can investigate election results to ensure they are "a true and accurate accounting of all votes cast."

The language, the Times reported, implies local officials have some discretion in the certification process, bucking decades of state law.

Marc Elias, of the group Democracy Docket, which advocates for protecting voter rights, wrote on X: "On a huge news day, this is a very big deal. Please pay attention."

Republicans, he said in a separate post, are "plotting to subvert our elections and undermine free and fair elections."

Elias has warned that Republicans will try to use the certification process to ensure former President Donald Trump retakes the White House — even if he loses.

Kristin Nabers, state director of the voting rights group All Voting Is Local Action, said certification inconsistencies can "tie up both the counties and the state in expensive and time-consuming litigation."

Read also: Elections expert warns 'loyalty' to Trump 'stronger' than 'instinct for self-preservation'

“This could result not only in counties missing the certification deadline but also in undermining public trust and confidence in our elections," she said, according to the Times.

At the meeting, Sara Tindall Ghazal, the only Democratic member of the elections board, opposed the rule and called a “reasonable inquiry” too vague and ripe for “exploitation.”

The rule also runs afoul of state law, she said.

"The statute still mandates that counties certify by 5 p.m. on Monday [after the election], and they will be in violation of state law if they refuse to certify,” Ghazal said, according to Democracy Docket.

State Sen. Jason Esteves (D-GA) wrote in a letter that the rules "create avenues for malicious actors to disrupt the election process under the guise of addressing discrepancies and could be exploited to sow doubt and distress and election outcomes.”

Elections expert warns 'loyalty' to Trump 'stronger' than 'instinct for self-preservation'

Democracy Docket leader Marc Elias warned MSNBC viewers Monday night that Republicans have tried at multiple levels to decertify elections ahead of the 2024 general election, and that the GOP's loyalty to former President Donald Trump likely means those efforts are coming again.

Marc Elias, founder of the group, spoke with host Rachel Maddow and walked through his organization's efforts to protect elections.

Elias said that when Americans talk about who "won" an election, the conversation is actually about two things: the "unofficial results" announced on Election Day by sources such as The Associated Press and other news outlets, and then there are the "certified results."

These results, he noted, are first certified by the county and then at the state level. For presidential elections, the count goes to electors, with governors certifying results that are handed up to Congress.

"Jan. 6 was the culmination of a certification dispute," he explained, noting the dispute began in Michigan at the county level. "And when Republicans couldn't achieve what they wanted to at the county level, they went to the state level. When they couldn't achieve that, they launched a 'fake-electors scheme' which is just another way of undermining accurate certifications."

When that failed, he said, Republicans launched a series of lawsuits until finally, they attempted to block the certification of the election on Jan. 6.

Read also: Two AZ county supervisors indicted for refusing to certify midterm election

"So this has been on their radar for sometime and it will be on their radar screen for sure in 2024," he said.

Maddow pointed out that the GOP has planned and tried out decertification tactics dozens of times at the county elections board level and in "off-the-radar" municipal elections — tactics that were "unheard of" before 2020.

"The idea of tinkering with the certification at the local level was just out of bounds," Elias emphasized. "That is part of the pageantry of democracy. It is what makes us great as a country. That after a hard-fought election, the election officials celebrate the results by certifying these election results."

Elias said his group successfully sued Cochise County, Arizona, when Republicans refused to certify elections, and the people involved were indicted over the scheme.

"You might think that would serve as a deterrent for 2024 but as Donald Trump proved, the loyalty to his crimes and misdeeds is stronger than people's instinct for self-preservation," he said.

Watch the clip below or at this link.

Rewind: Kamala Harris’ 2020 presidential campaign was a financial disaster

WASHINGTON — Presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris has raised historically massive sums of money since President Joe Biden announced on Sunday he’d not stand for reelection.

But political money hasn’t always been easy for Harris.

Federal records indicate that Harris’ 2020 presidential campaign, which she abandoned in late 2019 before a Democratic primary or caucus vote had been cast, experienced a most messy financial ending — one that didn’t officially arrive until less than a year ago.

ALSO READ: How much access did $50,000 buy someone at the Republican National Convention?

Harris’ 2020 presidential campaign money situation offers a small, but relevant window into her campaign resource management style during a month when Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump had financially overtaken the Biden — now Harris — campaign immediately prior to Biden’s exit.

Here’s what happened with Harris’ 2020 campaign, according to Federal Election Commission records analyzed by Raw Story:

When Harris dropped out of the 2020 race on Dec. 3, 2019, she cited campaign money as an overriding reason. “My campaign for president simply doesn’t have the financial resources we need to continue,” Harris said at the time.

She wasn’t lying. As of Dec. 31, 2019, Harris’ presidential campaign committee had less than $1.13 million left in its account — and $1.07 million in debt, according to federal records.

But that was only the beginning of Harris’ debt problems.

By March 31, 2020, her campaign committee’s cash reserves had dwindled to about $220,000 while debt grew to nearly $1.1 million as lingering bills hit the campaign’s ledger.

The creditor list for Kamala Harris for the People — the official name of Harris’ 2020 presidential campaign committee — included 16 different campaign vendors.

ALSO READ: Milwaukee girded for massive convention protests. But they got something else.

Harris’ campaign owed Perkins Coie LLP, the law firm whose political law group was then led by Democratic superlawyer Marc Elias, the most — more than $430,000. TorchStone Global LLC (security and travel), NGP VAN Inc. (software) and Political Data Inc. (voter data) and SCRB Strategies (political consulting) were likewise owed large sums.

By the end of June 2020, Harris’ all-but-defunct presidential campaign was effectively broke: It reported just $994.96 in its account versus more than $1.04 million in debt.

It looked as if Harris was destined to join the likes of Newt Gingrich, Rick Santorum, Mike Pence and Al Sharpton as former presidential candidates who to this day rank among the nation’s most notable presidential campaign deadbeats, unable or unwilling to settle up on years-old bills.

But the trajectory of Harris’ financial fortunes would soon change.

On Aug. 11, 2020, Biden — then the Democrats’ presumptive presidential nominee — selected Harris as his running mate.

ActBlue, the Democratic donation platform, allowed supporters of the new Biden-Harris ticket to make contributions to Harris’ old 2020 presidential campaign committee for the purpose of paying down its debts.

It helped. A lot. By Sept. 30, 2020, Harris’ 2020 presidential committee reported nearly $100,000 cash on hand and less than $846,000 in debt.

But it wasn’t a panacea. So Harris’ old campaign dug into federal regulations and pulled out a unanimous and decidedly relevant 2010 advisory opinion from the Federal Election Committee that stated: “The principal campaign committee for a presidential ticket may transfer general election funds to retire debts from the vice presidential nominee’s presidential primary campaign.”

Somewhat ironically, it was Biden’s 2008 presidential campaign, which flamed out in similar fashion to Harris’ 2020 presidential campaign, that prompted the Federal Election Commission’s ruling.


That’s because when Biden became Barack Obama’s running mate in mid-2008, the old Biden presidential committee, in conjunction with the Obama for America committee, petitioned the Federal Election Committee to allow the Obama committee to either transfer $138,000 to Biden’s old committee or simply pay off the Biden committee’s debts.

Among the Federal Election Commissioners voting in favor of this arrangement that would benefit Harris years later? Future Donald Trump White House counsel Don McGahn and failed Trump federal court nominee Matthew Petersen, of all people.

Flash forward 10 years.

In Oct. 16, 2020, the Biden for President campaign transferred nearly $437,000 to the Kamala Harris for the People committee. On Nov. 16, 2020 — shortly after Biden won the presidency — it transferred another $441,635.

Kamala Harris for the People’s campaign debt was zeroed out by December 2020.

This story of Harris’ unpaid bills doesn’t quite end here, however.

Kamala Harris for the People incurred some new bills in 2021, including delayed tax bills from governmental entities and tens of thousands of dollars in new legal bills from the Kaufman Legal Group in California. Some Harris donors had money refunded to them, slicing into the committee’s cash balance.

In early 2022, Kamala Harris for the People sunk back into debt, with nearly $439,000 in outstanding bills — including $319,957 in unpaid payroll taxes due to the Comptroller of Maryland.

But the Biden campaign again came to the rescue, injecting another $560,000 into Kamala Harris for the People, to bring its grand debt-retirement total to more than $1 million.

Source: Federal Election Commission

This allowed Harris to pay off her campaign debts once and for all by late 2022.

Kamala Harris for the People’s final act came on July 10, 2023, when it transferred $48,504.42 back to the Biden for President committee and notified the Federal Election Commission of its intent to terminate itself. (Federal regulators generally won’t allow federal political committees to terminate themselves until they’ve paid off their debt.)

On Aug. 3, 2023, Federal Election Committee senior analyst Jessica Grainger informed Kamala Harris for the People that its termination request had been “accepted.”


Less than a year later, Harris would rename the Biden for President committee “Harris for President” and take over the Biden committee’s tens of millions of dollars, to which it has already added tens of millions more in the two days after Biden’s departure from the race.