Terry Branstad is taking a lot of shots at Governor Chet Culver on the campaign trail. I don’t know what’s more maddening: his lies about Culver’s record, his silence about important news affecting the state budget or his selective amnesia regarding his own record as governor.
While campaigning in Williamsburg on August 12, Branstad criticized how Culver handled questionable spending and personnel policies in the Iowa Alcoholic Beverages Division. Culver had the Department of Management impose tighter controls on the division after learning about some problems in 2008. At that time, the governor also sought legal advice about firing Alcoholic Beverages Division Lynn Walding. The Iowa Attorney General’s Office indicated Culver lacked “sufficient legal basis” for removing Walding before his fixed term was up, so Culver declined to reappoint Walding in 2010. (Incidentally, some Republicans thought Walding should have been kept on.)
According to a Culver campaign press release of August 13, Branstad told his audience in Williamsburg, “If that had been my Administration, they would have been fired immediately.” Trouble is, Culver’s campaign staff hopped in the wayback machine and found:
When a similar incident happened in the Alcoholic Beverages Division during the Branstad Administration, then known as the Beer and Liquor Control Department, Branstad didn’t even try to take any action. He even ignored an inspector general report that said they should be fired. […]
Iowa’s Inspector General Said Two Managers at the Beer and Liquor Control Department Should Be Fired. “Iowa’s inspector general said Tuesday that deputy director George Price and properties manager Dicta Izzolena should be fired from the Iowa Beer and Liquor Control Department.” [Des Moines Register, 11/21/1984]
An Affair Between Top Managers at the Liquor Department Caused Morale Problems. “[State Inspector General] Gamble concluded that there is a ‘morale problem’ at the department because of the relationship between {Deputy Director George] Price and [Properties Manager Dicta] Izzolena.” [Des Moines Register, 11/21/1984]
Top People at the Beer and Liquor Control Department Made Dubious Expenditures. “The state auditor’s office will investigate questionable business transaction at the Iowa Beer and Liquor Control Department, Deputy State Auditor Kasey Kiplinger said Wednesday… During the course of his investigation, Gamble said he also discovered a number of dubious expenditures at the department, including $2,000 for a tulip bed, $2,800 for patio furniture. $255 for a redwood planter, a painting contract that grew from $550 to $3,400, and the addition of a second layer of wall paneling in a state liquor store.” [Des Moines Register, 11/22/1984]
Branstad Said He Wouldn’t Take Action To Correct Problems at the Liquor Department. “Branstad told reporters it is up to [Dept. Dir.] Gallagher and the Beer and Liquor Control Council to Decide what action to take, if any, when Gamble completes his investigation, because the governor has no direct control over the agency. ‘I believe that once they’ve got the facts and the information, they will make the appropriate decision,’ Branstad said.” [Des Moines Register, 11/14/1984]
Bad Actors at the Beer and Liquor Control Department Only Received a 30 Day Suspension. “Two Iowa Beer and Liquor Control Department officials were suspended for 30 days without pay Monday even though Iowa Inspector General Jerry Gamble said they should be fired.” [Des Moines Register, 11/27/1984]
I didn’t remember this incident, but you’d think it would have made an impression on Branstad. Then again, he seems to conveniently forget lots of things that happened in the 1980s and 1990s. I expect Branstad to get a refresher course on his own record during the next couple of months. The Culver campaign has had staff go through 1,000 boxes of files from Branstad’s time as governor, and only a small portion of what they found has been published so far.
Share any relevant thoughts in this thread.
3 Comments
Strategy
These press releases are wonderful for us progressive political junkies – but I wonder how many Independents are reading these? I just get nervous when all I ever see are Branstad ads and haven’t seen one of Culver’s in a long time. I know TV ads are very expensive to do so I just wonder what their gameplan is. Are they just going to spend all their money on canvassing/phone banking? Or will they saturate the airwaves the last month of the campaign?
I’d hate to see a Republican landslide here after so many of us have built the party up for several years.
natewithglasses Mon 16 Aug 12:50 PM
I imagine they'll be back up on the air
after Labor Day and from then through November. A statewide tv ad campaign can cost at least $250K a week. The Iowa Democratic Party’s coordinated campaign (to which Culver contributed) will handle most of the canvassing and phone banking, I think. Some other groups (like Planned Parenthood’s PAC) will also GOTV for Culver.
You’re right–Branstad’s certainly spent a lot more on tv this summer than Culver.
desmoinesdem Mon 16 Aug 9:10 PM
Speaking of short term memory loss, I shook my head this morning
at the op/ed piece in the Register from William Lepley, Director of the Department of Education under Branstad. He was upset that Culver is filling Judy Jeffries’ position now, instead of waiting until next spring after the election. He as much as said that this is Branstad’s choice to make, not Culver’s.
This guy was one of Branstad’s hatchet men in the late 80s/early 90s. Together they damaged education in Iowa from K-12 through the Regent’s schools. And he’s tsk-tsking Culver for doing his job. Dems need to remind folks about all of Branstad’s old cronies if they want to avoid a repeat.
iowafarmboy Wed 18 Aug 1:55 PM