Do tell. Mr. Fiscal Responsibility sure has
a pitted history of financial mismanagement, while he
preaches fiscal responsibility for the rest of us.
Alex Leary at Tampa Bay's
The Buzz reports:
April 30, 2012
The $8,000 fine the FEC slapped Sen. Marco Rubio with was not his campaign's first violation. In January, the campaign paid a $1,360 fine for failing to disclose a number of campaign contributions made within 48 hours of the 2010 general election.
The FEC had said Rubio failed to disclose 36 contributions totaling $92,440 and proposed a $9,904 fine. But the campaign contested that, and the FEC agreed only six contributions were not disclosed as required. (Those contributions are in the jump.)
A few days earlier, before the 48 hour window, Rubio's campaign got a flood of money from contributors and corporate PACs, including $5,000 each from Exxon Mobil, Geo Group and Las Vegas Sands Corp. PAC.
.....
When will the national media
finally decide to vet this con artist?
OK, we'll help. Here are a few issues to examine:
Examine the $135,000 home equity loan Rubio obtained from a politically connected bank, and somehow
"forgot" to disclose on his campaign financial forms. The bank's board of directors was populated with Rubio supporters.
Examine the nearly $110,000 that Rubio
spent on personal expenses with the GOP American Express Card (for business expense use only). Rubio has
fought tooth and nail to
hide his credit card statements during this period from
public scrutiny. The Republican leadership in the Florida legislature has
circled the wagons around Rubio.
We're
looking forward to the Jim Greer trial this summer, where all of this deceit will be exposed.
Examine Rubio's
double-billing the state of Florida for plane tickets, when he was House Speaker.
Examine the
secretive deal that former House Speaker Rubio quietly engineered through the Legislature to create the lavish 'Taj Mahal' courthouse for his buddies.
This overripe
Ruby-oh Red fruit dangles ready to pick.
Who ya gonna
blame now, Rubio?
You're
entangled in quite a self-enriching political web. And now,
it's time to pay the piper.