Below the belt. Did former President Donald Trump steal a UFC championship belt from the White House? In December, a “person familiar with the matter” told The Washington Post that a storage unit at the center of Trump’s stolen document case—which the government had helped Trump rent as part of his transition to private life, and which he filled with items from his administration—had been the landing pad for an array of post-presidential knick-knacks, including “suits and swords and wrestling belts.” In 2018, Trump was photographed in the White House beside UFC interim welterweight champion Colby Covington. Covington had previously claimed that if he won the championship, he would travel to D.C. to deliver the belt to Trump. The White House photo shows Trump with the belt over his shoulder. Paul’s well that ends well. Disgraced former Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort gave up this fight this week, settling his federal tax suit with the Justice Department for $3.1 million, according to court filings. DOJ prosecutors had previously rejected Manafort’s third settlement offer. The government sued Manafort last April for failing to disclose nearly two dozen foreign bank accounts. Mandel effect. Former Ohio GOP senatorial contender Josh Mandel’s campaign has blamed its former treasurer for a $15,000 FEC fine related to misreported primary contributions, Cleveland.com reported. According to the FEC, the Mandel team failed to timely report dozens of donations totaling $147,601 made in the days leading up to the May 3 primary, which Mandel lost to now Senator J.D. Vance. Mandel’s treasurer at the time, professional political accountant Thomas Datwyler, was approached with a job offer last month by the beleaguered George Santos, but rejected it, part of a bizarre series of events that left the Santos campaign treasurer-less for more than three weeks. (As of a filing today, Datwyler is no longer treasurer for former Rep. Madison Cawthorn’s leadership PAC.) Missing person report. After three weeks of not having a treasurer—and a few days after the FEC informed him that he can’t raise money if the position goes vacant for 10 days—George Santos’ campaign committee has officially named a new bookkeeper. However, no one, including The Daily Beast, has been able to confirm that the person, “Andrew Olson,” actually exists. The filing, submitted Tuesday, lists a gmail address for Olson, which The Daily Beast hasn’t been able to trace to a real person. It also puts Olson’s physical address—and the campaign’s address—at an apartment building outside Santos’ district. Santos was living in that building in December, as his sister, the apartment’s tenant of record, faced eviction, The Daily Beast previously reported. A Queens County court filing earlier this month states that the eviction claim was settled, but also notes that Santos’ sister had vacated the apartment on Jan. 18. George Santos told The Daily Beast in early January he had moved out of the apartment and was living elsewhere. Santos is also conspicuously absent from his fellow GOP statesmen in a new joint fundraising committee created this week, called “New York Majority Makers.” The group’s treasurer: Datwyler. COP out. Former Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-IL) converted his campaign committee into a PAC, according to an FEC filing submitted Tuesday. The PAC, Country Over Party, inherits the $2.4 million Kinzinger’s campaign had on hand after the anti-Trump Republican stepped down from Congress at the end of 2022. Wake-up call. According to a CNBC report published on Tuesday, GOP officials who have decried “woke capitalism” have accepted “tens of thousands of dollars in campaign donations from some of the same Wall Street money managers they have attacked” for pushing ‘far-left’ positions on environmental, social and corporate governance issues. “Since taking control of the U.S. House, top Republicans have refused meetings with the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and created a working group to ‘combat the threat to our capital markets posed by those on the far-left pushing environmental, social, and governance (ESG) proposals,’” the report says. But 10 of the 29 Republicans on the Financial Services Committee—including its chairman, Rep. Patrick McHenry (R-NC)—accepted a total of $140,000 from major companies that fall under their target list. Mattgaet. After a sweeping yearslong investigation into alleged sex trafficking and other crimes, DOJ prosecutors told Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) last week that they were not bringing charges. That would appear to put the onus back on the House Ethics Committee to either resume or drop its own investigation into the congressman, after tabling the probe so the DOJ could complete its work. The matter appeared in a summary report of the House Ethics Committee’s activities during the 117th Congress, published last month, which says that “[t]he committee, following precedent, deferred consideration of the matter in response to a request from DOJ.” “At the conclusion of the 117th Congress, the Committee had not completed its investigation into this matter,” the report says. “Representative Gaetz was reelected to the House for the 118th Congress.” But now with the GOP in charge, and Gaetz having received unknown promises from House Speaker Kevin McCarthy amid his confirmation fight last month—“I ran out of things I could even imagine to ask for,” Gaetz said—those odds may be slim. And, as the report notes, throughout the 117th Congressional term, the House Ethics Committee issued only one—count ’em, one—subpoena. |