to catch a witch…

Posted on Monday 20 September 2010


With Revelations of Debt, Georgia Governor’s Race Evens Up
New York Times

By ROBBIE BROWN
September 19, 2010

LAWRENCEVILLE, Ga. — At a paper-plate luncheon for lawyers and judges on Friday, Nathan Deal, the Republican nominee for governor of Georgia, searched for a metaphor that would resonate. He wanted to describe how it feels to run a major campaign, especially amid revelations last week that he is facing more than $5 million of debt and may need to sell his house to avoid bankruptcy or foreclosure. “What’s it like?” he asked rhetorically, standing in a century-old courtroom in this Atlanta suburb. “It’s like being in a trial that is contentious, doesn’t have weekends off and lasts for over a year and a half.” In his analogy, the jurors determining his fate would be Georgia voters, who must decide in November whether to stand by Mr. Deal, a former nine-term congressman, despite revelations about his worsening financial situation.

On Wednesday, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported that Mr. Deal, 68, owed $2.3 million to a bank, after having invested in his daughter’s sporting goods store, which went out of business last year. On Thursday, The Associated Press added to the campaign’s troubles, reporting that Mr. Deal also owed $2.85 million on loans for an automobile salvage business he co-owns. None of the debts were included in filings that the Deal campaign released before the Republican primary runoff in August, which Mr. Deal won by less than 1 percent of the vote.

The back-to-back disclosures have upended an election that had been considered reasonably easy for Republicans. Georgia is so reliably conservative — with a Republican governor, two Republican senators and Republican control of the state legislature — that Mr. Deal’s Democratic opponent, former Gov. Roy E. Barnes, declined even to meet President Obama when he visited the state last month. Gov. Sonny Perdue is prevented by term limits from seeking re-election. Now, national experts are declaring the Georgia race a tossup, offering a glimmer of hope to Democratic leaders expecting landslide defeats elsewhere, especially in the South…

He has tried to frame the story as the kind of financial hardship many Georgians are enduring. “Nobody foresaw the current course of the economy several years ago,” he said. “My wife and I did what responsible parents do — we supported our daughter. The situation that’s happening to our daughter is not unlike what’s happening to other Georgians.” The Deal campaign has updated its disclosures to include the debt but contends that it was not required by state law to do so…

Even before the debt problems, Mr. Deal faced charges of ethical impropriety. In March, a week after he resigned from the House to run for governor, the Office of Congressional Ethics released a report concluding that Mr. Deal appeared to have improperly used his staff to pressure Georgia officials to continue a state vehicle inspection program that generated hundreds of thousands of dollars a year for his automobile salvage company. He denied any wrongdoing, calling the accusations a “politically motivated witch hunt”…
And then there was this campaign ad in the Primary last month…
Nathan Deal steps up attacks on Karen Handel for supporting gays
examiner.com

by Ewa Kochanska
August 5, 2010

The Republican battle for the Georgia gubernatorial nomination heats up today, just five days before the August 10 primary runoff, with former Congressman Nathan Deal attacking his opponent former Secretary of State Karen Handel in a TV ad for supporting various gay-rights groups.
    Narrator: The last straw. For some, it’s Karen Handel’s support for taxpayer-funded gay partner benefits. For others, the last straw is Karen Handel’s vote to give our tax dollars to Youth Pride, a group that promotes homosexuality among teenagers as young as 13. But for all, the lies Karen Handel tells about Nathan Deal — a veteran, former prosecutor and judge, to hide what she’s done — are the last straw.
It is worth noting that the Youth Pride group does not "promote" homosexuality. Youth Pride is an Atlanta organization offering various programs for gay, lesbian or transgender individuals, including HIV education and prevention workshops, mental health and suicide prevention and counseling services, among many others…
I suppose he could always stand on his record…
A review of congressional records by the AP shows Deal was the lead sponsor on 72 bills over his 18-year career. Just seven became law, and three of those involved the naming of post offices.
If you need any reason to rant about something, look no further! Nathan Deal [my former Congressman] has it all – practiced incompetence, fiscal irresponsibility, challenged ethics, bigotry, opportunism, endorsements from the clown Newt Gingrich, is neither pleasant to listen to or look at, and seems to lack any platform – one stop shopping! He presents us with a near perfect test of whether my State [Georgia] will remain lost in a post Civil War pout or move into the  next  century after next. His opponent is a decent Southerner whose only downsides are being a Democrat and changing our embarrassing flag when he was Governor last time. Nathan Deal "denied any wrongdoing, calling the accusations a ‘politically motivated witch hunt’." His problem is that this time, we found us a real witch – him…
  1.  
    September 20, 2010 | 10:45 AM
     

    But, Mickey. How heartless of you. If he loses the race for governor, Nathan Deal will be out of a job — and he really really needs one, what with over $5M in debts and insufficient assets to cover them.

    Don’t you think we should help him out so he doesn’t have to use his friends-in-high-places to bail him out again with even more shady insider-influence sweetheart deals for his salvage car lot business?

    Think of it as welfare for the privileged. Don’t they deserve a helping hand too?
    Think of it as fighting unemployment. Roy Barnes is rich. He doesn’t need job.

  2.  
    September 20, 2010 | 12:00 PM
     

    … and it looks like he’ll lose his house[s]. So why not let him live in the Governor’s Mansion so he won’t be homeless?

  3.  
    September 20, 2010 | 12:39 PM
     

    I’ve just had a great idea that may solve all the problems.

    Elect Barnes governor, and then let him magnanimously offer Deal a job as manager of the governor’s mansion fleet of automobiles. With Deal’s experience as a car lot owner, he could take care of all the vehicles at the mansion. And you could let him live in an apartment over the garages, which would solve his homeless problem. Of course, as a state job — and having lost his connections to the powers-that-be — the salary might not be enough to pay off the loans.

    Still, it’s something. He and his wife wouldn’t be homeless and without food,.

  4.  
    Carl
    September 20, 2010 | 3:52 PM
     

    Ralph, your magnanimity is truly moving considering that this jamoke has been fleecing you and your fellow Georgians for 18 years and thanks you for your trouble by heaping scorn, humiliation and ridicule upon the Great State of Georgia.

    What I am not grasping is how a salvage auto-parts guy can furnish the numbers that, even at the height of the bubble, showed sufficiency to loan him $5M? And how much is his house worth anyway? Enough to pay off the notes? I find it highly improbable that Mr. Barnes won’t be able to make the case that Mr. No-Deal is an utterly inept manager, utterly incapable of discharging the duties and trust of the high office of Governor.

  5.  
    September 20, 2010 | 4:35 PM
     

    I think you’ve hit an important point, Carl. How did Deal manage to get loans of this magnitude? Most likely because of his “friends in high places” — like the Lt. Governor who was a personal friend. So they gave him loans not sufficiently collateralized — and the soninlaw’s business failed — and it’s time to pay the piper.

    If he weren’t running for Gov. and under intense scrutiny, he’d probably get some sweetheart deal arranged by one of these friends. But what can he do in the glare of the media spotlight, now? Well, it’s simple. They don’t come due until January, so all he has to do is promise he will take care of it when the time comes. Barnes should not let him get away with that. Nor should the AJC. I personally don’t think they will. They’ve been pretty aggressive on this story.

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.