Tech
RFK Jr. May Have Violated The Hatch Act In Encouraging Iowa Congressional Candidates To Drop Out
from the if-only-that-mattered dept
I don’t think it’s terribly controversial to say that this second Trump administration has never shown much concern for the Hatch Act. If you’re not familiar with that particular law, it makes it illegal for most of the members of the executive branch of the federal government, and some state representatives, to engage in partisan political activity. Sometimes the question of whether something violates the Hatch Act can be tricky, or a matter of interpretation.
And sometimes RFK Jr. rides in to provide a nakedly blatant example of a Hatch Act violation. Ron Wyden is calling for an investigation into Kennedy after he reportedly called two different Libertarian candidates in Iowa running for congressional seats to suggest that they drop out. This could be otherwise described as election interference in violation of the Hatch Act.
Wyden cited two instances in which Kennedy may have violated the Hatch Act by encouraging two Libertarian candidates in Iowa to drop out of their respective races.
In a phone call to Libertarian House candidate Marco Battaglia of Iowa’s 3rd Congressional District, Kennedy reportedly said, “If this seat flips, it’ll make my life hell.”
In a phone call to Rick Stewart, another Libertarian House candidate running to represent Iowa’s 2nd Congressional District, Kennedy reportedly suggested Stewart could find another position within federal government but outside elected office, adding that he would help him accomplish this.
Kennedy is doing this because both races are reportedly quite close and pretty much everyone agrees that the only real impact these Libertarian candidates would have on the election is pulling a few percentage points of the vote away from the Republican candidates. Plainly partisan political influence on an upcoming election, in other words, with something pretty close to bribery to boot when it comes to offering other positions within government in exchange for dropping out.
“Secretary Kennedy called Stewart in his official capacity as a member of the President’s cabinet, and he asked that Stewart suspend his campaign in order to make it easier for the Republican candidate to win the race, easier for the Republican Party to maintain its majority in the House of Representatives, and easier for Kennedy to personally avoid Congressional subpoenas from Democratic committee chairs,” Wyden wrote in his letter to Greer.
“Iowa’s voters should be able to freely choose who represents them in Congress, and our democracy does not allow political appointees to take that power away from them by deleting candidates from the ballot.”
I don’t really know how to argue with any of that. I also don’t have any problem believing that Kennedy has no idea what the Hatch Act is or says, nor that he was violating any laws in making these phone calls. But if the reports are correct, it appears he did. And I also don’t doubt that further reporting will reveal more of Kennedy doing this sort of thing.
That’s the problem with having unprofessional clowns working in your administration.
Filed Under: election interference, hatch act, iowa, marco battaglia, rfk jr., rick stewart, ron wyden
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