KEVIN DIAZ , Star Tribune
WASHINGTON – GOP operative Andy
Parrish, a former chief of staff to U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann, is
expected to tell an Iowa Senate ethics panel that her 2012 presidential
campaign made improper payments to its state chairman.
Having maintained a public silence so far,
Parrish referred questions Wednesday to his attorney, John Gilmore, who
said his client will corroborate allegations from another former
Bachmann aide, Peter Waldron.
Waldron, a Florida pastor, claims that the
campaign hid payments to Iowa Sen. Kent Sorenson, in violation of Iowa
Senate ethics rules that bar members from receiving pay from
presidential campaigns.
Until now, Parrish has been identified by the committee only as “Witness A,” Gilmore said.
“The time has come to confirm that ‘Witness
A’ is Andy Parrish, and he’ll be providing an affidavit with supporting
material that completely supports the representations previously made by
Peter Waldron,” Gilmore said.
Sorenson has vehemently denied any
wrongdoing, calling the ethics charges “totally baseless, without
evidence, and a waste of Iowans’ time and money.” Lawyers for the
Bachmann campaign also have denied the allegations.
Waldron’s accusations are also the subject of
inquiries by the Federal Election Commission (FEC) and the independent
Office of Congressional Ethics. The investigations are part of a growing
web of legal problems facing Bachmann, including a lawsuit by former
staffer Barbara Heki alleging that Sorenson stole a proprietary e-mail
list of Iowa home-school families from her personal computer. Those
allegations also are the subject of an ongoing police investigation in
Urbandale, Iowa.
Gilmore said Parrish can provide the ethics
panel documentary evidence that Sorenson was paid $7,500 a month to work
on Bachmann’s campaign, money that was funneled to him indirectly
through C&M Strategies, a Colorado-based company controlled by
Bachmann fundraiser Guy Short.
Among the sources of the funding, Waldron
contends, was Bachmann’s independent political organization,
MichelePAC, also headed by Short. Attorneys for Short have denied the
allegations, which also are part of the FEC inquiry.
Sorenson rocked the Bachmann campaign in the
waning days of the Iowa caucuses when he left to join the campaign of
rival Ron Paul. At the time, Bachmann suggested that Sorenson’s
defection was prompted by money.
Parrish’s willingness to go public against
his former employer and political mentor is likely to send shock waves
through Minnesota GOP circles, where both he and his attorney are
well-known figures.
Parrish served as deputy campaign manager of
last year’s unsuccessful effort to pass a constitutional amendment
prohibiting same-sex marriage. Gilmore is a well-known conservative
blogger.
“Andy is taking a bit of a risk,” Gilmore
said. “But at the same time, he feels loyal to Peter Waldron. Peter’s
been out there doing the best he can.”
Waldron, for his part, said Parrish’s
willingness to come forward “reflects impeccable character and a sense
of civic duty that is extraordinary.”
Parrish’s decision to go public came hours
after the Iowa Senate ethics panel set a 10-day deadline for “Witness A”
to step forward publicly with information.
The six-member panel — made up of three
Republicans and three Democrats — also directed the Secretary of the
Iowa Senate, Michael Marshall, to get an update on the status of the
police investigation in the Heki case.
Iowa Sen. Wally Horn, a Democrat who chairs
the ethics committee, said the panel felt it needs to move forward to
resolve the allegations or dismiss them. Waldron originally filed three
complaints against Sorenson with the ethics panel in January. One of
them, alleging improper business disclosures, has been dismissed. The
other two complaints, alleging hidden payments and misappropriation of
the e-mail list, are still pending.
Horn said he hopes to resolve the ethics
complaints before the legislature adjourns next month. Meanwhile, two
sources close to the Bachmann campaign have told the Star Tribune that
congressional ethics investigators have questioned them about
allegations that her presidential campaign played an improper role in
her 2011 book tour.
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