词条 | Dan Newman (political consultant) |
释义 |
CareerInitiative 773 CampaignIn 2001, Newman led the campaign for Washington's Initiative 773, a ballot initiative to add 60 cents to each pack of cigarettes sold in the state, to increase access to health-care to more low-income families, and to pay for tobacco-control programs. The Seattle Times on July 13, 2001 reported that when Newman and supporters of the initiative were turning in signatures to the Washington Secretary of State in Olympia, they caught the attention of a curious tourist.
Despite questionable campaign tactics on the part of tobacco company opponents,[3] Initiative 773 passed overwhelmingly: 66%-44% [4] MessageWorks LLCBefore joining Treasurer Angelides, Newman founded Message Works LLC a firm that provided communications services for campaigns around the country.[5] He was also a partner in SCN Public Relations (now defunct - an earlier incarnation of the current SCN Strategies), a firm that provided research, press strategy, message development, rapid response, debate preparation as well as other strategic support to campaigns at all different levels of government. Newman has been a featured speaker at national conferences and conducted many communications and media trainings. Newman has served as a Congressional aide and worked for a Washington D.C. think tank.[1] Phil Angelides administrationIn 2006, Newman managed media relations and communications for the California State Treasurer's Office and for State Treasurer Phil Angelides' 2006 gubernatorial campaign. Involvement in Schwarzenegger remark controversyOn September 7, 2006, it was revealed that Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger referred to Latino Republican Assemblymember Bonnie Garcia as being fiery and hot-tempered because "black blood" mixed with "Latino blood" equals "hot." He further stated "I mean, they [Cubans and Puerto Ricans] are all very hot...they have the, you know, part of the black blood in them and part of the Latino blood in them and together that makes it." Schwarzenegger apologized for the remarks the next day, in a joint press conference with Garcia in Santa Monica, California.[6] The Schwarzenegger administration claimed that it was the victim of a breach of security protocols, and Andrea Lynn Hoch, Schwarzenegger's legal affairs secretary falsely stated that the file was stored "in a password-protected area of the governor's office network computer system." The California Highway Patrol was asked to investigate. On September 13, it was discovered that the recording was obtained by members of the Angelides campaign on August 29 and August 30 stored in an MP3 file and that Newman and campaign researcher Sean Sullivan submitted it to the Los Angeles Times. Katie Levinson, a spokeswoman for the Schwarzenegger campaign wanted Angelides to "denounce the unethical actions taken on his behalf," stating that he was trying to personally smear Schwarzenegger.[7] In response to the claims from the Schwarzenegger administration, Angelides campaign manager Cathy Calfo dismissed the claims as being politically motivated and "completely false." In regards to the recording she stated: "What I have been told is, there was information accessed by one of our computers off of a taxpayer-funded, publicly available Web site that any member of the public would have access to..." [8] According to The Inquirer, the supposed URL where the recording was taken from is http://speeches.gov.ca.gov/dir/06-21.htm{{dead link|date=September 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} (now offline) [9] As of September 13, 2006, a cached version of the site could be found on Google, suggesting that the site was available to the public at the time, and that it was indexed on Google's servers.[10] Roger Salazar, a California Democratic Party spokesman also was quoted as saying - "They want to put it off onto some massive conspiracy theory... The governor's office is trying to play up the nefarious angle to deflect attention from their own incompetence — accidentally posting the recording on its own Web site. And from the recordings themselves." [11]In early 2007, the California Highway Patrol issued a report clearing the Angelides campaign and Sullivan and Newman of any wrongdoing. The CHP concluded in its 38-page report that the digital audio files were placed on a website that was "accessed by backwards browsing ... which does not constitute a crime." The report also indicated that "there were no security measures in place that would prevent backwards browsing." The CHP recommended that no criminal charges be filed against anyone involved in "Tapegate."[12] Upon being vindicated by law enforcement investigators, Newman questioned Schwarzenegger's use of law enforcement for political purposes.
Employment with Coughlin StoiaIn 2007, Newman became public affairs director for Coughlin Stoia Geller Rudman & Robbins, a top plaintiffs' law firm in California. Newman also served as spokesman for William Lerach, a former partner at Coughlin Stoia who was indicted and pleaded guilty to one felony count of conspiracy to commit obstruction of justice and making false declarations under oath. Lerach credited Newman with helping him craft his departure memo,[13] which had allusions to Richard Nixon[14] and The Godfather.[15] References1. ^1 SCN Strategies. Retrieved 31 October 2009. 2. ^Lobbyist Lurking in Disguise? Seattle Times. 13 July 2001. 3. ^In The Northwest: Smoking out big tobacco's strategy to win votes. Seattle Post-Intelligencer. 31 August 2001. 4. ^November 2001 General Election Results. Washington Secretary of State. Retrieved 31 October 2009. 5. ^Message Works {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111009110424/http://www.messageworks.org/upgrade.html# |date=2011-10-09 }}. Retrieved 31 October 2009 6. ^Schwarzenegger Apologizes for Hot Tape. The New York Times. 8 September 2006. 7. ^Angelides campaign staffer downloaded guv's comments. San Francisco Chronicle. September 12, 2006. 8. ^Sex, lies and audiotape. Sacramento Bee quoted in Capitol Weekly's Daily Roundup. 12 September 2006. 9. ^Democrat rival admits 'hacking' Schwarzenegger{{dead link|date=September 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} The Inquirer. 13 September 2006. 10. ^ 11. ^Angelides Campaign Downloaded Schwarzenegger Comment, Says It Was Available to the Public. Governor’s Office Says it was “Unauthorized.” {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070509223257/http://www.californiaprogressreport.com/2006/09/angelides_campa.html |date=May 9, 2007 }} California Progress Report. 12 September 2006 12. ^1 CHP: Security Lax on Guv's Web Site; No Crime Occurred in Tapegate. San Francisco Chronicle. 2 February 2007 13. ^[https://blogs.wsj.com/law/2007/08/29/law-blog-phone-caller-of-the-day-bill-lerach/ Law Blog Phone Caller of the Day Bill Lerach.] The Wall Street Journal. 8 August 2007 14. ^[https://blogs.wsj.com/law/2007/08/29/did-bill-lerach-channel-richard-nixon/ Did Bill Lerach Channel Richard Nixon?]. The Wall Street Journal. 29 August 2007. 15. ^[https://blogs.wsj.com/law/2007/08/29/this-is-the-business-weve-chosen-did-lerach-channel-the-godfather-ii/ This is the business we've chosen: Did Lerach channel the Godfather II?]. The Wall Street Journal. 29 August 2007. External links
4 : Living people|Year of birth missing (living people)|People from San Francisco|American political consultants |
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