Color Them Corrupt: Doe Documents Paint Republican Senators Olsen, Harsdorf as Key Players in Payoff to Major Donor
Voted to Provide Immunity From Legal Liability to Major Donor to Group That Attacked Their Election Opponents
MADISON, Wis. — Explosive new documents from the 2012 John Doe investigation of political corruption involving Gov. Scott Walker’s campaign and special interest groups published by The Guardian today implicate Republican state Senators in advancing the legislative agenda of a major donor to a group that spent heavily in their recall elections.
“It’s been clear for years that there’s no line between Gov. Walker’s administration, his campaign and the agendas of his big money donors,” commented One Wisconsin Now Executive Director Scot Ross. “But these documents paint key state Senators as deplorably corrupt and engaging in the same sleazy tactics as Walker, paying back a major donor to the group that bailed them out in their recall elections.”
Evidence gathered by state prosecutors found that Harold Simmons, owner of NL Industries, one of the largest manufacturers in the U.S. of lead used in paint, donated $750,000 to the Wisconsin Club for Growth. That group spent heavily in the 2011 recall elections of key Republican senators, including Luther Olsen and Sheila Harsdorf.
Olsen and Harsdorf subsequently voted as members of the Joint Committee on Finance to insert a last second provision into the 2013 state budget that granted Simmons’ corporation retroactive immunity from legal liability for the poisoning of Wisconsin children with lead produced by his company and used in paint. The motion was the final “999 motion” of the 2013 budget deliberations (see 6b).
In an email providing talking points from Club for Growth Wisconsin head and Gov. Walker campaign consultant R.J. Johnson to Walker for a call to donors, set to be made from the taxpayer funded mansion provided to Walker, the efforts of the Club in the recall elections for key state Senators were detailed. Walker was instructed to note, “We needed to hold four of the six Republican Senators facing recalls last week in order to maintain our conservative majority in the state senate. With your help and against the odds, we beat back the national unions and held our majority …”
Specific recall elections efforts of the Club for Growth Wisconsin that Walker was directed to highlight included attacks on the the opponents of Senators Olsen and Harsdorf.
Ross concluded, “The state Senators who benefitted from lead paint industry-fueled campaign spending on their behalf put protecting the people who poisoned children with retroactive immunity from liability before justice for victims. Luther Olsen, Sheila Harsdorf and the others who were in on this sleazy deal have some serious explaining to do for their deplorable actions.”