Tagged: John Morrison

Posted: May 1, 2012 at 12:05 pm

Adultery and Abuse, Front and Center

I was forwarded a juicy e-mail late last night from a tipster, but didn’t have time to blog about it and I woke up to find that Pogie at Intelligent Discontent had scooped me. Check his post out. The e-mail contains a 30 second TV spot, by Montana Conservative Families, contrasting Rick Hill and Ken Miller on…..family values.

Miller is shown with his family, described as a Jesus-loving devoted husband, a “John Wayne, Johnny Cash and John Deere” type of guy, if you will.

We are then shown Rick Hill’s mug, and are told that he is an adulterer.  A photo of a cocktail waitress, in revealing dress, is then shown, the face blurred out, along with headlines from when Rick Hill’s first wife went public with his infidelity during his the 1998 Congressional campaign (said infidelity having been consummated with a cocktail waitress).

The narrator tells an abbreviated story of how Hill was stepping out on his wife at “a motel bar,” which we know to be none other than the world famous Sip ‘N Dip lounge in Great Falls (soon to have its own reality show, by the way.)

One might conclude, as Pogie does, that Ken Miller is behind this ad, though there is nothing in the ad to confirm this.  What we do know is that the apparent ring leader of Montana Conservative Families, a woman named Nancy Davis, has sent several emails out in the past, some bashing moderate Republicans and specifically Rick Hill for not having “social conservative values.”

Ken Miller has recently attacked Hill directly in public, in a very personal way–making fun of Hill for spending most of his time in Palm Springs, California at his second home–but has never alluded to his extramarital past.  Only the Stapleton campaign has crossed that line, with Bob Keenan, Stapleton’s number two, suggesting that Hill’s “skeletons” would ultimately take him down.

The timing of this video is also interesting if you consider the simliarities to what occurred in the Democratic Primary in 2006 between John Morrison and Jon Tester.

A month or so before election day during the Tester-Morrison face-off, Lee Newspapers had a big front-page expose about Morrison’s extramarital affair. He had a relationship with a woman many years earlier, but when he became State Auditor, his office ended up investigating her new husband for securities fraud. This raised a question about whether Morrison should have recused himself from the investigation.

But before the story hit the paper in 2006, an effective whisper campaign was conducted against Morrison, with letters and e-mails making the rounds among Democrats, giving the story a certain ripeness.  We will see if this Ken Miller-Rick Hill business follows the same trajectory.

 

Posted: February 9, 2012 at 5:47 pm

On Skeletons and Closets

When he was announced as Corey Stapleton’s runningmate yesterday, Bob Keenan took a whack at the entire Republican gubernatorial field, saying that all the other candidates “have skeletons in their closets” and thus Corey Stapleton “is the most electable.”

Whether this assertion is true or not, notice that Keenan expects the press to take care of his negative campaigning, to begin writing on the various problematic histories of each candidate simply because Keenan suggested it.

Asked at a press conference to elaborate about the “skeletons” in their opponents’ closets, Keenan declined.

“No, I won’t do that,” he told reporters. “That’s your job, and you’re good at it.”

There are several problems with what Keenan is trying to do.

First, in a big field of candidates, the media has to make some effort at fair treatment. Thus if they write about the scandalous past of one candidate, they must write about them all.  So the easier thing is to just stay away from the whole enterprise.

Second, the Montana press has an aversion to covering negative stuff, especially when it concerns Republican candidates. The conservative-owned newspapers in Montana will all be gunning for the GOP nominee in November.

Witness the hilariously absurd article in the Billings Gazette, regarding Rick Hill’s efforts to scrub his bio on his Wikipedia page (scrub it of any reference to his night club incident with a barmaid, and a subsequent press conference, while he was Congressman, in which his ex-wife burned him down as an abusive spouse).  The article refused to even state specifically what it was that Hill was trying to erase–describing it only as “details about Hill’s past campaigns and his 1976 divorce” but yet tried to report on the fact that he was trying to erase it.

Third, the press has an informal rule: you have to attack someone directly in order to make news.  That’s probably not a bad rule. It’s a spin-off of the age-old maxim, “if you have something to say, say it to my face.” Don’t go whispering it around town. Thus is Bob Keenan a sheep and a coward, for hinting at something but refusing to come out and say it directly. He’s hoping somebody else will do it.  Cowardice is not a quality we want in a leader.

I suppose that it’s not totally a bad thing that that Montana newspapers try to keep things clean.  There is something to be said for a positive news environment, especially in a special place like Montana.  But if you think about the way the press covers national politics, and the way that every little thing gets covered (a Tiffany’s revolving credit account, strapping the family dog to the roof of the car, failed marriages), one wonders if the Montana press’s self-censorship is really the way to go in a free and open society.  Nationally, the press rarely makes a concerted effort to cover things up.  Perhaps, too, should the Montana Press not be deciding what factual items about candidates are relevant.  That’s for the public to decide.

And the press is not always consistent in this regard.  John Morrison got skewered in the months before the primary in 2006, for an incident which occurred almost a decade earlier involving a bit of adultery.  The press simply decided that they wanted to write about it because it was juicy and timely.  Perhaps Democrats should be grateful that the incident was covered, because the issue surely would have been raised by Conrad Burns in the general election.  Morrison had been the big money leader in the primary, but went immediately down the tubes.  The stronger candidate (Jon Tester) thus ended up winning the Primary and the General election, and  thus did the media’s coverage of a steamy affair help ensure a meritorious election.   So maybe Democrats are quietly sitting by and hoping that Rick Hill’s several problems do not get ink until July.

It’s no secret that Keenan is pointing the finger at Rick Hill.  Numerous candidates, including Ken Miller and Stapleton and the now-defunct Essmann, have all been trying to get newspapers and TV stations to cover Hill’s flaws.

But Keenan should be careful what he wishes for.  Stapleton himself has a problematic past.  When he first put up his own Wikipedia page, it made a reference to his having suffered a “childhood addiction,” a term that I’ve never heard before.  (Presumably, this means that Stapleton was once a drug addict, probably as a teenager or young adult.)  A few weeks later, after this strange reference had been reported (and ridiculed) by my blog, the reference was taken down off the Wikipedia page.  But of course, it never made news.

Posted: September 21, 2011 at 12:19 pm

This is Why Young Women Rock

You know when you have to go to the hospital that it isn’t going be cheap, but what you probably didn’t know that hospitals charge the highest prices to those who can least afford it.  That’s why it’s so great that a 20-year-old young woman is taking on hospitals in Montana for giving big price breaks to the insurance industry while sticking the uninsured with higher hospital bills.

Kudos to Jessica Gazelka, a Montana student, for stepping up to fight against the special discounts that hospitals provide for health insurers.  As the Helena IR reports, Ms. Gazelka says such arrangements “illegally fix prices and discriminate against the uninsured.”

The IR editorial board had the right idea when they wrote today that,

many of us view health care as a basic right, and it’s difficult to fit that basic right perfectly into the capitalist model that works so well in most of the rest of our economy.

The IR is also right that this case will be one to watch-especially for those who thought it was okay to stop asking about the problems with our health care system. Anyone who has been going around raving about how great everything is after so-called “reform” should take a page from Ms. Gazelka.

Regardless of the outcome of her case,  she’s already doing great work by reminding people that the system (still) isn’t working.

Posted: June 15, 2011 at 7:07 am

GUEST POST: Handicapping the 2012 AG Race

After reading Montanafesto’s analysis of the latest GOPer to enter the 2012 Governor’s race in Montana, I thought folks here might be interested in a look at the Dems that are being talked about for a possible AG run in Montana and Cowgirl has kindly allowed me a guest post.  There are three or four democrats right now who are considering running for Steve Bullock’s seat as Attorney General should he run for Governor:  Jesse Laslovich, a former state legislator; Tyler Gernant, who ran for Congress before being defeated in the 2010 Democratic primary; Pam Bucy, Chief Legal Council for the Montana Department of Labor; and John Morrison, former Montana State Auditor who ran for Senate before being defeated in the 2006 primary by Jon Tester despite raising millions.

Demographics likely play somewhat of a role.  Montana has never had a female Attorney General, and there have only been twelve women AG’s in the U.S. Gernant and Laslovich are somewhat younger, and will both just make it in under the required five years of legal practice required by state law for Attorney General in Montana.  Somehow, I doubt that Montanans will want to put a “barely legal” candidate up against Tim Fox, last cycles Republican candidate and a tough competitor.  John Morrison would be good at raising money, but may face similar electability problems as Rick Hill.

A larger factor in the race however will be experience.  Bucy’s experience includes service as deputy county attorney for Lewis and Clark County. Then in 2001, Pam was appointed Executive Assistant Attorney General for Attorney General Mike McGrath. She’s also got several years of private sector experience, working at a private firm in Helena for several years.  She is currently Chief Legal for the Montana Department of Labor, which has like 600 employees.  Morrison’s experience would also be formidable as the former State Auditor in charge of an agency with 70 employees.

Given the experience gap, it appears unlikely that Gernant will jump into the race. Laslovich has come closer to being publicly committed to actually running, and has more experience than Gernant, in that he has been a state legislator. He also has some anti-choice votes that will  make it difficult for him to win in a primary, including voting for a bill that is essentially the personhood initiative-the abortion ban that anti-choicers have failed to get on the ballot for the past two election cycles.

Posted: May 19, 2011 at 1:13 pm

Farmers Are Bad*sses

Three Montana farmers are suing insurance megalith Blue Cross Blue Shield over unscrupulous business practices.

Why is it that farmers are so often found leading the charge for progress?

As Whitefish farmer and former state legislator Mike Jopek (D-Whitefish HD4) writes, many of the founding fathers are farmers. Senator Jon Tester too is known for being the Senate’s only farmer, working hard to bring progress to the U.S. Senate for Montana.   So it is no surprise that a band of Montana farmers is standing up to take on Insurance giant Blue Cross Blue Shield.  Good for them.

Farmers from the Fossen family have gone out and hired John Morrison, the former Montana Insurance Commissioner (State Auditor) no less, as their attorney and boldly sued Blue Cross for

evading state law that requires group policies to treat all members equally and keep increases within certain limits.

The Billings Gazette has the story:

“Montana’s laws prohibit group health plans from charging excessive premiums to employers on the basis of health status,” [the farmer's attorney] said. “In these association plans, the health insurance companies are dodging the law, raising rates through the roof for many employers, and cherry-picking to get younger, healthier customers. We hope this case will bring that to an end.”

The Fossens allege that Blue Cross misled them into thinking that if they joined a Blue Cross “association plan” they would get large group pricing, but instead, once they started to file claims, the game changed.  Blue Cross raised their rates by 21 percent in 2006, and they were treated as an individual family instead of a group–siphoning them off from the rest of the group so that everybody else’s prices stayed super-low.

In a big group plan, large numbers of people share the burden equally, keeping pricing fair and low for everyone.  This was supposed to be the whole point of joining the associations: to give small businesses new options for buying insurance together in a group.

If such groups cherry pick healthy individuals and firms, they can keep their group super healthy and low cost.  But this leaves all the older and less healthy people forced to buy individual policies, making insurance more expensive for everyone else.  It’s against the law for insurance companies to kick-off people with higher health costs or to charge them more than the rest of the association.