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SPECIAL REPORT: ACORN Workers Claim Minimum Wage Funds Helping McCaskill

Posted on 04 October 2006 by Antonio French

PUB DEF EXCLUSIVE VIDEO REPORT

Several former and current workers demonstrated today in front of the St. Louis office of the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN) demanding to be paid for work they had performed and alleging that they were instructed to tell people to vote for U.S. Senate candidate Claire McCaskill while registering voters in support of the proposed minimum wage increase.

Ten-year ACORN veteran Josephine Perkins claims she was fired last week, in part because she informed the teams she supervised that it was inappropriate and illegal for them to campaign for McCaskill while being paid by ACORN and Give Missourians a Raise, the political action committee which supports Proposition B and, according to campaign finance reports, has given money to ACORN to circulate its literature.

Several other ACORN workers also told PUB DEF that they were told to ask voters to vote for McCaskill. But Johanna Sharrard, the political field director for ACORN, denies that is the case.

“That’s not going on in this office,” she said. “It’s not been the case at all.”

She declined to say on-camera why Perkins was fired. But Perkins told us the reason Sharrard, who has been at the St. Louis office only four weeks, gave for her termination was theft, a charge she vehemently denies.

Another ACORN worker, Joseph Weick, said he has not been paid for work he did with the organization last month. He also said that he and others were told last week that they needed to re-apply for their positions, which he took as a termination.

“They refuse to give me my check,” said Weick. “I guess there’s at least about a half a dozen of us that have worked for these people and aren’t getting paid.”

Weick said he too was told to ask people to vote for McCaskill while registering voters and passing out literature supporting the minimum wage increase, which if true could be a violation of federal election laws.

“These are very serious allegations and we are reviewing our options as they relate to the McCaskill campaign and the potential exploitation of a tax-exempt organization that is supposed to help those who need help the most,” said Rich Chrismer, a spokesman for McCaskill’s opponent, Sen. Jim Talent.

The McCaskill campaign declined to comment for this story.

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McCaskill Rallies Democrats, Aide Kicks Jeff Smith Out of Meeting

Posted on 06 September 2006 by Antonio French

PUB DEF EXCLUSIVE

U.S. Senate candidate Claire McCaskill met yesterday with several St. Louis area Democratic elected officials to emphasize the importance of the upcoming statewide elections and to heal whatever wounds may remain from last month’s Primary fights.

Mayor Francis Slay, Comptroller Darlene Green, State Senator Maida Coleman, State Reps. John Bowman, Robin Wright-Jones, Yaphett El-Amin, Connie Johnson, soon-to-be State Rep. Jamilah Nasheed, City Democratic Committee Chair Brian Wahby and most of the committee members were at the meeting at McCaskill’s city headquarters in the St. Louis Marketplace on Manchester. But one recently elected city Democrat did not attend — and not for lack of trying.

Jeff Smith, who recently won a tough primary election for State Senate and has no opposition in the general election, was stopped at the door and asked to leave by McCaskill’s political director, Brandon Davis. He told Smith the meeting was only for “elected officials.”

At least two of those elected officials voiced some concerns they had with McCaskill and the direction of the state party.

Committeewoman Norma Leggette (4th Ward) told McCaskill that she wasn’t sure what to tell her constituents about what the Democratic Party stood for anymore. She said she felt the there were two parties in the City — one white, one black.

Committeeman Joe Palm (26th Ward) said that McCaskill’s opponent, Sen. Jim Talent, was making strong inroads into the black community. He claimed the incumbent Republican has been making promises of financial aid to black church leaders and even some northside politicos. Palm warned McCaskill that gimmicks won’t increase voter turnout.

“I know I lost, but my opponents in my [State Rep] race had a big truck with video and signs too, and the turnout was still terrible,” said Palm. He said the Republicans have gimmicks too. “Talent lit the Arch up pink,” he said referring to Talent’s bill that authorized bathing the Gateway Arch in pink lights to bring attention to breast cancer.

McCaskill listened quietly to Palm and Leggette before taking the floor. In a spirited voice, she told them that she would do everything she could to make clear to every Democratic voter that “George Bush has no better friend than Jim Talent.”

McCaskill said she would remind people that “George Bush let people die on rooftops in New Orleans because they were poor and because they were black.”

“That’s what I’m talking about,” interrupted Palm. “Your people should be videotaping that right now!”

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