http://tnne.ws/1jYmte5 NRA lowers grade for Charles Sargent
Facing a challenger backed by gun rights activists in Tennessee, state Rep. Charles Sargent has received some bad news. The National Rifle Association has given him a B+ for the 2014 primary election.
The NRA says a politician who receives a B is still a "generally pro-gun candidate," but the grade could be seen as a blow to Sargent, who has boasted about having received A+ ratings from the influential group in the past. The NRA also appears to have left Sargent off its list of endorsed candidates.
The NRA did not explain how it arrived at the grade. Gun rights activists in Tennesseehave blamed the Franklin lawmaker for the failure of a bill that would have let handgun owners carry openly without a permit.
Sargent's opponent in the Aug. 7 primary, Steve Gawrys, received an "AQ" grade, the equivalent of A grade based on his answers to a questionnaire.
And remember this?
http://rockytoppolitics.com/2014/07/10/charles-sargent-employing-lobbyists-wife/
You got to admit, it takes a certain amount of nerve (or a sufficient level of stupidity) to face the voters and declare that they are your primary concern, while you rake in money from a lobbyist AND employ the lobbyist’s wife as your campaign manager.
The unseemly (some would say”sleazy”) little arrangement comes from Sargent’s relationship with Pfizer pharmaceuticals. Pfizer’s lobbyist is one Josh Brown, a former executive assistant to Gov. Don “Income Tax” Sundquist. Since taking on Pfizer as a client, Brown has funneled thousands of dollars to Sargent’s re-election campaigns. In fact, over the last couple of elections, no other individual legislator has received more money from Pfizer than Charles Sargent.
Now fast-forward to this year’s primary election in August. Brown’s wife, Mary Kate Brown, lists herself as working for the Sargent campaign. Below is a screen shot of her LinkedIn page.
Sargent has paid Mary Kate thousands of dollars in campaign consulting fees and his reports list her as his “campaign manager.” How cozy.
Sargent couldn’t get any closer to the Brown’s lobbying and consulting businesses than if he moved into their spare bedroom.
We know what you are all asking yourselves: “Isn’t this illegal?”
Unfortunately, no. It’s just what passes as “ethics” among some in the Tennessee legislature