Jason Carter has “gotten David Axelrod to come down and be his campaign adviser.”
— Gov. Nathan Deal in a radio interview July 17
Gov. Nathan Deal was on radio recently to address allegations that two of his aides pressured the director of the state ethics commission to settle cases against his campaign.
Erick Erickson of News 95.5 & AM 750 WSB asked the governor what he thought of Democratic opponent Jason Carter’s call for an independent investigation.
Deal said it wasn’t surprising “now that Carter has gotten David Axelrod to come down and be his campaign adviser.”
Axelrod, a longtime political strategist, is closely tied to President Barack Obama. He was campaign manager when Obama won the presidency in 2008 and followed Obama to Washington to serve as a White House senior adviser. In 2011, he became senior strategist for Obama’s successful 2012 re-election campaign.
Deal is hardly the first candidate in this year’s elections to try to link an opponent to Obama, who has a low 42 percent job approval rating.
In the state’s GOP Senate race, U.S. Rep. Jack Kingston tried to tar opponent David Perdue by pointing out that a company with Perdue on its board of directors had accepted money from Obama’s stimulus program. Perdue attacked Kingston for helping fund Obama’s Cash for Clunkers program.
In this case, Deal got it wrong.
Axelrod isn’t working on Carter’s campaign. He’s running the Institute of Politics at the University of Chicago.
But AKPD Message and Media, a consulting firm Axelrod founded and sold in 2009, is working for Carter, a two-term state senator and a grandson of former President Jimmy Carter. The younger Carter was born in Georgia but grew up outside of Chicago.
AKPD is doing media consulting for Carter’s campaign for governor and, as of the last disclosure reports, had been paid $67,908.
Jen Talaber, a spokeswoman for Deal’s re-election bid, said the campaign wasn’t aware Axelrod sold the firm five years ago. It was an “honest mistake,” she said an email.
But Talaber said the governor’s underlying point still stands.
“Carter’s campaign team and consultants are Obama insiders, and his national fundraising list shows the Obama brain trust is in full force,” she said.
Bryan Thomas, the communications director for the Carter campaign, said Deal’s claim about Axelrod was intentional.
“Governor Deal will do anything he can to distract from his ethical quagmire, including lie about his opponent,” Thomas said.
Earlier this month, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution obtained a memo in which Holly LaBerge, the head of the state ethics commission, said she was pressured by Deal’s office in 2012 to “make (ethics) complaints” against the governor “go away.”
The complaints included claims Deal improperly paid for use of a private aircraft for campaign travel and questioned his use of campaign funds to pay legal fees during his 2010 campaign.
The ethics commission wound up dismissing the major complaints against Deal. He agreed to pay $3,350 in fees for technical defects to his campaign disclosures.
Now, the Deal campaign isn’t the only one spreading word of an Axelrod connection.
The Georgia Republican Party has a Web page on “Chicago liberals,” with images of Carter, Axelrod and Obama.
It states: “Sadly, Chicago-style politics have come to Georgia. Atlanta liberal Jason Carter has hired Barack Obama’s trusted ally, David Axelrod.”
It goes on to say: “Liberals know they can’t hit Gov. Deal on jobs, the economy, or education. So they’ve resorted to attacking Gov. Deal’s character … Tell Jason Carter, Barack Obama, and David Axelrod we don’t need Chicago liberals running around Georgia attacking our conservative values.”
AKPD’s website touts the firm’s founding by Axelrod and has a quote from him on its homepage.
We reached out to firm executives just to ask point-blank whether Axelrod were in some way connected to them or the Carter campaign.
Isaac Baker, a partner in the firm, said Axelrod “does not work for our firm” and “is not involved in any way in the Jason Carter campaign.”
To summarize, David Axelrod is not working as a campaign adviser to Jason Carter. But the firm he founded and sold five years ago is.
Talaber, Deal’s campaign spokeswoman, said the governor made an “honest mistake” when he said on radio that Axelrod was working for Carter. But she said the underlying point still stands — that Carter’s campaign team and consultants are “Obama insiders.”
That doesn’t change the fact that the governor was incorrect in saying that Jason Carter has “gotten David Axelrod to come down and be his campaign adviser.”
We rate Deal’s statement as False.
About the Author