The following scandals-to-be never gelled in the public consciousness. Whether or not they would have changed anybody’s vote is an academic question now, but it’s still interesting to review…
- Porngate: Martha Rainville’s alleged coverup of an illegal porn video made by those under her command was at first brought to the surface by three anonymous letters (that we know of). SInce then, Rainville herself has confirmed the essence of the story, and that there is an investigation, but the details are still unclear.
- Wildergate: After news of Jim Douglas’s tanking of the Wilderness Act that had all-but-passed in Washington, came a verifiable email trail indicating that members of his administration had worked behind the scenes with anti-environmental interests to devise strategies against wilderness protection. This story never caught on like the initial scuttling of the act did. Clearly it wasn’t pushed as heavily as one might expect from either the Parker campaign or the state Democratic Party, and the institution that was in the best position to make political hay out of it (the Democratic Legislative caucuses) have showed little interest in assisting the top of their in-state ticket, going back as far as the Health Care debate last session. Odd, that.
- Alohagate: Members of the press seemed almost bored with election coverage and were content to allow Lt. Governor Brian Dubie to skate by on his “disclaimer” that essentially said his accounting of his time performing official duties, officially demanded by the Dunne campaign, simply may or may not be accurate. The notable contradiction was his Hawaiian vacation that was unreflected in his schedule which may be an understandable omission – or it may not be. Given that nobody bothered to look into it in any meaningful way, we’ll never really know.
- Multi-million-dollar-government-fraudgate: Okay, maybe not the catchiest title. This is the one you probably never heard about unless you’ve been reading this site for a while. It concerns Rich Tarrant’s firing and direct involvement (while running IDX) of the case of a high profile whistleblower (IDX’s Director of Informatics) who accused IDX (with the full knowledge of higher-ups) of defrauding the US government of millions of dollars under a federal contract. The whistleblower was fired and his case is currently under appeal. While his original lawyer had his license suspended, Dr. Mauricio Leon found other counsel, and insiders close to the case indicated to me a high probability of a successful appeal based on the questionable ruling by the first judge. This one even has the hint of the possibility of a supressed Department of Justice report that may have reflected poorly on Tarrant, the GOP Senate candidate.
So there you have them. Porngate and MMDGF-gate we may very well hear more about in the months to come, but the other two, I’m afraid, will simply be consigned to the dustbin of history. I do hope I’m wrong about that.