[Vision2020] Idahoans to Pay for GOP Lawsuit

Donovan Arnold donovanjarnold2005 at yahoo.com
Fri Apr 8 10:48:48 PDT 2011


No money for teacher salaries but we got plenty for law suites the people don't want? How much is it going to cost the taxpayer to revamp the entire primary system and register every person that wants to vote in the Idaho Primaries? 
 
Why should I have to pay for the Republican Party Primary since it is not open to the general public? It is a private event, not a public one, as was the lawsuit. Shouldn't the Republicans recuse themselves from a vote, since it was monetary conflict of interest? Can we not sue for that vote? We ought to individually sue each legislator that takes money from the Republican Party that voted to give taxpayer money to the Republican Party. 
 
Donovan Arnold

--- On Fri, 4/8/11, Art Deco <deco at moscow.com> wrote:


From: Art Deco <deco at moscow.com>
Subject: Re: [Vision2020] Idahoans to Pay for GOP Lawsuit
To: "Vision 2020" <vision2020 at moscow.com>
Date: Friday, April 8, 2011, 7:29 AM





Whores.

----- Original Message ----- 
From: Tom Hansen 
To: Moscow Vision 2020 
Sent: Friday, April 08, 2011 5:54 AM
Subject: [Vision2020] Idahoans to Pay for GOP Lawsuit

Courtesy of today's (April 8, 2011) Spokesman-Review.

---------------------------------------------------------

Public to pay for GOP suit
Lawmakers vote $100,000 to pay attorney fees

BOISE - Idaho lawmakers rushed through a bill to pay $100,000 to the Idaho
Republican Party - to which 81 percent of them belong - in the final days
of this year's legislative session, to cover the party's attorney fees in
its successful primary election lawsuit against the state.

Though it's not uncommon for prevailing parties to get their legal fees
paid in a federal civil rights case, what's unusual is how the Idaho GOP
set up its fee arrangement with its attorney - a rare "contingent fee"
deal in which only the taxpayers would have to pay, not the party,
regardless of the outcome.

"It was not something they had to do," said John Strait, a law professor
at Seattle University School of Law and an expert on federal court
litigation. "The Republicans decided they would rather have him paid out
of taxpayer money, and they set it up that way."

Idaho Republican Party Chairman Norm Semanko declined repeated requests
for comment on why the party chose that route. The party's executive
director, Jonathan Parker, said, "It's my understanding that it's standard
operating procedure for court cases like this." He said Semanko had
nothing to say beyond that.

The oddity drew plenty of opposition as the bill careened through the
House and Senate, with not only every legislative Democrat but but also
nine GOP House members and three Republican senators opposing the payment.

"I have to point out, we're paying $100,000 for the Republican Party to
sue the Republican Legislature, defended by the Republican secretary of
state, in order to close primaries in Idaho - I just think this is so bad
it's comical," said Sen. Elliot Werk, D-Boise.

Sen. Shawn Keough, R-Sandpoint, who voted against the bill, said, "They
weren't forced to submit that bill . and I found it insulting that they
did that. I don't believe it's appropriate that the taxpayers pay that
money."

Keough noted that when the party held its convention in Sandpoint in 2008,
a majority of the attendees voted against closing the GOP primary. But
then the party's central committee moved forward anyway, and sued the
state; party rules now require the GOP primary in Idaho to be closed to
anyone other than registered party members.

Because Idaho's never had party registration, that's forcing a re-do of
the state's entire primary election system; GOP-backed legislation now
awaiting the governor's signature would force all Idahoans to publicly
declare their party preference for the first time.

Keough said, "I remain disturbed that even while in essence shutting out
the public, they asked the public to pay for it."

The Idaho GOP's lawyer, Christ Troupis of Eagle, who didn't return a call
for comment Thursday, filed an affidavit with the federal court stating
that he's represented the party on a "contingent fee" basis in the case
since 2008. "My fee agreement with the Idaho Republican Party and Chairman
Norm Semanko was for a contingent fee, comprised of whatever sum was
awarded by this Court in the event that the Plaintiffs were successful in
prosecuting their claims in this action," he wrote.

In the affidavit, he said his total fees and costs came to $143,880. The
state negotiated and got that lowered to $100,000 in a settlement, and the
two sides filed a stipulation with the court agreeing to the figure. On
Tuesday, after the $100,000 payment bill already had passed the Senate,
U.S. District Judge Lynn Winmill issued an order granting the stipulation.

Jeffry Finer, a Spokane attorney with 26 years of federal civil rights
litigation experience, said, "Judges typically award fees in civil rights
cases."

"The losing side could really be rational and say . negotiate these fees
and get 'em paid, we don't want to go to court - the judge could hit us
even worse," he said. "And while we fight, the meter's running."

Finer called the settlement over the amount "impressive," saying, "Getting
almost a third of it knocked off ain't bad," and said the fees aren't
extraordinarily high for the type of litigation involved.

Contingent fee arrangements, however, are rare in civil rights cases like
this one, which challenged a state law, rather than seeking money damages.
They're more typical in cases in which someone is suing for cash damages -
the lawyer takes a gamble that he'll win the case, and get paid only a
percentage of those winnings, typically anywhere from 25 to 45 percent.

Strait called the arrangement "unusual in that type of case."

He said, "In terms of whether they're entitled to it, the statute says
that they are." But, he said, they "didn't have to ask for it."

House Minority Leader John Rusche, D-Lewiston, said, "As a citizen I just
am really upset by this - paying the Republican Party to sue the state of
Idaho to make it more difficult for citizens to vote in the primary. Just
listen to what we're doing. . The plaintiffs did not have to request money
from the state coffers, the Republican Party chose to. . I think that's
just unconscionable."

The bill, SB 1202, is now awaiting action by GOP Idaho Gov. Butch Otter.

-------------------

Senate Bill 1202

Status
http://www.legislature.idaho.gov/legislation/2011/S1202.htm

Text
http://www.legislature.idaho.gov/legislation/2011/S1202.pdf

---------------------------------------------------------

Seeya round town, Moscow.

Tom Hansen
Moscow, Idaho

"The Pessimist complains about the wind, the Optimist expects it to
changeand the Realist adjusts his sails."

 - Unknown


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