Starkville Daily News

Indictment of Missouri governor could have political ripples

- By DAVID A. LIEB, JIM SALTER and BLAKE NELSON Associated Press

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — It didn’t take long after Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens was indicted for alleged invasion of privacy for Missouri Democrats to tie him to Attorney General Josh Hawley, the presumed GOP front runner in Missouri’s hotly contested U.S. Senate race.

Nor did it take long for Republican­s to link the prosecutor who announced the charges to a prominent national Democratic financier.

The quick injection of politics was a strong sign that Greitens’ potentiall­y prolonged legal battle stemming from an extramarit­al affair could have implicatio­ns for the 2018 elections — especially for fellow Republican­s whom history suggests have a disadvanta­ge as the party in power during the midterm of Donald Trump’s presidency.

So far, Greitens, 43, has remained defiant against growing but not-yet-overwhelmi­ng calls to resign from some fellow Republican­s, while instead portraying the felony charge against him as nothing more than a political jab by a “reckless liberal prosecutor.”

The Missouri Republican Party noted that St. Louis circuit attorney Kim Gardner had received more than $200,000 from wealthy liberal financier George Soros during her campaign — casting the indictment as part of a broader Democratic attack on Republican­s.

The Thursday indictment came just five days ahead of Tuesday’s start of the candidacy filing period for Missouri residents wanting to run for U.S. Senate, Congress, and state and local offices. Hawley is challengin­g Missouri Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill.

An incumbent governor typically is a help to his party in races such as the Senate, but an indicted one could be a detriment.

“It doesn’t help the image of the Republican Party, so in that sense it helps McCaskill and hurts Hawley” in the Senate race, said Ken Warren, a longtime political scientist at Saint Louis University.

The Missouri Senate race is being closely watched as one that could determine control of the chamber, where Republican­s now have a bare majority of 51 seats. McCaskill is one of only two statewide-elected Democrats in Missouri, which Donald Trump carried by nearly 20 percentage points in 2016. Republican­s got behind Hawley early after a disastrous 2012 campaign when McCaskill defeated Todd Akin following his comments about “legitimate rape.”

Whether Democrats can effectivel­y tie Greitens to Hawley remains to be seen. But indication­s are that they will try.

On Friday, The Missouri Democratic Party noted that Hawley had accepted nearly $50,000 in contributi­ons from Greitens in 2016 and has not called on Greitens to resign. The attorney general is conducting an investigat­ion over Greitens’ use of a secretive app that deletes messages once they’ve been read. It’s unclear when the investigat­ion will conclude.

Hawley took to Twitter on Friday and, without mentioning Greitens, noted that an indictment “is a serious matter” with no place for partisansh­ip. He also expressed support for a newly announced legislativ­e investigat­ion into the governor, saying he’s confident “the House’s investigat­ion will be thorough and swift, and will proceed without regard to party.”

That House investigat­ion could serve as a first step for impeachmen­t proceeding­s against Greitens, though it also could determine he has done nothing warranting his removal from office.

University of Missouri political science professor Peverill Squire said the 38-year-old Hawley is in a “very awkward” spot.

“As the state’s chief legal officer, he has to not appear to question the veracity of the legal process and certainly be supportive of prosecutor­ial staff,” Squire said. “The other problem is, of course, he’s sort of the other young and up and coming Republican, and although he obviously doesn’t wish to get confused with Greitens, it’ll be hard for him to distinguis­h himself.”

McCaskill, a former prosecutor, has not commented about Greitens’ indictment, and spokespeop­le for both her Senate office and campaign did not respond to messages seeking comment on Friday. But she took a political jab at him after the media reported last month that Greitens had engaged in a 2015 affair with his former hairdresse­r. The woman was recorded as saying that Greitens had blindfolde­d her, bound her hands and took an unwanted photo of her during a sexual encounter in the basement of his St. Louis house.

Speaking to Democrats in Columbia, McCaskill quipped last month that Greitens had run as a political outsider.

“He was going to do things that literally no other governor had done,” McCaskill said, as reported by the Columbia Daily Tribune. “Little did we know it was sex in the basement.”

Republican consultant John Hancock, who is not affiliated with either Greitens or Hawley’s campaign, called the indictment a “political sham” but added that the underlying facts of Greitens’ affair pose “a real political problem” for Republican­s in the 2018 elections.

In presidenti­al midterm elections, supporters of the incumbent president’s party typically are less motivated that those in the challengin­g party, he said. The president’s party typically loses seats in Congress. Hancock said Greitens’ troubles could provide yet another reason for Republican voters to stay home on Nov. 6.

“A depressed turnout affects the entire ticket,” Hancock said.

Warren said that if Hawley starts to fall behind in the race, Republican­s could pressure Greitens to resign. Noting the governor’s maverick streak, he doubts it would work.

“Since when has he taken cues from fellow Republican­s?” Warren asked.

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