The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Reports raise Perdue ethics questions

He’s said to have sought to boost donors, firm in which he bought stock.

- By Brad Schrade brad. schrade@ ajc. com

Sen. David Perdue faced fresh questions this week about whether he used his position in Washington to try to secure lucrative tax breaks for pro sports owners and to boost a defense contractor in which he had purchased stock.

The revelation­s came in separate reports by national media outlets and renewed focus on questions that have followed the Georgia Republican this election year. Perdue’s campaign said he’s done nothing wrong.

Propublica, a nonprofit news outlet, on Friday reported that Perdue has collected more than $ 425,000 in campaign contributi­ons from pro sports owners and their families, including from fellow Georgia Sen. Kelly Loeffler, according to campaign finance records. Loeffler is a co- owner of the Atlanta Dream of the WNBA.

Perdue presses Mnuchin

L ast year, Perdue privately pressed Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin to try to help pro sports owners benefit from a tax break in the 2017 tax bill pushed by President Donald Trump, according to the Propublica report.

Mnuchin’s agency helped draft rules for how the bill would be implemente­d and carried out, but owners of pro sports teams were excluded from a narrow provision that offered up to a 20% tax deduction for pass- through businesses and certain types of income.

Perdue drafted a letter on Jan. 2 3, 2 019, noti ng hi s c oncern about implementa­tion and urging Mnuchin to reconsider.

“The Office of the Commission­er of Major League Baseball has submitted extensive comments on these regulation­s during the public comment period that further explain the proper applicatio­n of the Section 199A deduction to owners of profession­al sports clubs,” Perdue wrote.

Ultimately, Perdue’s effort failed to persuade the Treasury to change the rules.

His campaign told the AJC there was nothing wrong with the request and that Perdue has a unique perspectiv­e on the sports industry because he is the former CEO of Reebok athletic brand.

“The Treasury probably received hundreds if not thousands of comments on this rule- making and ultimately decided to take a different approach,” Perdue campaign spokesman John Burke told the AJC.

But these types of behind- thescenes maneuvers that are all too common in Washington can impact the public’s view of whom politician­s are really serving, said Meredith Mcgehee, executive director of Issue One, a nonpartisa­n Washington group that focuses on money i n politic s, lobbying and campaign finance reform.

“It’s really where the rubber hits the road, where the donor money comes i nto play,” she said. “It leads to this speculatio­n about motive, and it undermines the decision he is making, or any public official is making.”

Daily Beast report

On Wednesday, a report in The Daily Beast detailed Perdue’s role on a powerful Senate subcommitt­ee that has oversight of the U. S. Navy. It detailed his influence in the military budgeting process that benefited a submarine contractor in which Perdue had invested.

In the weeks before he became chairman of the Senate Armed Services Subcommitt­ee on Seapower in January 2019, Perdue started purchasing stock totaling up to $ 190,000 in BWX Technologi­es, a Virginia- based firm with millions in contracts to develop high- tech components for the Navy’s nuclear submarines.

Over the ensuing months, as Perdue helped shape the military’s funding benchmarks, the stock’s price rose, and Perdue sold shares at a profit, the Daily Beast reported. His 2019 disclosure statements show he reported earnings between $ 15,000 and $ 50,000 in the BWX trades that year.

The story echoed questions Perdue faced earlier this year about stock trades. In May, he announced t hat hi s portfolio would no l onger i nclude i ndividual company stocks after he and other members of Congress faced criticism that they benefited from stock trades based on inside informatio­n during the early days of the coronaviru­s pandemic. He denied any wrongdoing, and his campaign says multiple outside reviews have cleared him.

His campaign said the Department of Justice, the Securities and Exchange Commission and the bipartisan Senate Select Committee on Ethics have reviewed the matter and found he did nothing wrong. They note that all his stock transactio­ns are disclosed in regular filings with the Senate. The campaign criticized the new story as more of the same.

“This is a desperate attempt by left- wing blogs and Democratic operatives to revisit an issue that has been asked, answered and settled,” Burke said. “These attacks have been tried, and they failed because they are false. David Perdue doesn’t manage his trades or retirement funds — they are handled by outside financial advisers.”

Blind trusts urged

Still, his Senate challenger Jon Ossoff seized on the story to again attack Perdue, as he has for stock trades in the past.

“He is blatantly exploiting his office to line his own pockets,” Ossoff said .“This conduct is utterly inexcusabl­e.”

Ossoff said members of Congress should place their investment­s in qualified blind trusts, something he has pledged to do if he’s elected. Only a handful of senators currently utilize blind trusts.

Mcgehee, the government reform advocate, said i t’s not a partisan issue, as both sides have run into difficulty over the years with questions about investment­s. She said blind trusts are an easy way to“take the issue off the table.”

“It doesn’ t require drastic action,” she said. “It is firewall that both protects you as a politician and helps build public trust.”

 ?? JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE AJC ?? In May, Sen. David Perdue said his portfolio would no longer hold individual company stocks after he and other lawmakers faced criticism they benefited from trades based on inside informatio­n early in the pandemic. He denied wrongdoing, and his campaign says multiple outside reviews cleared him.
JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE AJC In May, Sen. David Perdue said his portfolio would no longer hold individual company stocks after he and other lawmakers faced criticism they benefited from trades based on inside informatio­n early in the pandemic. He denied wrongdoing, and his campaign says multiple outside reviews cleared him.

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