Rob Bonta gives back more fraught campaign funds

Inside the Golden State political arena
Oct 25, 2024 View in browser
 
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By Dustin Gardiner and Lara Korte

California Attorney General Rob Bonta speaks during a press conference.

It’s the third instance this year that Rob Bonta has returned campaign donations after facing questions about the sources of the money. | Minh Connors/AP Photo

THE BUZZ: WHAT TIMING — Just days before state Attorney General Rob Bonta’s office announced he wouldn’t pursue criminal charges against Southern California Edison over its role in sparking the 2018 Woolsey Fire, he received a windfall of campaign funding from lawyers working for the electric utility company.

Bonta raked in $72,500 over a three-day period in August 2021 from lawyers employed by the firm Hueston Hennigan LLP, including partners at the firm who directly represented SoCal Edison on the case, campaign finance reports reviewed by Playbook show.

The funding went toward Bonta’s campaign committee to be reelected as AG. That burst of campaign cash raises questions about Bonta’s vetting process for contributions, as well as any potential influence his political benefactors had in the investigation — all while Bonta mulls whether to run for California governor in 2026: If he does decide to run for governor, he could transfer a big chunk of cash from his AG pot to that campaign.

Bonta’s campaign said he now plans to return at least some of the funds, a decision he made after receiving questions from Playbook. His campaign didn’t specify how much he would refund. But it’s the third instance this year that Bonta has returned campaign donations after Playbook raised questions about the sources of the money.

He previously returned more than $155,100 in campaign contributions that he had received from the Duong family, the politically-connected owners of a Bay Area-based recycling company who are embroiled in an FBI investigation (Bonta donated the money to charities). He also returned $4,000 he received from two attorneys who represented Lyft and Uber’s challenges to California's gig worker law.

Spokesperson Nathan Click said Bonta will similarly return the money he received from lawyers repping SoCal Edison “to remove even any appearance of a question around the donations.”

Click said the misstep was due to a “miscommunication” between Bonta’s campaign vetting team and the state Department of Justice. Click said the investigation into SoCal Edison had been wrapped up well before Bonta was appointed attorney general in the spring of 2021, but his campaign team didn’t know a press release from the Justice Department on the Edison decision was coming “before greenlighting the donation.” Bonta was sworn in on April 23, about four months before the Aug. 13 press release.

“This particular investigation had been wound down for months, and DOJ had recommended not pursuing charges well before the AG assumed office,” Click said in a statement.

Like prior attorneys general, including Jerry Brown and Kamala Harris, Bonta’s team said he doesn’t accept donations from lawyers representing clients who are under active criminal investigation by his office.

Click said the AG doesn’t typically issue press releases to announce the results of criminal investigations, especially when there are no charges. In this instance, however, Click said the decision was publicized “because the case had received a great deal of media attention,” so the office “recommended notifying the public.”

At the time, Bonta’s office said it wouldn’t pursue charges against SoCal Edison after investigating the role its electrical equipment played in sparking the 2018 Woolsey Fire in Los Angeles and Ventura Counties, which killed three people and torched 1,643 homes and other structures.

The AG’s office said in a statement that it concluded there was “insufficient evidence to establish beyond a reasonable doubt that Southern California Edison” violated state law.

Playbook asked spokespeople for Hueston Hennigan and SoCal Edison about Bonta’s decision to return the contributions. David Eisenhauer, a spokesperson for the utility, said it had no involvement in the contributions. “We have no insight into or influence over political contributions made by any of our contractors,” he told Playbook.

A representative for Hueston Hennigan said employees of the firm donate to state and local politicians as many lawyers do. The spokesperson noted its lawyers have contributed to “many California attorney general candidates over many years,” including Harris and HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra.

But a partner at the law firm praised the decision by the Attorney General’s Office in an August 2021 press release. Andrew Walsh, who had given $2,500 to Bonta two weeks before, said the firm was “pleased that the investigation resulted in the just decision not to pursue criminal charges.”

GOOD MORNING. Happy Friday. Thanks for waking up with Playbook.

You can text us at ‪916-562-0685‬‪ — save it as “CA Playbook” in your contacts. Or drop us a line at lkorte@politico.com and dgardiner@politico.com, or on X — @DustinGardiner and @Lara_Korte.

WHERE’S GAVIN? Nothing official announced.

ON THE AIRWAVES

Michael Weinstein, AHF president, speaks in support of Proposition 33.

Michael Weinstein, AHF president, speaks in support of Proposition 33 | Jenna Schoenefeld/AP Content Services for AIDS Healthcare Foundation

FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: The Yes on Proposition 34 campaign just released a new ad that takes a veiled shot at the AIDS Healthcare Foundation, the target of the initiative.

The ad features a man “living with HIV” urging voters to support Prop 34, which he argues will bring down prices of prescription drugs. Left unsaid is that the measure would also curtail the political spending of AHF, the world’s largest HIV/AIDS health care organization.

The advertisement is the latest in a series of spots that highlight the initiative's effect on Medi-Cal, rather than its political motivations. Although California Apartment Association-backed Prop 34 would “permanently authorize the state to negotiate Medi-Cal prices,” insiders primarily view it as a retaliation against AHF’s repeated attempts to pass rent control initiatives (including Prop 33 this year). — Will McCarthy

CAMPAIGN YEAR(S)

California Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis during a news conference to address sea level rise along the city's waterfront in San Francisco, Friday, Jan. 26, 2024. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg)

California Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis during a news conference in San Francisco, Friday, Jan. 26, 2024 | AP

ELENIMENTUM? — In late August, allies of Antonio Villaraigosa were vigorously shopping around a private poll conducted for his 2026 gubernatorial campaign by Tulchin Research that showed the former Los Angeles mayor with an edge over the other declared Democrats, namely Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis. 

Now, Kounalakis’ camp is calling BS. Her latest poll — conducted Oct. 10 to Oct. 15 by David Binder Research — found the lieutenant governor at 18 percent and leading the other Democrats in the race, including Villaraigosa, who was at 9 percent. State schools chief Tony Thurmond (7 percent), former legislative leader Toni Atkins (6 percent) and former state Controller Betty Yee (4 percent) were running further behind. Perennial candidate John Cox, serving as a GOP placeholder in the poll, was at 27 percent.

The jousting by Democrats comes just ahead of the presidential race, after which all the early maneuvering we’ve seen so far could become moot. Several other possible contenders, led by outgoing Rep. Katie Porter look poised to jump into the race . There’s also the chance, if Harris wins, that one or more of the Democrats could take positions in her administration.

But the elbowing for frontrunner status right now is between Kounalakis (and her favorable ballot designation as the state’s No. 2), and Villaraigosa, who ran unsuccessfully in 2018. — Christopher Cadelago

STATE CAPITOL

WRIST SLAP — California’s campaign finance watchdog issued a warning letter to Speaker Robert Rivas over the summer for not reporting a behested payment in a timely way, Playbook has learned.

The Fair Political Practices Commission reprimanded the Democratic leader over a $10,000 payment made by Joel and Connie Andreesen to the Cesar Chavez Foundation in April at Rivas’ request — something which must be reported to the FPPC within 30 days.

The commission closed the case in August, choosing to let Rivas off with a warning rather than a fine because of “mitigating factors,” noting that the speaker had made efforts to get info from the Andreesens in a timely manner and that no public harm came as a result of the late filing.

A spokesperson for Rivas, in a statement, said: “The Speaker’s record on reporting is pristine, and the required report was filed well before the FPPC contacted us. In this case, the office asked for, but did not receive, the paperwork from the foundation on time. We appreciate the FPPC’s diligence, and we will continue to follow the law.”

CLIMATE AND ENERGY

CHARGING DOWN — California's blue-state allies are pumping the brakes on following its zero-emission truck policies amid a shortage of vehicles and chargers. Read more in last night’s California Climate.

Top Talkers

MUSK BOMB — The world’s richest man is once again doling out serious dough to boost Republicans, POLITICO’s Jessica Piper reports.

A campaign finance report filed Thursday shows Elon Musk donated $10 million earlier this month to the Mitch McConnell-linked Senate Leadership Fund. He also gave $2.4 million to The Sentinel Action Fund, a super PAC linked to the Heritage Foundation that’s backing GOP Senate candidates and former President Donald Trump.

Musk put another $43.6 million into his super PAC boosting Trump in early October. The new contributions bring Musk’s total for the group to more than $118 million.

FIRE FIGHTS — Trump is facing another political firestorm over disaster aid, this time in Washington state instead of California. Thomas Frank and Scott Waldman of POLITICO’s E&E News report the former president ignored a request for $37 million in disaster aid from Democratic Washington Gov. Jay Inslee following deadly 2020 wildfires because of a personal dispute. The request was later approved after President Joe Biden took office in 2021.

CHECKING YES — The San Francisco Chronicle is backing the recall effort to oust embattled Alameda County District Attorney Pamela Price, citing “deep concerns about her competency and fitness for office.”

“She’s often failed to competently perform some of the most basic aspects of her job and has repeatedly cast the blame elsewhere instead of taking accountability for her missteps,” the paper’s editorial board wrote in a Thursday endorsement. “Alameda County voters deserve better.”

AROUND THE STATE

— Eight of California’s 12 Republicans in Congress have not yet committed to certifying the 2024 presidential election. (CalMatters)

— Meet Kamala Harris’ 62 biggest Hollywood donors. (The Ankler)

— Some workers in California’s wide-open Eastern Sierra region are living in vans amid a housing crunch in resort towns. (The Los Angeles Times)

PLAYBOOKERS

BIRTHDAYS — Steve Duchesne of the PR firm Duchesne Company …

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