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Sunday, April 28
The Indiana Daily Student

Republican representative caught signing campaign letters on House floor

Democrat party staff member filmed, reported ‘ethics’ violation

INDIANAPOLIS – A Republican state representative running for Congress has apologized for working on campaign materials while on the House floor.\nState Democrats took video of Rep. Jon Elrod, R-Indianapolis, signing campaign thank-you letters and sealing them in envelopes. There are few ethical rules for legislators, and no law or regulation appears to prevent lawmakers from engaging in such an activity.\nElrod, the Republican nominee in the 7th Congressional District race, said he was multitasking but used poor judgment. He said it would not happen again.\n“I feel horrible about it,” he said. “I really do. To put our caucus and everyone else in this position, it’s just inexcusable.” \nElrod is running against Democrat Andre Carson in a March 11 special election for the congressional seat previously held by Carson’s grandmother, Rep. Julia Carson, who died in December. Libertarian candidate Sean Shepard is also running.\nAfter Democrats heard that Elrod was working on campaign materials in the House, the party sent a staff member to video Elrod from the House balcony, and the aide recorded him working on campaign letters twice this month, said Dan Parker, a spokesman for the Democratic party.\n“It raises questions about Jon Elrod’s ethics,” Parker said. “Here he is on the floor of the House doing campaign work. That says that politics is more important than the people’s work.”\nElrod gave the letters to a legislative employee – Graig Lubsen, deputy media director for House Republicans – to mail.\nThe handbook for House personnel says employees “shall not perform campaign or political activity during hours they are performing work for the House.” The rules also state that “campaign activity may not occur on House property.”\nHouse Minority Leader Brian Bosma, R-Indianapolis, said Lubsen violated House rules and there would be consequences, although he did not specify what actions could be taken. He said he had a stern talk with Elrod and Lubsen, who said he did not know the letters were campaign-related.\n“I’m confident it has not ever happened before, and I’m very confident it will never, ever happen again,” Bosma said.\nJulia Vaughn, policy director of the government watchdog group Common Cause Indiana, said the incident “isn’t the biggest scandal since Watergate.” But she said lawmakers should refrain from doing campaign work in the Statehouse.\nIndiana Republican Party Chairman Murray Clark, a former state senator, said he doesn’t see anything wrong with it. He said the flap shows that Democrats are desperate to hold onto the 7th District.\n“Democrats are going to pull out every trick in the book,” Clark said. “I’m going to call Jon and make sure he pulls his shades at night.”

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