Democracy's grave-digger and his wife are as corrupt as Donald Trump

Democracy's grave-digger and his wife are as corrupt as Donald Trump

by digby



Last week we learned that Mitch McConnell's wife, Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao, has been doing a very lucrative family business in China with her family while her husband is the Majority Leader and she serves in the Trump administration.

Now this:
The Transportation Department under Secretary Elaine Chao designated a special liaison to help with grant applications and other priorities from her husband Mitch McConnell’s state of Kentucky, paving the way for grants totaling at least $78 million for favored projects as McConnell prepared to campaign for reelection.

Chao’s aide Todd Inman, who stated in an email to McConnell’s Senate office that Chao had personally asked him to serve as an intermediary, helped advise the senator and local Kentucky officials on grants with special significance for McConnell — including a highway-improvement project in a McConnell political stronghold that had been twice rejected for previous grant applications.

Beginning in April 2017, Inman and Chao met annually with a delegation from Owensboro, Ky., a river port with long connections to McConnell, including a plaza named in his honor. At the meetings, according to participants, the secretary and the local officials discussed two projects of special importance to the river city of 59,809 people — a plan to upgrade road connections to a commercial riverport and a proposal to expedite reclassifying a local parkway as an Interstate spur, a move that could persuade private businesses to locate in Owensboro.

Inman, himself a longtime Owensboro resident and onetime mayoral candidate who is now Chao’s chief of staff, followed up the 2017 meeting by emailing the riverport authority on how to improve its application. He also discussed the project by phone with Al Mattingly, the chief executive of Daviess County, which includes Owensboro, who suggested Inman was instrumental in the process.
Recall this as well:
Rusal, the aluminum company partially owned by Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska, announced plans to invest around $200 million to build a new aluminum plant in Kentucky just months after the Trump administration removed it from the U.S. sanctions list. 
The new aluminum plant, slated to be built in the home state of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, will be the biggest new aluminum plant constructed in the U.S. in decades. Rusal will have a 40 percent stake in the facility.
Deripaska was the Russian oligarch to whom Trump's former campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, allegedly owed 20 million dollars.  He's also the Russian suspected of receiving that polling information from Manafort for reasons about which we can only speculate. He's reportedly very close to Vladimir Putin.

Maybe McConnell is obstructing all that election protection legislation for reasons beyond protecting Donald Trump.

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