5/22/26 - Banks says Morales lied about Deputy Chief of Staff, Diego fights back, Rokita piles on
Today’s episode of The Rob Kendall Show focuses on the growing fallout around Indiana Secretary of State Diego Morales and the Republican Party’s sudden push to move on from him. Rob argues the real story is not just Morales’ scandals, but the fact that powerful Republicans knew about many of these issues for years and did nothing until they feared losing the office. He says party leaders are now trying to make Morales disappear politically rather than fully exposing what happened inside the Secretary of State’s office.
Rob spends much of the show calling out what he sees as gaslighting from Republican officials who previously ignored, defended, or endorsed Morales. He points to questions surrounding the India trip, no-bid contracts, the $90,000 vehicle, use of state resources, and the recent reporting about former deputy chief of staff Elena Copsey. Rob argues that if party leaders were serious about accountability, they would be demanding investigations and answers, not simply pushing Morales aside before the convention.
The show also digs into Jim Banks’ role in backing Max Engling as the new Republican alternative for Secretary of State. Rob questions Banks’ explanation that the Copsey story was the final straw, arguing that Engling’s name had already been circulating before that reporting became public. He suggests powerful Republicans may have known about the issue earlier and held it back until Morales became too big of a political liability.
Another major topic is whether Copsey, who reportedly rose to deputy chief of staff in Morales’ office, was not only a noncitizen but possibly in the country illegally. Rob highlights comments from Treasurer Daniel Elliott that appear to suggest that possibility and says reporters should press Banks, Rokita, Elliott, and Morales for clear answers. He argues the distinction matters because Republican leaders built their politics around “America First” messaging while apparently ignoring major questions inside one of Indiana’s most sensitive statewide offices.
The episode closes with Rob arguing that Morales should stay in the race rather than allow party leaders to quietly push him out and bury the story. He says the situation could expose how the Republican power structure really works, especially if Morales starts talking about the people who enabled him. Rob also highlights Greg Ballard’s reaction, saying the chaos helps prove Ballard’s argument that more competition is needed in Indiana politics because the current system protects insiders instead of voters.
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