The Rob Kendall Show
Today’s episode of The Rob Kendall Show opens with new reporting from Indy Politics involving a former deputy chief of staff in Secretary of State Diego Morales’ office. Kendall walks through Abdul-Hakim Shabazz’s reporting that the employee, Elena Copsey, was paid $160,000 a year and carried a driver’s license restriction associated with non-U.S. citizens, while also having previously signed a voter registration form affirming U.S. citizenship. Kendall says there are still unanswered questions, but argues the story is especially serious because Morales has built much of his public image around election integrity, Trump loyalty, and “America First” messaging. Kendall focuses heavily on the implications of a high-ranking official in the Secretary of State’s office potentially being a non-citizen, especially in an office that oversees elections, businesses, and sensitive information tied to millions of Hoosiers. He questions how someone with no listed prior government experience rose so quickly to a senior role and why the position was not publicly posted. He also says Morales should immediately answer the questions raised by the reporting instead of falling back on his usual strategy of attacking the media and waiting for the story to fade. The show also covers Paula Copenhaver officially requesting a recount in her extremely close Senate primary race against Spencer Deery. Kendall says a recount is fair given the margin, but criticizes Copenhaver’s legal strategy of trying to subpoena 14 voters and question whether they were eligible to vote in the Republican primary based on alleged crossover voting. He argues that if voters are legally registered and cast legal ballots, attempting to invalidate them over presumed political intent is dangerous and could set a terrible precedent. That discussion leads into a broader critique of Indiana Republicans pushing to close primaries after the Deery race. Kendall points out that Republicans have benefited from open primaries in the past, including Mike Braun’s own explanation years ago that he voted in Democratic primaries because those races determined local offices where he lived. Kendall argues that if taxpayers fund party primaries, voters should be allowed to choose which ballot they want, especially in heavily gerrymandered areas where the primary is often the only election that matters. The episode closes with a look at the Chicago Bears stadium situation and whether Indiana is still being used as leverage against Illinois. Kendall says he originally believed the Bears were mostly using Indiana to force a better deal in Illinois, but now thinks Indiana’s offer may be so generous that the team could seriously consider leaving. He argues the Bears are ultimately a business chasing the best financial deal, and warns that Indiana taxpayers could end up subsidizing a multibillion-dollar franchise if Illinois fails to get its act together. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices [https://megaphone.fm/adchoices]
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