Democratic Representative Cori Bush employs her husband and pays him through ‘wage expense’ payments – Washington Examiner

The article discusses how “Squad” Rep. Cori⁢ Bush has been making payments from her campaign to her husband, who also serves as her security guard. The payments, including ⁣a recent $15,000 payment ‍for a “wage expense,” have raised concerns ​as​ they come amidst a Department ‌of Justice investigation into her campaign’s spending on private security. Bush has paid ‍her⁢ husband over⁢ $137,000 since ‍2022, with additional payments​ to security personnel. The article highlights the scrutiny⁢ faced by Bush over‌ these payments,⁤ with conservative groups ‌filing‌ complaints alleging​ false reporting of disbursements. The situation‌ has sparked​ controversy and calls for accountability regarding⁣ the‌ use of campaign funds.


‘Squad’ Democrat Cori Bush keeps husband on payroll with ‘wage expense’ payments

“Squad” Rep. Cori Bush (D-MO) recently cut more checks from her campaign to her husband and longtime security guard — payments that came after the Justice Department opened an investigation into her major spending on private security.

Bush dished out $15,000 between April and June to Cortney Merritts for a “wage expense,” adding on to the more than $137,000 she has paid her husband since 2022, according to Federal Election Commission filings. The new payments come months after Bush noted she is “fully cooperating” with a DOJ investigation into the private security disbursements, which are north of $750,000 combined, documents show.

The new filings show that Bush separately spent $16,720 on security services, paying two men named Joseph Walter and Joel Beard.

Bush married Merritts, her security guard, in a private ceremony in St. Louis last year.

By that time, the security guard had already received more than $62,000 from January 2022 to January 2023 from Bush’s campaign for “security services,” campaign finance records show.

But the Bush campaign subsequently began to describe campaign payments to Merritts as a “wage expense” as scrutiny grew over the alleged enrichment of her husband. Bush faced FEC complaints from conservative groups, which argued she had been “falsely reporting the purpose of disbursements,” which one group, the conservative Committee to Defeat the President, said was a “criminal act” that should be referred to the DOJ.

“It appears Rep. Bush’s campaign may have made payments for services that were unnecessary or above fair market value because of her personal relationship with the payee,” the Foundation for Accountability and Civic Trust, a separate group, wrote in an FEC complaint last year.

“If so, these payments would qualify as either impermissible payments to a family member or an impermissible gift,” the watchdog argued.

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Bush faces a tough reelection this year and trails her Democratic primary challenger, St. Louis prosecuting attorney Wesley Bell, by 23 percentage points, according to a new poll conducted by McLaughlin & Associates for the CCA Action Fund.

The Washington Examiner reached out to Bush and Merritts for comment.



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