Ethics complaint lodged against Ted Cruz over podcast deal with iHeartMedia

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An ethics complaint was filed Wednesday against Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) over a deal broadcasting company iHeartMedia offered his podcast.

Nonpartisan organization Campaign Legal Center lodged the complaint to the Senate Ethics Committee complete with evidence in an attempt to open an investigation against the Texas senator. This comes after Cruz and co-host Michael Knowles openly discussed an offer from iHeartMedia to “fund production [and] dump a whole bunch of money into marketing” during the Oct. 7 episode of the Verdict podcast.

Cruz serves on the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, which has received lobbying from iHeartMedia about two bills surrounding the Federal Communications Commission. iHeartMedia has also contributed $2,000 toward Cruz’s campaign, spending a total of $3,410,000 in lobbying efforts this year.

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There is a rule of the Senate forbidding senators from receiving “any gratuity, favor, discount, entertainment, hospitality, loan, forbearance, or other item having monetary value … includ[ing] gifts of services” from a lobbyist so that they can “exercise impartial judgement in performing their duties.” The Campaign Legal Center has filed the complaint for the Ethics Committee to determine whether Cruz has violated this rule while also acknowledging that according to Cruz’s financial disclosure forms, he has not made any income via the podcast since its inception in 2020.

“It’s no surprise Democrats and their allies in the corrupt corporate media take issue with Sen. Cruz’s chart-topping podcast — it allows him to circumvent the media gatekeepers and speak directly to the American people about what is really happening in Washington,” a spokesman for the senator told the Washington Examiner. “Sen. Cruz receives no financial benefit from Verdict. There is no difference between Sen. Cruz appearing on a network television show, a cable news show, or a podcast airing on iHeartMedia.”

Instead, Cruz’s office pointed to a 2008 amended guidance on gifts that allows for small items “of little intrinsic value,” such as apparel, food items, or other items that cost less than $10 when a senator is appearing at an event. The guidance gives the example of a senator receiving a cup of coffee during a television appearance which would otherwise be forbidden because lobbyists are employed by the same network.

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The Ethics Committee is led by Democratic Sen. Chris Coons (D-DE) and has the potential to find Cruz in violation of not only the rules of the Senate but the Lobby Disclosure Act, which, if a violation is found, can result in a fine of up to $200,000 and a five-year prison term.

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