(Promoted by Colorado Pols)
Journalists have been asking U.S. Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) for documentation to support a reimbursement of $22,259 for mileage driven during her successful election campaign last year.
Boebert said she might provide her proof with journalists “if I liked them.”
“Maybe if I liked them, I would throw them a little something,” Boebert told KHOW’s Ross Kaminsky this morning.
Apparently, she does not, as she declined recent requests from The Denver Post’s Justin Wingerter and Colorado Public Radio’s (CPR) Andrew Kenney and Caitlyn Kim to provide it.
Following up on information first uncovered by ColoradoPols, The Post calculated that Boebert needed to have driven 38,712 miles during the 2020 campaign to justify the reimbursement, and The Post and CPR were unable to figure out how she could have reached that number of miles. They analyzed Boebert’s travel schedule and other public information.
Boebert said on the radio that the Glenwood fires caused her to put extra miles on her vehicle, beyond what would be expected based on her schedule.
“We had to take the long way,” said Boebert, due to the fires. “To get from Rifle to Edwards, which should be a 40-minute drive, it took us nearly seven hours to get around it. I mean, absurd. It was like, ‘Can we cancel this event? No, we can’t. We are going to be with these people. They set this up an event for us. We will make a way when there is no way.'”
Boebert’s mileage total is an outlier among elected officials.
“This highly unusual amount of mileage expenses raises red flags and the campaign should feel obligated to provide answers,” said Kedric Payne, a former investigator for the Office of Congressional Ethics, an independent body in Congress that examines misconduct allegations, told The Denver Post.
Pressed gently by Kaminsky, Boebert said, “I drove tens of thousands of miles all throughout the district. I was somewhere new every single day.”
“I am doing the work of the people. I had to make those connections. And really, I under-reported a lot of stuff,” she added.
She said she and her campaign driver, now a co-worker, put “more than 30,000 miles” on her vehicle.
“I was able to do a lot of work, while she did the driving,” said Boebert.
“I drove the tires off my car,” said Boebert, explaining that she had to buy a “whole new set of tires” for her car.
You must be logged in to post a comment.
BY: kwtree
IN: Friday Open Thread
BY: spaceman2021
IN: BREAKING: Matt Gaetz Pulls Out Of AG Nomination
BY: Duke Cox
IN: BREAKING: Matt Gaetz Pulls Out Of AG Nomination
BY: notaskinnycook
IN: BREAKING: Matt Gaetz Pulls Out Of AG Nomination
BY: notaskinnycook
IN: BREAKING: Matt Gaetz Pulls Out Of AG Nomination
BY: JohnInDenver
IN: BREAKING: Matt Gaetz Pulls Out Of AG Nomination
BY: 2Jung2Die
IN: BREAKING: Matt Gaetz Pulls Out Of AG Nomination
BY: DavidThi808
IN: Thursday Open Thread
BY: itlduso
IN: BREAKING: Matt Gaetz Pulls Out Of AG Nomination
BY: JohnInDenver
IN: BREAKING: Matt Gaetz Pulls Out Of AG Nomination
Subscribe to our monthly newsletter to stay in the loop with regular updates!
37K miles is 5+ oil changes.
papers please.
New tires? Easy to produce a receipt.
Gas? Easy to download your bank transactions.
Service records or oil changes list the odometer readings.
Keep digging
the hole deeperfor the receipts…Funny, how a paper trail can help, Q-bert. Do you think she'll go with "the dog ate the receipts" or "my husband burned them because fire pretty"
She will claim to have paid for everything in cash and did not keep any receipts.
Kaminsky rivals only Caplis in sucking up to Qbert. Yesterday I heard Dan Caplis say that Qbert is "only getting stronger" from the media attention over the mileage; that she "is being forged into iron". I guess local AM radio is the last bastion of GOP sycophancy in CO. If you exclude speedways and cake shops.
Well…there IS that restaurant in Rifle…