Election officials advance campaign finance complaint against state senator prompted by Colorado Sun reporting

The political drama swirling around State Sen. Sonya Jaquez Lewis has taken another twist. Colorado elections big shots are digging into a campaign finance complaint against her, sparked by The Colorado Sun’s juicy exposé.

Apparently, the spotlight turned on the Longmont Democrat after one Cory Gaines—a conservative player in this political chessboard—dropped a dime on her, suggesting she might’ve bent the campaign finance rules. The Colorado Secretary of State’s Office agrees there’s enough smoke to see if there’s fire. They reckon the allegations might hold water if proven true.

Now, Jaquez Lewis stands on the hot seat. She’s got until Monday to either dust off the alleged infractions or push back against them. The clock’s ticking.

State Sen. Sonya Jaquez Lewis gestures as she speaks before Colorado Gov. Jared Polis signed four gun control bills. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

The Complaint

Gaines is blowing the whistle over what he calls Jaquez Lewis’ misuse of campaign cash. According to him, she splashed campaign dough on personal whimsies, sent forbidden contributions to a rival candidate, and, oh boy, missed jotting down some financial dealings. He claims his intel came straight outta a Colorado Sun story about Jaquez Lewis’ Capitol antics—allegedly putting her aides through the grind like domestic workers.

Allegations and Reports

Come December, The Sun started airing the dirty laundry. They reported how Jaquez Lewis’ former aides cried foul over some work shenanigans. Back in November, that’s when they said she had them doing odd jobs, like backyard pruners and party bartenders. The dollar bills supposedly came from her campaign coffers, which, FYI, ain’t cool by Colorado law. Here’s a deeper dive on campaign finance rules.

But wait, it gets spicier. The grapevine says she might’ve finanaced door-knocking missions for an Adams County commissioner candidate. The wrench in the works? This commissioner was butting heads against a rival’s spouse within the Dem camp. Nonetheless, the buzz at the time was quiet, as those transactions didn’t pop up on the state’s TRACER system.

After the cat was out of the bag, Jaquez Lewis quickly took to fixing her finance sheets, checking the “Sonya For Colorado” account for discrepancies. Yet, she claims it was all just a mix-up with her campaign numbers.

The Fallout

Despite her attempts to correct the record, Jaquez Lewis isn’t out of the woods yet. Colorado rules are tight: no using campaign cash for personal kicks or doling it out to other politicos’ campaigns, be it direct or in-kind.

In a statement released Thursday, the senator denied any hanky-panky. She brushed off the allegations, saying the bartending gig was for a campaign shindig. She’s sticking to her story about mixing up checkbooks—claiming she planned the aide’s payment from her leadership committee. It’s an honest-to-God mistake, according to her narrative.

Jaquez Lewis also said her Morrison Avenue fundraiser’s scoop, snagging two Benjamins from some Jamestown local, was all by the book. Meanwhile, folks at her leadership committee, "Sonya for Dems," counted 11 donations that day. Her defense? “I have substantially complied with Colorado campaign law.” According to her, there was never any attempt to game the system.

Still, trouble shadows her steps. Legislative aides? Nah, she ain’t got any state-paid helpers now; she’s in the doghouse after multiple complaints. Stripped of committee gigs and facing an ethics probe, she might even get the boot from the legislature altogether. And it’s an awkward situation with her colleagues, especially since she’s been all about worker rights in her legislative pursuits.

Even so, Jaquez Lewis is no newbie to the political scene. She made her way into the legislature back in 2018. By 2020, she scored a spot in the Senate, and recently rolled into another term, winning Senate District 17 by a comfortable margin.

Read the full source article here.