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State senators go to bat for LSU student government candidates accused of frat food bribery

State senators go to bat for LSU student government candidates accused of frat food bribery

Yahoo17-03-2025

Clouds pass over Tiger Stadium on Monday, March 20, 2023, on LSU's campus in Baton Rouge, La. (Matthew Perschall for Louisiana Illuminator)
Two Louisiana lawmakers intervened to get a pair of former student legislative aides placed back on the ballot for an LSU campus government election after they were removed for allegedly bribing fraternity members with food.
Alex Foret and Isabelle Tatman, who were both student workers in the Louisiana Senate, were disqualified last month as candidates for student body president and vice president, respectively. Their opponents, Lavar Henderson and Abry Layrisson, accused Foret of offering to buy dinner for fraternity members who would support his campaign, The Reveille student newspaper reported.
The LSU Student Government Judicial Branch Election Court, the venue that handles such disputes, disqualified the Foret-Tatman ticket from the race Feb. 24.
For their appeal, state Sens. Alan Seabaugh, R-Shreveport, and Gregory Miller, R-Norco, filed a brief last weekend in support of the ousted candidates. The original ruling to remove Foret and Tatman was upheld last week, but LSU Dean of Students Fran'Cee Brown-McClure has intervened to place the ticket back on the ballot for the March 20-21 election.
Neither Seabaugh nor Miller have responded to multiple calls and text messages requesting comment. An email seeking comment from Foret and Tatman has also gone unanswered.
Foret served as Miller's aide last year, according to his LinkedIn page. Tatman's LinkedIn profile also lists her as a former senate aide in 2024, though she does not name any senators for whom she worked.
The senators' involvement in college student government raises concerns for political analyst Robert Collins, a professor at Dillard University.
'It's not just inappropriate. Quite frankly, it's bizarre,' Collins said. 'It sounds like basically what they're trying to do is intimidate the student judges that are on the panel, basically frighten them.'
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Foret and Tatman appealed to Brown-McClure, according to Student Government Judiciary Chief Justice Camille Cronin, who said she met with the dean Friday morning. Brown-McClure has the authority to override the student government judiciary only when the case involves a violation of university policies.
Brown-McClure's opinion went further, however.
'University regulations are not the only concern,' the dean wrote. 'In all matters involving a public institution, the United States and Louisiana constitutions must also be considered.'
'To uphold the integrity of our student governance system, the University will be conducting a comprehensive review of the Student Government Election Code and Judicial Court procedures to ensure they align with State and Federal Law,' Brown-McClure added.
'The message to silence the Court was clear,' Cronin said when contacted for comment on the university's decision.
Placing the Foret-Tatman ticket back on the ballot is unusual, according to several current and former LSU student senators interviewed for this report.
Popularly elected student governments, considered to be public bodies under the law, play an important though often overlooked role in university governance. Their independence from university administration is key to their functioning, and these positions are often students' first experiences with public service.
Cronin, a senior at LSU, said the removal of the two candidates was done by the book. The only variation from procedure was suspending the rules to allow Foret and Tatman to submit additional evidence in their defense, which the court was not obligated to do, she said.
'Legally, this was very easy,' Cronin said in an interview with the Illuminator. 'Emotionally, very difficult.'
Cronin said she received a phone call from LSU Deputy General Counsel Trey Jones before her court ruled on the Foret-Tatman ticket's appeal. She said Jones raised concerns with how the Foret-Tatman appeal was being handled. Cronin said she told Jones she was following policies and procedures created long before her time on the court.
'He was very forward in what he was saying, but it did feel … like it was made to make me feel like I'm doing something wrong,' Cronin said. 'I think he was trying to look out for the university, which is his job.'
LSU spokesman Todd Woodward declined to comment on Jones' call to Cronin.
In their brief, Seabaugh and Miller argued there was insufficient evidence that Foret engaged in bribery. The senators said the fraternity's president made the offer to buy dinner for members without Foret's knowledge.
'Denying citizens … the opportunity to exercise constitutionally protected political activity … should not be based on unsupported inferences with no basis in fact contained in the record,' Seabaugh and Miller wrote in the brief.
Seabaugh and Miller, who are both attorneys, argued that because the election could impact the makeup of student government – and the LSU Board of Supervisors – the election court should carefully weigh the interests of student voters. The only non-political appointee on the LSU Board of Supervisors is its student member, which is selected from the student body presidents of schools in the LSU System.
The Miller-Seabaugh brief is not the first time Louisiana elected officials have gotten involved in LSU student government elections.
Former Gov. John Bel Edwards, a Democrat, endorsed the 2021 ticket of Mia LeJeune and Angelina Cantelli. The Reveille reported LeJeune had worked for the governor, and the governor's son, Stephen Miller Edwards, was part of the LeJeune-Cantelli campaign team.
The endorsement was criticized at the time as inappropriate and setting a 'poor precedent.'
Collins said Edwards' endorsement, while allowed under student government rules, was inappropriate but not as unethical as the Miller-Seabaugh brief.
'I really don't think elected officials should be getting involved in student government politics at all,' Collins said.
Dillard prohibits non-students from getting involved in student government matters, Collins added.
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‘The intern in charge': Meet the 22-year-old Trump's team picked to lead terrorism prevention
‘The intern in charge': Meet the 22-year-old Trump's team picked to lead terrorism prevention

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

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‘The intern in charge': Meet the 22-year-old Trump's team picked to lead terrorism prevention

Thomas Fugate at a Trump rally during the campaign. (Photo via Fugate's Instagram account) This story was originally published by ProPublica. When Thomas Fugate graduated from college last year with a degree in politics, he celebrated in a social media post about the exciting opportunities that lay beyond campus life in Texas. 'Onward and upward!' he wrote, with an emoji of a rocket shooting into space. His career blastoff came quickly. A year after graduation, the 22-year-old with no apparent national security expertise is now a Department of Homeland Security official overseeing the government's main hub for terrorism prevention, including an $18 million grant program intended to help communities combat violent extremism. The White House appointed Fugate, a former Trump campaign worker who interned at the hard-right Heritage Foundation, to a Homeland Security role that was expanded to include the Center for Prevention Programs and Partnerships. 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Spiller super PAC spent $8.3M just on canvassing
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Yahoo

time14 hours ago

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What to Know About Trump's Revived Travel Ban

President Donald Trump waves to guests from the White House during an event on the South Lawn on June 4, 2025. Credit - Anna Moneymaker—Getty Images As promised during his campaign, President Donald Trump is reviving his 'famous' travel ban policy from his first term, citing threats to national security to block out entire nationalities from entering the U.S. Trump issued a proclamation Wednesday that bars the entry of nationals from 12 countries and tightens restrictions on nationals from seven more. The order takes effect on June 9. It provides exceptions, including for lawful permanent residents and specific visa holders as well as for athletes and team members who are traveling for major sporting events. (The U.S. is hosting the FIFA Club World Cup this summer, the FIFA World Cup in 2026, and the 2028 Summer Olympics.) Trump's original travel ban, which he issued just a week after his first-term inauguration in 2017—sowed chaos at arrival points and incited protests across the country. The order was widely referred to as a 'Muslim travel ban' as it initially targeted Muslim-majority countries, barring Syrian refugees from entering and temporarily suspending the entry of nationals from Iraq, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, and Yemen. Over time, the list of countries was revised, while the ban was challenged in court. The Supreme Court upheld the ban in 2018, though Trump's successor President Joe Biden repealed it upon taking office in 2021. The new 'travel ban' comes after a Jan. 20 executive order that directed the Secretaries of State and Homeland Security, the Attorney General, and the Director of National Intelligence to identify countries with security and public safety risks. Trump said in the proclamation on Wednesday that the new restrictions are necessary 'to prevent the entry or admission of foreign nationals about whom the United States Government lacks sufficient information to assess the risks they pose to the United States.' The proclamation fully suspends the entry of nationals from Afghanistan, Chad, the Republic of the Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Myanmar, Somalia, Sudan, and Yemen. Nationals from Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leone, Togo, Turkmenistan, and Venezuela will face limited restrictions, including a ban on entry for immigrants and bans on entry for nonimmigrants with certain classes of visas. In a video posted by the White House on X announcing the proclamation on Wednesday, Trump added that the list can be expanded to include other countries 'as threats emerge around the world.' In March, an internal memo obtained by the New York Times showed that as many as 43 countries could be included in such a ban. A White House fact sheet about the proclamation lists a justification for each of the 19 countries on the list. Some of the countries have links to terrorism. Afghanistan is controlled by the Sunni Islamist group the Taliban, which took over in 2021 after the exodus of American troops from the country; Iran has links to several militant organizations in the Middle East, including Hezbollah in Lebanon, the Houthis in Yemen, and Hamas in Gaza; and Somalia, where the jihadist group al-Shabaab is based, is designated by the U.S. as a 'terrorist safe haven.' Others are deemed to be uncooperative with the U.S. in sharing law enforcement data or accepting back their removable nationals. In the video on X, Trump said the June 1 attack in Boulder, Colo., which left several injured, 'underscored the extreme danger posed to our country by the entry of foreign nationals who are not properly vetted, as well as those who come here as temporary visitors and overstay their visas.' The Boulder attacker arrived in the U.S. on a nonimmigrant visa that has since expired. 'Thanks to Biden's open-door policies, today there are millions and millions of these illegals who should not be in our country,' the President, who has also promised a mass deportation effort, said. 'We don't want them.' Trump touted in the video that his first-term travel restrictions were one of his 'most successful' policies and claimed they played a role in thwarting terror attacks. 'We will not allow people to enter our country who wish to do us harm,' Trump said in the video. 'And nothing will stop us from keeping America safe.' Contact us at letters@

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