WASHINGTON - A year after Michele Bachmann's presidential ambitions sputtered in Iowa, a close adviser is alleging that her political organization is withholding money from former staffers to keep them quiet about the turbulent final months of the campaign.
Peter Waldron, a national GOP operative, said Friday that senior Bachmann officials are demanding that he sign a confidentiality agreement that, he believes, would bar him from discussing "unethical, illegal, or immoral activity" on the campaign.
Rep. Bachmann, R-Minn., and the top echelon of her Iowa staff were hit with a lawsuit last year alleging the improper use of a Christian home-schooling organization's e-mail list. That allegation is the subject of an ongoing criminal investigation.
But two former Bachmann aides say the document is a standard campaign release agreement and has nothing to do with the lawsuit.
The dispute with Waldron is the latest in a series of organizational mishaps that plagued Bachmann's presidential campaign -- from mass resignations in New Hampshire to the abrupt resignation of campaign manager Ed Rollins and the 11th-hour defection of Iowa state Sen. Kent Sorenson, her state campaign chairman.
Waldron, an evangelist and veteran of GOP presidential campaigns going back to Ronald Reagan, is himself no stranger to controversy. In 2006, he was arrested for possession of assault rifles in Uganda in disputed circumstances.
"I'm baffled as to why Peter would be doing this," said Iowa political consultant Eric Woolson, who managed Bachmann's Iowa campaign. "It doesn't make any sense to me."
Waldron, who served as the campaign's national faith outreach director, frequently rode the campaign bus as part of Bachmann's entourage. Campaign records show that the campaign owes him $916, a sum that he says has been outstanding for a year.