Fired Minnesota Senate staffer Michael Brodkorb is threatening to seek sworn statements from legislators and staffers who may have had trysts to prove he was treated differently for having an affair with former Senate Majority Leader Amy Koch.
Brodkorb is a longtime GOP operative whose work as a blogger and strategist played a role in bringing Republicans to power at the Capitol. His attorneys say they are prepared to take sworn depositions from romantically linked legislators and subordinates in order to help his potential gender-discrimination lawsuit. Brodkorb is seeking more than $500,000 in damages and legal costs, and his suit is based on what his attorney called "new and creative" legal reasoning.
The political and legal fallout of Brodkorb's threat, which rocked the Capitol on Thursday, came a day after Secretary of the Senate Cal Ludeman released a sternly worded statement saying there would be no negotiated settlement with Brodkorb regarding his termination.
Brodkorb lawyer Phil Villaume summoned journalists to his office Thursday, vowing "to come out and fight back."
Who would be deposed?
The aftershocks of the Koch-Brodkorb relationship has lingered at the Capitol since late last year, when the Republican from Buffalo announced she was stepping down as leader. The next day, Ludeman confronted Brodkorb at a restaurant away from the Capitol and told him he was fired. It was not until this week that anyone confirmed the affair.
Brodkorb had long been seen as a powerful and brash Senate GOP communications chief, unafraid to confront colleagues and even senators.
Ludeman accused Brodkorb of trying to "blackmail" and "extort" the Senate. The Senate's private attorney dismissed the former staffer's claims as a fishing expedition. But the allegations got the Capitol rumor mill buzzing over whom, precisely, Brodkorb could identify.