Two Republican-owned national political consulting firms are demanding the Minnesota Republican Party settle hundreds of thousands of dollars in unpaid bills from the 2014 campaign, a sign the party's long-running financial struggles may not be totally resolved.
In e-mails to state GOP Chairman Keith Downey, top executives at Salt Lake City-based Arena Communications and the Kansas-based Singularis Group blasted the Minnesota Republican Party in unusually frank language. They said the party has failed to pay its bills for direct mail and other political communications on behalf of federal and state GOP candidates running for office in Minnesota last fall.
Downey said Monday that the party has paid all but 20 percent of its campaign-related debt to vendors. "We feel confident about the financial footing of the party," he said. Asked how much the party still owed vendors, Downey put the figure at about $300,000. That's included in the total that the party owes to creditors, which at the end of January was $1.47 million. Peter Valcarce, founder and manager of Arena Communications, wrote in a Feb. 23 e-mail to Downey that his firm is still owed $211,473 for work it did for the party to aid the U.S. Senate campaign of Mike McFadden and the congressional campaign of Stewart Mills in northeastern Minnesota.
"I was dismayed to read your claim in the MN GOP Annual Report that 'We were able to support our endorsed candidates through the primary and with a statewide victory program, while simultaneously meeting our financial obligations and paying down debt,' " Valcarce wrote to Downey. "I can attest this is a total falsehood."
Valcarce confirmed Monday he wrote and sent the e-mail to Downey.
"It's the first time I've taken a step like this with a state party in the almost 20 years I've been in business," Valcarce said. His firm has provided direct mail and online political communication services to several Republican presidential candidates, dozens of GOP candidates for governor and Congress nationwide and numerous state Republican parties.
Downey got a similar e-mail last Thursday from Kristian Van Meteren, owner of the Singularis Group, another Republican direct-mail firm. Van Meteren did not return a call and e-mail message seeking to confirm he wrote the e-mail, which the Star Tribune obtained from two separate sources. It did not reveal how much the firm still feels it's owed by the Minnesota GOP.
"To be frank, we believe that the Minnesota GOP has dealt very dishonestly with our firm over the past four months," Van Meteren wrote. Singularis employees who contacted Minnesota GOP staff about outstanding invoices were told they were not received until several weeks after the election, Van Meteren wrote, adding: "That claim is demonstrably false."