SOURCE: Wikipedia, captured 2020-08-26
This page last modified: 2022-02-10 13:15:30 -0800 (PST)
Notable affiliations:
Conservative Partnership Institute, Senior Legal Fellow | see also
Partner, Foley & Lardner LLP
co-Chair, American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC)'s voter suppression task force
past Chairman, American Conservative Union Foundation
Board of Directors, Bradley Foundation
legal counsel for Steve Bannon's fraudulent Citizens of the American Republic
legal counsel for Senator Jim DeMint (R-SC; past-President, The Heritage Foundation)
Chair, Public Interest Legal Foundation (where the notorious financier Neil Corkery is the Treasurer)
See also:
[2020-08-24] Federal prosecutors have Steve Bannon's murky nonprofit in their sights. Tucked at the bottom of the long indictment against Bannon, prosecutors say they want to seize the assets of his nonprofit Citizens of the American Republic, shedding more light on the secretive political group's finances.
Near the end of a lengthy indictment detailing fraud allegations against Steve Bannon, former Donald Trump campaign CEO and chief strategist and his associates, federal prosecutors reveal that they intend to seize the assets of a murky nonprofit organization Bannon launched in 2017 to promote "economic nationalism." ...
Stephen Bannon is the President of the Citizens of the American Republic ... Other top officials are ... lawyer Cleta Mitchell ...
Cleta Deatherage Mitchell (born September 15, 1950) is an American lawyer, politician and conservative activist. Elected in 1976, Mitchell served in the Oklahoma House of Representatives until 1984, representing District 44 as member of the Democratic Party.
Cleta Mitchell was born as Cleta B. Deatherage in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma in 1950. Cleta Mitchell attended Classen High School her junior and senior year. Cleta Mitchell received a B.A. in 1973 and a J.D. in 1975, both from the University of Oklahoma. Mitchell also has an honorary degree in Home Economics from Oklahoma State University due to her work with former dean, Beverly Crabtree.
In 1971, Mitchell was one of the five original conveners of the Oklahoma Women's Political Caucus.
Cleta Mitchell married Duane Draper, a fellow Oklahoman from Norman, in 1973. In 1980, Draper moved to Massachusetts to take a teaching fellowship at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government. The couple divorced two years later in July 1982 on grounds of "incompatibility." Draper later came out as a gay man and became director of AIDS programming at the Massachusetts Department of Public Health.
In 1984, Cleta Deatherage married Dale Mitchell, who was the son of all-star Brooklyn Dodgers left-fielder Dale Mitchell. In the early 1980s, the FBI began investigating Dale Mitchell for banking malpractice, and in 1992 he was convicted of five felony counts of conspiracy to defraud, misapplying bank funds and making false statements to banks, and ordered to pay $3 million in restitution. According to Mitchell, this is what convinced her that government had grown too big.
Mitchell served as a member of the Oklahoma House of Representatives from 1976 to 1984, as member of the Democratic Party. Cleta Mitchell was the first woman in the United States to chair a House Appropriations and Budget Committee. Cleta Mitchell served on the executive committee of the National Conference of State Legislatures.
Chair of the House Appropriations and Budget committee.
In 1991 Cleta Mitchell moved to Washington to become general counsel and executive director of the Term Limits Legal Institute [local copy], and later served as a losing co-counsel in the case of U.S. Term Limits, Inc. v. Thornton.
Mitchell is a partner in the Washington, D.C. office of Foley & Lardner.
Cleta Mitchell is not mentioned on the Wikipedia page for Foley & Lardner LLP. However, she is listed [2020-08-26] as a Partner at Foley & Lardner, on their web page [local copy].
[In part.] Cleta Mitchell served on the advisory council to the American Bar Association's Standing Committee on Election Law and as an advisor on the American Law Institute's Election Law Project entitled, "Principles of Election Law: Resolution of Election Disputes" [2012-04-16; local copy]. In 2016 she was elected to membership in the American Law Institute. Cleta Mitchell serves on the Board of Directors of the International Foundation for Electoral Systems and the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation, is past Chairman of the American Conservative Union Foundation, and has served as the President of the Republican National Lawyers Association.
Cleta Mitchell refused to represent Christine O'Donnell.
Cleta Mitchell has been appointed to the American Bar Association's Standing Committee on Election Law and as an advisor on the American Law Institute's Election Law Project entitled, "Principles of Election Law: Resolution of Election Disputes" [2012-04-16; local copy]
Cleta Mitchell serves on the Board of Directors of the Bradley Foundation. Cleta Mitchell also serves on the Board of the National Rifle Association (NRA), where she has also been a lawyer, and the American Conservative Union Foundation. Cleta Mitchell sits on the Board of Governors of the Republican National Lawyers Association, where she is a former president.
After leaving the House and an unsuccessful run for Lieutenant Governor in 1986, Mitchell switched her political affiliation from Democratic to Republican.
In August 2013, conservative Newsmax magazine named Mitchell among the "25 most influential women in the GOP".
In 2018, The McClatchy Company reported that Mitchell, as a long time lawyer for the National Rifle Association (NRA), had previously expressed concerns about the NRA's close ties to Russia and the possibility that Russia had been funneling cash through the NRA into Donald Trump's 2016 Presidential Campaign. Mitchell's name was included in a list of individuals that Democrats on the House Intelligence Committee sought to interview in connection with the committee's investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election. Upon learning of the report, Mitchell denied ever having expressed such concerns.
"Rising Star" Award by Campaigns and Elections magazine (1993)
South Oklahoma City Chamber of Commerce's Native Daughter Award
Outstanding Female Attorney (1980)
Selected as a Fellow at Harvard's Institute of Politics (1981)
Campaign-Finance Reform and Its Casualties, The Wall Street Journal, August 31, 2012.
Give Partisanship a Rest and Address Real Issues, The New York Times, November 9, 2012.
'The Rise of America's Two National Pastimes: Baseball and the Law' (1999, Michigan Law Review)
'Donor Disclosure: Undermining The First Amendment' (Minnesota Law Review, 2012)
The Lobbying Compliance Handbook (2008, Columbia Books)
[RightWingWatch.org, 2021-11-18] Cleta Mitchell, Who Advised Trump's Efforts to Overturn 2020 Election, Named to Election Advisory Board.
News broke this week that Cleta Mitchell, a lawyer who helped former President Donald Trump in his efforts to attempt to overturn the 2020 United States presidential election, has been named to the Board of Advisors of the federal Election Assistance Commission, which advises state election officials on voting guidelines and procedures.
The appointment of Cleta Mitchell has been met with alarm from voting rights advocates. Mitchell, a prominent right-wing Republican lawyer, actively promoted Trump's false claims about fraud and a stolen election and advised the Trump campaign in its efforts to overturn the results. She participated in the notorious call on which Trump badgered the Georgia secretary of state to "find" the votes that would give the victory to Trump. Right Wing Watch reported that Mitchell signed a 2020-12-30 letter from right-wing movement leaders urging Senate Republicans to "protect the republic" by contesting electoral college votes from battleground states won by Joe Biden.
Cleta Mitchell is also supporting Trump's efforts to elect state election officials who accept his false claims about the stolen election.
Right Wing Watch reported earlier this year that Cleta Mitchell is at the center of multiple right-wing "election integrity" efforts being promoted by FreedomWorks and the Conservative Partnership Institute since Trump's defeat with the goal of passing more restrictive voting legislation at the state level. She reportedly steered at least $1 million to the bogus Arizona "audit" promoted by so-called Stop the Steal activists and funded by Trump loyalists.
Cleta Mitchell has called H.R.1. [For the People Act], federal voting rights legislation being considered by Congress this year, an attempt to rig elections in Democrats' favor and urged conservative activists to "hammer" senators to vote against it. Her legal clients have included former White House adviser Steve Bannon and right-wing pro-voter-suppression group True the Vote.
It is not clear how much of an impact Cleta Mitchell's appointment will have on U.S. election systems, but it gives her an inside platform from which to press for implementation of the same right-wing policies on "election integrity" that she advocates for as an activist and attorney. The U.S. Election Assistance Commission (EAC) describes itself as "an independent, bipartisan commission" charged with helping election officials meet the requirements of the Help America Vote Act of 2002. The advisory board to which Mitchell has been appointed does not make policy, but it does advise the EAC and reviews voluntary voting system guidelines and best practices.
Cleta Mitchell's appointment to the 35-member Election Assistance Commission (EAC) board of advisers came about through a convoluted process described in a 2021-11-16statement from the United States Commission on Civil Rights. The advisory board is made up of people representing a variety of groups, including the National Governors Association, National Conference of State Legislatures, National Association of Secretaries of State, the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, and more. As the civil rights commission statement explained the process by which Mitchell was named, she was one of two people nominated by Republican members of the commission, and she was the one of those two chosen by the commission's Democratic members and then ratified by a majority vote of the commission.
In an interview with CNN, Michael Yaki - a Democratic member of the commission - described voting for Cleta Mitchell as "the lesser of two great evils." The commission's other choice was J. Christian Adams, who was appointed to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights by Donald Trump in August 2020. Michael Yaki told CNN that J. Christian Adams led his fellow conservative commissioners in holding the "entire agenda of the Commission hostage" until they were empowered to name someone to the election board.
J. Christian Adams is a promoter of more restrictive voting laws who served on Trump's short-lived sham of an "election integrity commission," which folded in 2018 after it found no evidence to support claims of widespread voter fraud. The Atlantic's legal journalist Andrew Cohen once described Adams as "a longtime conservative critic of many facets of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, whose claim to fame as a federal lawyer seems to be his penchant for accusing Black people of discriminating against whites." During the Presidency of Barack Obama, Adams was a favored speaker at right-wing events, where he slammed the United States Department of Justice (DOJ) and charged that the DOJ's civil rights division was filled with "rancid, rotted, corrupt racialists."
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[Slate.com, 2019-10-02] How to Get Away With Gerrymandering. A leaked audio recording reveals how state lawmakers are taught to trash evidence, avoid the word gerrymander, and create an appearance of bipartisanship. | ALEC: American Legislative Exchange Council
... Slate has obtained an exclusive audio recording of the closed-door panel called "How to Survive Redistricting," moderated by influential Republican lawyer Cleta Mitchell. The panel's four experts -- Hans von Spakovsky of The Heritage Foundation, North Carolina election lawyer Thomas Farr, former Georgia Rep. Lynn Westmoreland, and Texas state Rep. Phil King -- are among the architects and defenders of some of the most notorious gerrymanders and voter suppression plans of this decade.
During the session, the legislators were advised to treat redistricting as "political adult blood sport," trash potential evidence before it can be discovered through litigation, avoid the word gerrymander, and make deals with Black and Latino legislators that guarantee them easy reelections by packing as many minority voters as possible into their districts, thereby making the rest of the map whiter and more conservative. ...
Thomas Farr is an American attorney. Farr was nominated by President Donald Trump for a judgeship on the United States District Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina in 2017, and again in 2018. Farr was considered a controversial[2] nominee due to his alleged involvement in suppression of African-American voters. ...
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