A growing number of Minnesota Republican legislators and other party leaders are calling on state party chairwoman Jennifer Carnahan to resign immediately after a top GOP donor was indicted last week on sex trafficking charges.
Minnesota GOP strategist and donor Anton "Tony" Lazzaro, 30, was arrested Thursday and faces federal charges of recruiting and sex trafficking minors. Also Thursday, 19-year-old Gisela Castro Medina, chairwoman of the University of St. Thomas College Republicans, was arrested in Florida on allegations of aiding Lazzaro.
Lazzaro, who remained in the Sherburne County jail awaiting his first court hearing Monday, has ties to many prominent state Republicans, including Carnahan, who recently co-hosted a podcast with Lazzaro.
Carnahan did not respond to repeated calls for comment over the weekend. However, she released a lengthy statement Sunday on Facebook, saying that "leaders in our party are now using guilt by association to demand my resignation" and that the party and its leaders "cannot be responsible for the actions of donors and unofficial persons," such as Lazzaro.
"The coup taking place right now to relitigate the chair's race, smear my reputation and defame me is not right," she wrote.
She noted that the party took immediate action to donate Lazzaro's contributions to charity and to condemn both his and Medina's actions. She said the state's executive committee was scheduled to meet Sunday evening to discuss the matter.
Carnahan is married to U.S. Rep Jim Hagedorn, R-Minn., and photos of the couple with Lazzaro were circulating on social media.
The Minnesota Reformer reports several anonymous party officials came forward after Lazzaro's indictment, saying that Carnahan forced staffers and donors to sign nondisclosure agreements "prolifically" to silence staff.