WASHINGTON – The House Ethics Committee announced Wednesday that it will extend its investigation of U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann's 2012 presidential campaign, continuing the Minnesota Republican's legal woes 20 months after she ended her White House bid.
The decision came with the release of 430 pages of investigative materials by the Office of Congressional Ethics (OCE), which found "substantial reason" to believe Bachmann's campaign violated campaign finance laws and rules that barred the use of campaign staff members to promote her book, "Core of Conviction."
The completed OCE report is the first by any of the half-dozen federal and state agencies investigating Bachmann's campaign, pulling back the curtain on the details of the campaign's topsy-turvy run for the GOP nomination, which she led for a short time.
While deciding to investigate Bachmann further, the bipartisan Ethics Committee left the four-term congresswoman in ethical limbo: The committee chose not to dismiss the case against her, nor did it immediately impanel a subcommittee to conduct hearings, which would fast-track her case.
"Basically, they're punting for further investigation," said Bill Allison, of the Sunlight Foundation, a government-transparency watchdog group that has long been critical of the committee. "It's a big 'To be continued.' "
Bachmann, who earlier this year announced she would not seek re-election, issued a statement saying she did nothing wrong. Rather, she said, she had relied on "experienced staff" who were directed to comply with all relevant election laws.
"The report released today makes no finding that I or anyone on my campaign staff did anything to the contrary," Bachmann said in the statement. "It simply has referred certain matters to the committee responsible for reviewing these issues."
In the statement and in a 43-page response to the OCE, Bachmann argued that the referral to the House Ethics Committee was unwarranted. She also noted that the committee's decision to keep the investigation alive does not itself mean that any rules were broken.