Randy Evans - Political Career - National

National

This article contains wording that promotes the subject in a subjective manner without imparting real information. Please remove or replace such wording and instead of making proclamations about a subject's importance, use facts and attribution to demonstrate that importance.

In 1988, Evans helped Gingrich and a colleague, Jeffrey Smith, draft an ethics complaint against then Democratic Speaker Jim Wright. Wright eventually resigned. Evans chaired Gingrich’s campaign organization (the Friends of Newt Gingrich (FONG)) in Gingrich’s successful reelection contests in 1988 and 1990.

After the 1994 election in which Republicans captured control of the United States House of Representatives under Newt Gingrich’s leadership, eighty-four ethics charges were made against then Speaker Gingrich and a special counsel was appointed to pursue the charges. Evans gained national exposure when then Speaker Gingrich brought in Evans to lead Gingrich’s defense against the various ethics complaints before the House Committee on Standards.

Evans was initially brought in to address ethics complaints centered around a letter prepared by Gingrich’s existing counsel. Subsequently, Evans assumed the lead for the defense against all of the ethics charges pending before the Committee on Standards.

In 1996, Evans negotiated an agreement with the Investigative Subcommittee and the Special Counsel that allowed Gingrich to remain as Speaker of the Congress. Under the agreement negotiated by Evans, Gingrich agreed that a letter provided by Gingrich’s prior counsel to the Committee on Standards was inaccurate and that he should have pursued the advice of counsel in connection with a college class that Gingrich taught. Evans insisted that Gingrich’s college classes violated no tax laws, a position which was validated in 1999 by the Internal Revenue Service when it cleared organizations connected with the college classes.

At a nationally televised sanctions hearing, Evans argued that the Committee should accept the negotiated sanctions of a reprimand and a $300,000 cost assessment for costs associated with the investigation of the inaccurate letter submitted by Gingrich’s prior counsel. By a seven to one vote, the Committee on Standards agreed. Subsequently, the United States House of Representatives accepted and agreed to the recommendations of the Committee. In January 1997, Gingrich was reelected as Speaker of the United States House of Representatives.

After Gingrich decided to pay the cost assessment using his personal funds, Evans crafted the “Dole loan agreement” in 1997, whereby 1996 Republican Presidential nominee Bob Dole agreed to loan Gingrich the funds to satisfy the cost assessment. Evans later negotiated Gingrich’s book contract for the New York Times Bestseller ‘Lesson Learned the Hard Way.’

After Gingrich stepped down as Speaker at the end of 1998, Evans negotiated a variety of business ventures for Gingrich, including a television contract with FOX News and book contracts for several books, including New York Times bestsellers. The books include nonfiction works ‘Winning the Future,’ ‘Real Change,’ ‘Rediscovering God in America,’ ‘A Contract With the Earth,’ and ‘Saving Lives Saving Money,’ as well as fiction works ‘Gettysburg,’ ‘Grant Comes East,’ ‘Never Call Surrender,’ ‘Pearl Harbor,’ ‘Days of Infamy’ and ‘Valley Forge.’

Evans chaired Gingrich’s companies from their inception in 1999 until Gingrich’s announcement that he was a candidate for President in 2011.

Upon his election as Speaker of the House of Representatives in 1999, Speaker J. Dennis Hastert retained Evans as his outside general counsel to the Speaker. Evans represented Speaker Hastert throughout his tenure as the longest serving Republican Speaker of the House in history. Evans appeared on behalf of Hastert and others in various matters before the Committee on Standards in the investigations of two different matters of national interest - the Medicare Prescription Drug Bill investigation and the Mark Foley investigation.

Beginning in 2002, Evans represented Georgia Governor Sonny Perdue (the first Republican governor in Georgia since Reconstruction). Later, Evans nominated Harold Melton to the Georgia Supreme Court. Justice Melton was appointed as the first Republican African-American Justice to Georgia’s Supreme Court.

In 2003, Senator Zell Miller engaged Evans to negotiate the book contract for the New York Times Bestseller ‘A National Party No More: The Conscience of a Conservative Democrat.’ In addition, Evans negotiated Miller’s television contract with FOX News. By 2004, Evans represented most of the leadership in the House of Representatives, prompting the Committee on Standards to question the multi-representation of different members by the same attorney.

Evans has represented former House GOP Conference Chairman J. C. Watts since his last term in Congress. Evans negotiated Watts’ television contract with CNN and his speech contract with the Washington Speaker’s Bureau.

On behalf of then Speaker Hastert, and in conjunction with Susan Hirschman (former Chief of Staff for Majority Leader Tom Delay) and Bill Paxon (former National Republican Campaign Committee Chairman), Evans designed and formed the first political organization after the effective date of the Bipartisan Campaign Finance Reform Act in order to receive nonfederal money. After challenges by Common Cause, the Federal Election Commission found that the entity - as structured - could accept nonfederal money.

In 2005-2006, Evans also represented Hastert in connection with public controversies involving Hastert’s real estate investments and the FBI’s raid of Congressman William Jefferson’s Congressional office. Evans appeared on behalf of Speaker Hastert in the United States Supreme Court litigation involving the McCain-Feingold campaign finance legislation known as the Bipartisan Campaign Finance Reform Act. Evans negotiated the book contract for Hastert’s book entitled ‘Speaker - Lessons From Forty Years in Coaching and Politics.’ After Hastert left the Congress in 2007, Evans negotiated various business ventures for Hastert.

In 2008, Evans worked with Tony Snow, the former White House Press Secretary, to create the Tony Snow Family Trust for the benefit of Snow’s children (Evans was the grantor of the Trust). After Snow’s untimely death from cancer on July 12, 2008, Evans helped raise hundreds of thousands of dollars for the Tony Snow Family Trust.

In 2009, then Alaska Governor Sarah Palin retained Evans to create a legal defense fund entitled “The Alaska Fund Trust” to help defray the expenses of Governor Palin and her staff in the aftermath of the 2008 Presidential election.

Evans served as a Senior Advisor to Newt Gingrich’s 2012 campaign for the Republican nomination for president until Gingrich’s announcement of his intention to suspend his campaign in late April 2012. Evans thereafter endorsed Governor Mitt Romney, the presumptive 2012 Republican nominee for president.

In addition to national political figures, Evans has represented and does represent various current and former elected officials in Georgia and elsewhere.

Read more about this topic:  Randy Evans, Political Career

Famous quotes containing the word national:

    The cultivation of one set of faculties tends to the disuse of others. The loss of one faculty sharpens others; the blind are sensitive in touch. Has not the extreme cultivation of the commercial faculty permitted others as essential to national life, to be blighted by disease?
    J. Ellen Foster (1840–1910)

    In our brief national history we have shot four of our presidents, worried five of them to death, impeached one and hounded another out of office. And when all else fails, we hold an election and assassinate their character.
    —P.J. (Patrick Jake)

    His mind was strong and clear, his will was unwavering, his convictions were uncompromising, his imagination was powerful enough to invest all plans of national policy with a poetic charm.
    Woodrow Wilson (1856–1924)