Updated 3 p.m.
Following a firestorm of criticism that he was bribed to resign, Virginia Democratic state Sen. Phillip Puckett will not seek a job within the state’s tobacco commission, according to the Washington Post.
On Sunday, the Post reported that Republicans would trade Puckett a job for himself and a judgeship for his daughter in exchange for his resignation, three people familiar with the deal told the Post. Puckett’s resignation is still expected to pave the way for his daughter’s new job, the Post noted.
The reported deal is the most bizarre twist yet in the state’s fight over Obamacare; Puckett’s resignation comes just as Gov. Terry McAuliffe, a Democrat, attempts to expand Medicaid in the state, and gives the GOP at least temporary control of the state Senate that McAuliffe was counting on to support the expansion.
Other Republicans denied to the Post that Puckett was offered a job in exchange for resigning—an alleged deal that could raise legal questions. Puckett didn’t respond to calls from the Post seeking comment Sunday. No one answered the phone at his Capitol office Monday.
The Medicaid expansion is largely funded by the federal government through Obamacare and it would give 400,000 low-income Virginians healthcare coverage. But Virginia Republicans, like their counterparts in Congress, complain that the expansion is too costly. The law requires states to fund a growing percentage of the program—up to 10%—after 2016.
“It’s astounding to me. The House Republican caucus will do anything and everything to prevent low-income Virginians from getting health care … They figure the only way they could win was to give a job to a state senator,” Democrat Scott Surovell, a House of Delegates representative, told the Post. “At least they can’t offer Terry McAuliffe a job. I hope Terry continues to stand up to these bullies.”
Puckett had been a senator since 1998, but his district is quite red—67% of the district voted for Mitt Romney in 2012—and it will be tough for Democrats to keep the seat, meaning that the deal will likely permanently alter the make-up of Virginia’s legislature.









