Calif. state Sen. Yee had a reputation for political corruption even before the federal indictment
Source: San Francisco Bay Guardian
Long before Sen. Leland Yees surprise arrest and arraignment on federal corruption charges today, Yee already had a reputation for, at best, political pandering and influence peddling; or at worst, corruption, a label for Yee long used in private conversations among figures in the local political establishment.
It was usually assumed to be the kind of low-level, quasi-legal corruption that is endemic to the political system: voting against ones values and constituent interests in order to curry favor and financial contributions from wealthy special interests. In Yees case, his recent voting record seems to indicate that he was cultivating support from landlords and the pharmaceutical, banking, oil, and chemical industries for his current campaign for the Secretary of States Office.
... In 2013, Yee sided with the Republican Party nine times on key votes, earning the scorn of many of his Democratic Party colleagues. Yee even voted for SCR 59, which would have created highway signs honored former Sen. Pete Knight, the late conservative Republican who authored Prop. 22 in 2000, strengthening Californias stand against same-sex marriage at the time.
... In 2013, his voting record more closely aligns with Sen. Mark Wyland, a Republican from Carlsbad, than it does with any other Democrat on the Senate, finishing just ahead of Sen. Ron Calderon, the Southern California Democrat who was also indicted by the federal government on corruption charges last month after allegedly accepting bribes from an undercover FBI agent.
Read more: http://www.sfbg.com/politics/2014/03/26/yee-had-reputation-political-corruption-even-federal-indictment