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Mass. GOP: Fisher sought $1M

Mark Fisher, the Tea Party nominee for governor, greets attendees at the Massachusetts Republican state convention in Boston. (AP Photo/Stephan Savoia)

Mark Fisher, the Tea Party nominee for governor, greets attendees at the Massachusetts Republican state convention in Boston. (AP File Photo/Stephan Savoia)

BOSTON (AP) — A Massachusetts Republican Party lawyer says a gubernatorial candidate who sued to get on the GOP primary ballot demanded $1 million in exchange for dropping the legal challenge.
In a letter yesterday to Republican State Committee members, a party attorney says he told a lawyer for tea party-affiliated candidate Mark Fisher that it is illegal to pay someone in exchange for dropping out of a political race.
Fisher’s attorney, Thomas Harvey, confirmed to The Boston Globe that Fisher, who is suing for the right to face off against front-runner Charlie Baker in the primary, had asked for $1 million.
Harvey said Fisher’s request for compensation was reasonable and not illegal because the candidate had “put a lot” into the race and should be compensated.

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