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Katie Porter earned royalties on books she required law students to purchase during her tenure.

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California Democratic Rep. Katie Porter — a former law professor who was paid more than $285,000 one year during her time at the University of California, Irvine — earned thousands of dollars in royalty fees from law school textbooks that she required her own students to purchase for the courses she taught.

Porter, who is currently running for re-election in November 2017, was paid $286674 to teach two classes per semester at the institution. Transparent California.

Porter has worked tirelessly since her arrival in Washington to make education more affordable. In 2020, Porter stated that the American political process has “favored wealthy and well-connected far too long” and that “powerful people live within one reality while rest of us live inside another.”

According to documents obtained by FOIA to the UC Irvine, Porter required that her students purchase textbooks she authored. She also received royalties for some of the courses she taught.

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Rep. Katie Porter, a Democrat from California, speaks during a House Oversight and Reform Committee hearing on the need to address the gun violence epidemic in Washington, D.C., US, on Wednesday, June 8, 2022.

Rep. Katie Porter is a Democrat from California. She speaks at a House Oversight and Reform Committee Hearing on Wednesday, June 8th, 2022.
(Andrew Harnik/AP/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

The school records show that Porter taught four courses in the 2017 academic school school year. Porter taught LAW 523 (a bankruptcy law course) and LAW 5252 (a consumer law course) during the fall 2017. Porter taught LAW 299 and LAW 5225, directed research courses, in the spring 2017 semester.

The seventh editionThe Law of Debtors and Creditors: Text, Cases, and Problems” a book co-authored by Porter and a few other others, including Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., was required material for Porter’s Bankruptcy LAW 523 class in fall 2017, according to a syllabus for the course.

Another one of her works, “Modern Consumer Law,” a book authored by Porter and released in 2016, was required reading material for Porter’s Consumer Law 5225 class in fall 2017, according to a syllabus for the course. Porter’s 2016 book “Modern Consumer Law” was also required reading material in an online class she taught during summer 2017. However, Porter did not require students purchase the book for that semester. course syllabus.

Porter also taught LAW 523 in the spring semesters of 2015 and 2016, and required her students to buy the seventh edition of “The Law of Debtors and Creditors,” according her course syllabus.

Porter, who has repeatedly called for lower tuition during her tenure at the university in other instances, has also pushed for lower tuition throughout her tenure. EducationCosts, so her students had to use her own books for courses they took.

Porter taught Law 5225 in 2015. She required that students use “draft pages” from her forthcoming book, Consumer Law, according to the course syllabus. Porter did not charge students for the required materials at the time.

Rep. Katie Porter, D-Calif., during a press conference on Thursday, August 18, 2022.

Rep. Katie Porter, D.Calif., at a press conference on Thursday August 18, 2022.
(Jeff Gritchen, Orange County Register/SCNG)

Katie Porter was a royalty-free author who earned thousands from Wolters Kluwer’s academic books between 2016 & 2017. This publishing company also has several legal works which were later acquired and republished by Aspen Publishing.

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Porter reported that she earned $7,795 in publishing royalties in her career. financial disclosure2018 For an academic book she wrote, she also received $1-$200 in royalty payments from Stanford University Press.

In 2017, financial disclosurePorter claimed that she earned between $2501-$5,000 in royalty payments from her law book. Porter also claimed to have earned between $201-$1,000 from Stanford University Press royalties for a book that she wrote. The 2017 filing did not disclose the exact amounts Porter received in royalties in 2016.

2020 financial disclosurePorter filed the following in 2021. She revealed that she had received as much as $5,000 in royalties from Wolters Kluwer for two academic law textbooks.

Porter wrote the necessary textbooks, which she used in her courses, at a cost that has fluctuated over the years. “The Law of Debtors and Creditors.” Cost $267 in 2019 Increased to $298A nearly 12% increase in the cost of electricity has been recorded as of 2022. Porter’s book, “Modern Consumer Law”, has seen its price rise from $216 in 2019 $275 in 2022This is an estimated 23% rise.

An earlier report by The Associated Press highlighted this fact in a March article Porter’s Orange Beach houseCalifornia’s newest city is reportedly in an area where homes can be purchased for $1 million.

Rep. Katie Porter (D-CA45) conducts a town hall meeting at Mike Ward Community Park.

Rep. Katie Porter (D–CA45) leads a town hall meeting at Mike Ward community park.
(Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images).

The progressive Democrat and law professor, who has lamented the cost of housing in her district, purchased it in 2011 for $523,000, a below-market price secured through a program the university uses to attract academics who couldn’t otherwise afford to live in the affluent area. She had to continue working at the school as a condition of her eligibility.

Porter believes that the subsidized housing she has chosen outlasts her time teaching. She took nearly four years off her $258,000-a year teaching job to go on unpaid leave and serve in the U.S. House.

According to university emails, Porter had ties with at least one law-school administrator who donated to her campaign. She helped her secure extensions of her tenure, while she was in Congress. Porter, a rising Democratic star who is a fundraising powerhouse and has a net worth of as high as $2 million, has been able to retain her home while her return to the school remains uncertain.

Porter refused to comment on whether the housing arrangement she used was appropriate in an interview with The Associated Press. She said she had followed the University of California policies and all federal laws.

Porter stated, “I am always happy and open to sharing my views with voters.” Porter said, “I take great pride in my record of transparency and good governance. I have been asked this question before by voters and have always been open to giving them all the information they need.”

Porter has been a strong advocate of the notion of too high college tuition. He tweeted in 2018 that “cost of college” was too high, and it was threatening the future opportunities of those who seek better opportunities.

Porter is also Campaigned on the subjectto make “college more affordable” so that all students who work hard can graduate from California’s top public colleges and universities without having to take out any debt.

Porter is being investigated over her housing arrangements with UC Irvine. Porter bought her home in an affluent neighborhood near the school in 2011 for $523,000 — securing a below-market price through a university program that is offered to employees of the school. Porter is still living in the house but is currently on an indefinite, unpaid leave to complete her duties in the U.S. House.

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In the November 8 general election in California, Porter will be facing Republican Scott Baugh. She is seeking to represent the 47th District of the Golden State in the House.

Porter’s campaign didn’t respond to Fox News.

This article was written by The Associated Press.

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