Recently in Tom DeLay Must Go Category
"'We have kept our promise to drain the swamp that is Washington, D.C.,' Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) said, adding that the legislation is 'historic.'" "'These are big-time fundamental reforms,' said Fred Wertheimer, president of the open-government group Democracy 21." Noted Common Cause president Bob Edgar: " If there is a positive side to Jack Abramoff and the wave of congressional scandal, this is it."
Yes, this could be big. In the wake of the broiling Stevens scandal, the House votes 411-8 to pass a comprehensive new ethics bill: "Secret 'holds' in the Senate, which allow a single senator to block action without disclosing his or her tactics, would end. Members of Congress would no longer be allowed to attend lavish convention parties thrown in their honor. Gifts, meals and travel funded by lobbyists would be banned, and travel on corporate jets would be restricted." In addition, "bundles" -- small campaign contributions packaged together -- will now have to be disclosed, along with political contributions by lobbyists and the identities of the lobbyists themselves.
Of course, the bill still has to pass the Senate, where some conservatives are threatening to force a filibuster vote (in part due to the weakening of earmark rules, which is admittedly rather annoying.) But that was before Stevens' unfortunate run-in with the FBI, so we'll see. Right now, I'm cautiously optimistic that the right-wing will have to fall in line. As Meredith McGehee of the Campaign Legal Center put it: "It may not be a grand slam, but it's a home run...There is no credible excuse to oppose this legislation."
"Renzi -- now, was that the guy with the skeezy land deal? Or the woman Paul Wolfowitz promoted?" To help keep track of them all, Slate offers a handy illustrated guide to GOP scandals.
"We have cooperated with everything. We've given them everything, including computers; they've taken computers that I had here. They've gotten everything that's got anything to do with my life." A deposed Boss DeLay decries his treatment by the FBI, taking particular umbrage at the investigations into his wife Christine: "She did her work and she was underpaid for the work she did and they can't make the case. It's a Justice Department that is running amok. Fish or cut bait. Do something." Underpaid? Christine DeLay, it may be remembered, was paid $500,000 in PAC funds by the DeLay campaign, $3,300 a month for three years in funds apparently skimmed from the US Family Network, and another half-million in a retirement account set up by former DeLay staffer and lobbyist Edwin Buckham.
"'Whether or not you've served your constituents well, on some level you have seriously betrayed the public's trust and abused your power as a congressman,' Huvelle told Ney. 'You have a long way to go to make amends for what's happened.'" Casino Jack flunky and former House GOP poobah Bob Ney gets thirty months in prison for his role in Abramoff's operation. Ney, meanwhile, is still blaming it on the booze: ""I will continue to take full responsibility for my actions and battle the demons of addiction." Um, at what point between opening the beer and it touching your lips did taking bribes enter the equation? Save that stuff for Oprah...Most people hopefully realize that Ney's corruption had less to do with the demon rum than with standard operating procedure under Boss DeLay and the Republicans.
Federal prosecutors build out their case against Bob Ney, and disclose that the disgraced former GOP rep had possibly shady dealings with Abramoff and DeLay's Russian connections at Naftasib. "Abramoff's lobbying team got the congressman to intervene with the U.S. Consulate in Moscow to help resolve a passport issue for the daughter of Abramoff client Alexander Koulakovsky, the e-mails show...A charity sponsored by DeLay received a $1 million check from a London law firm linked to the two. Former charity officials told The Washington Post last year the donation originated with Russian oil and gas executives, and was intended to influence DeLay's vote on an issue affecting the Russian economy."
Remember when Boehner and the GOP banked on their widespread corruption not playing on Election Day? Well, they chose poorly. Among the many seats lost by the GOP last night were those of Abramoff flunkies Conrad Burns, Richard Pombo, and Bob Ney, notorious friend-of-pages Mark Foley, the recently-FBI-implicated Curt Weldon, mistress-beater Don Sherwood, and the fatcat architect of it all, Boss DeLay. (Surviving the corruption purge: the Foley-connected Tom Reynolds, Duke Cunningham's replacement, Brian Bilbray, and -- though a runoff hopefully won't shake his way -- corrupt Dem William Jefferson.)
"Alas, poor Brit, it was too much for him to bear in the end, I'm afraid. You almost had to feel sorry for the guy...I said almost." Salon's Andrew O'Hehir evaluates last night's election coverage on FOX News. I admit, I also switched over to FOX in the late hours just to revel in all the sweet, sweet schadenfreude. I'm forced to concede, though, that their graphics were much better than CNN's -- you could actually tell how many House seats Dems were picking up all night over the needed 15, while CNN dropped that ball as soon as the Senate got tight. At any rate, for angry right-wing teeth-gnashing, nothing on FOX topped Stephen Colbert's hilarious speel last night at the end of the otherwise middling Midterm Midtacular (Click on "Stephen Quits," in case you missed it.)
Oof, it's been a bad 24 hours for Casino Jack's cronies in the House. With the public in an increasingly unforgiving mood towards congressional incumbents, GOP fave and Abramoff flunky Bob Ney drops out of his Ohio House race. And, one day after losing a bid to get his name off the ballot in Sugar Land, Boss DeLay announces he'll step aside for a write-in candidate. Update: It appears Ney's leaving will cause some ballot trouble as well for the GOP.
"Every redistricting is a partisan political exercise, but this is going to put it at a level we have never seen...That's the gift that the Supreme Court and Tom DeLay have given us." In other news, the Court votes 5-4 that DeLay's Texas redistricting plan needs to be tweaked -- namely, that one district needs to be redrawn to accommodate the Voting Rights Act -- but is otherwise legal and constitutional. "[W]ith six justices producing 123 pages of opinions, without any five of them able to agree on how to define an unconstitutional gerrymander, politicians of both parties said that the ruling leaves the door wide open to attempts to copy the DeLay strategy in other states."
"The forms show that about 2,300 trips cost $5,000 or more. At least 500 cost $10,000 or more, 16 cost $25,000 or more, and the cost of one exceeded $30,000. There were $500-a-night hotel rooms, $25,000 corporate jet rides and other extravagant perks. Almost three-quarters of all trips were taken by aides, who often influence how their bosses vote, negotiate in committee and interact with other government officials. All told, the travelers were away from Washington for a minimum of 81,000 days -- a combined 222 years." A new report by the Center for Public Integrity scrutinizes the massive epidemic of congressional boondoggles, and, folks, it ain't pretty: "Offices that accepted more than $300,000 worth of trips include (in alphabetical order), Rep. Barton (R-TX), Rep. Roy Blunt (R-Miss) Rep. John Boehner (R-OH), Rep. Tom Delay (R-TX), and Speaker Hastert (R-IL)."
"[T]here is a distinction between what is legal and what is right. . . . What was DeLay doing for all that money? Even Ed Buckham was not paying DeLay and his family out of the goodness of his heart." The Washington Post reports that Boss DeLay and his lobbyist cronies were funneling even more money through his wife Christine, bringing the total the DeLay family received from Buckham to -- another -- half-million.
Grinding into action, oh, at least 18 months late, the House Ethics Committee begins investigations into Bob Ney and Duke Cunningham, as well as Dem William Jefferson.
"'It clearly shows some members live in a dream world of high-class living and fictional accounting. DeLay's office was part of the public deception. It makes you wonder if there are more filings as fictional as this one is turning out to be,' said Kent Cooper, the former chief of public disclosure for the Federal Election Commission." Prosecutors disclose an e-mail trail indicating that Boss DeLay's office knowingly filed false reports about Abramoff-paid boondoggles and were "concerned 'if someone starts asking questions.'"
In somewhat related news, the administration's freefall in the polls continues, with even conservatives now admitting that Dubya is quacking like a lame duck. Meanwhile, some congressional Republicans begin to hear strains of 1994 in their own corruption and excess. And, with the Christian Coalition also nearing the End of (its) Days to boot, one has to wonder: Could we Dems ask for a more favorable electoral terrain against the Dubya-DeLay GOP heading into this November? And when are our party leaders going to rise to this opportunity and start offering a vision of leadership the American people can get behind?
"''Any rational person in [DeLay's] position would be very concerned,' said Kendall Coffey, a former federal prosecutor who is now a prominent defense lawyer in Miami. 'Whether it's working up the ladder at Enron or a drug organization, it's classic strategy to work up by getting plea agreements and cooperation at each level.'" As the GOP preps for a DeLay-less future, it seems that, for Boss DeLay -- despite having theoretically left "on his own terms" -- the legal woes are just beginning.
Breaking news: In a boon for the republic (and likely for the Republican party, now that the poster boy for their culture of corruption will be out of sight through November), Boss DeLay is done. "DeLay's fall has been stunningly swift, one of the most brutal and decisive in American history."
Another crack emerges in the DeLay-Abramoff Ring: The Feds flip Tony Rudy, a former top flunky of Boss DeLay's, which is particularly bad news for the former "Mayor of Capitol Hill," Bob Ney. "According to papers filed today, Rudy will provide key corroborating information regarding the case prosecutors are building against [Ney], who was taken by Abramoff on a lavish trip to Scotland in 2002." Update: The Post profiles Rudy. "'How did Abramoff and Rudy meet, through JDate? No, they met through DeLay,' Frank said."
"'I believe the most damaging thing that Tom DeLay has done in his life is take his faith seriously into public office, which made him a target for all those who despise the cause of Christ,' Scarborough said, introducing DeLay yesterday." The WP's Dana Milbank reports in as the right-wing "War on Christians" crowd embrace Boss DeLay as a martyr."When DeLay finished, the host reminded the politician: 'God always does his best work right after a crucifixion.'" Update: Salon's Michelle Goldberg has more.
"Abramoff, for his part, once boasted that he had invested a million dollars in Buckham, according to a former Abramoff colleague...Abramoff expressed confidence that the funds would bring a good return for his clients, the colleague said." Good news/bad news for Boss DeLay: While DoL Robert Novak reports that Casino Jack is not implicating the Hammer as part of his plea bargain, the WP finds that former DeLay Chief of Staff Edwin Buckham skimmed over a million dollars from the US Family Network, a "pro-family" nonprofit funded by Abramoff clients. [Graphic] "In addition, Buckham and his wife, Wendy, acting through their consulting firm, made monthly payments averaging $3,200-$3,400 apiece to DeLay's wife, Christine, for three of the years in which he collected money from the USFN and some other clients." (Boss DeLay, it bears remembering also paid his wife and kids a half mill in PAC funds.) Well, I guess if by "pro-family" you're talking about the Buckham and DeLay families, this is all money well spent.
"In the three Republican primaries that DeLay has faced since he was first elected in 1984, he has never received less than 80 percent of the vote, until now. Over the past four years, the percentage of Republicans who have had enough of the Hammer has doubled." With perhaps a dollop of wishful thinking, Salon's Joe Conason parses the results of Boss DeLay's recent primary win.
Thanks to the ugly public machinations of Casino Jack and Boss DeLay, GOP courting of the "September 12" vote stalls out. "'September 12 Republicans' were Jewish Democrats and independents who would switch their allegiance because of their concern over national security and their appreciation of President Bush's stalwart support of Israel."
With three opponents all bucking to take him into a runoff situation, Boss DeLay faces a tougher GOP primary than usual in his home district this Tuesday. (In a January poll, 68% of primary voters remained undecided.) And, even if he emerges from the primary dust-up relatively unscathed, DeLay will then face a credible and well-financed Democratic opponent in former Rep. Nick Lampson, who, in the same poll, led the Hammer by eight points. "It will not help DeLay that his district is more Democratic, ironically by his own making...Always a strong candidate in his own races, DeLay surrendered GOP voters in the realignment to bolster some other Republican districts. Now, after contending with indictment and departure from the House leadership, he could be facing the loss of the very seat he used to rise to power." Update: Or not. Boss DeLay coasts to victory over his three primary challengers with 62% of the vote.
File this one next to Red Scorpion: The Boston Globe uncovers that, among Casino Jack's various other projects, Abramoff wanted to dig for oil in Israel, and had established a company, First Gate Resources, with some Russian investors to do so. It seems these investors, "energy company executives of a Moscow firm called Naftasib," may also have paid for a 1997 DeLay-Abramoff boondoggle to Moscow. Also, the Feds "have sought information about Naftasib's interest in congressional support for Russian projects financed through the International Monetary Fund." The plot thickens...
The Bush administration loves it, but many Justice Dept. officials think it's illegal...Now, it's the Supreme Court's turn to weigh in on Boss DeLay's gerrymandering plan in Texas. "Two years ago, justices split 5-4, in a narrow opening for challenges claiming party politics overly influenced election maps. Justice Anthony M. Kennedy was the key swing voter in that case, and on Wednesday expressed concerns about at least part of the Texas map." (Rehnquist and O'Connor sided against the map challenge then, so a switch by Roberts or Alito will only mean a larger majority against the DeLay redistricting, should the same votes hold.) Update: Justice Ginsburg finds the subject exhausting, and Dahlia Lithwick reports in.
"'This audit was political retaliation by Tom DeLay's cronies to intimidate us for blowing the whistle on DeLay's abuses,' McDonald said. 'Enlisting the IRS to intimidate critics is a dirty trick reminiscent of Richard Nixon...It is not a crime to report a crime, as we did with DeLay.'" Texans for Public Justice, a non-profit organization critical of the DeLay ring's hold over their home state, has been cleared of any wrongdoing in an IRS audit -- one seemingly triggered, it was discovered after a FOIA request, by Boss DeLay's minions. "The [instigating] lawmaker, House Ways and Means Committee member Sam Johnson (R-Tex.), was in turn responding to a complaint about the group...from Barnaby W. Zall, a Washington lawyer close to DeLay and his fundraising apparatus, according to IRS documents."
The Justice Department, along with Casino Jack's lawyers, ask for a delay of sentencing for Abramoff in the Suncruz case, so that he can continue working with the Feds on the bigger picture of GOP corruption. "'Mr. Abramoff has been working very hard in terms of his cooperation,' said Neal Sonnett, Abramoff's attorney in Miami." Let's hope so.
"Not since 1994 has the party in power -- in this case the Republicans -- faced such a discouraging landscape in a midterm election...The result is a midterm already headed toward what appears to be an inevitable conclusion: Democrats are poised to gain seats in the House and in the Senate for the first time since 2000. The difference between modest gains (a few seats in the Senate and fewer than 10 in the House) and significant gains (half a dozen in the Senate and well more than a dozen in the House) is where the battle for control of Congress will be fought." The WP previews the midterm electoral landscape. Excellent news...but still, if anyone's shown an amazing capacity to spin gold into straw, it's our current crop of Dems.
Despite well-publicized concerns in their own Justice Department (which were overruled by senior officials), the White House rides to the rescue of Boss DeLay's troubling redistricting plan by filing an amicus brief before the Supreme Court. "DeLay's efforts on behalf of the plan resulted in his being admonished by the House Ethics Committee and indicted on charges of illegally diverting money to the campaigns of state legislators who drew the new map."
Behind closed doors, the Republicans talk amongst themselves about lobbying reform, with the status quo beating back a challenge by reformers to vote on new GOP leadership across the board (except for Hastert.) "'All we were doing was asking us to look in the mirror,' Rep. Daniel E. Lungren (R-Calif.), a co-sponsor of the motion, said after the vote. 'The shadow of [Jack] Abramoff is not a mere distraction but a serious problem to address.'" Meanwhile, in the race for Majority Leader, while Blunt might be on the threshold of maintaining the DeLay ring's hold over the House GOP, Boehner apparently proved himself no friend to reform either. Speaking on the GOP's anti-lobbying package, he "scoffed that Congress knows how to do just two things well -- nothing and overreact, according to witnesses." And Boehner leads the candidates in former-staffers-turned-lobbyists.
But, give 'em credit -- the GOP have at least succeeded in kicking lobbyists out of the House gym. "The rule change passed overwhelmingly, 379 to 50, but not before Democrats -- and some Republicans -- ridiculed it as meaningless. Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.) suggested that lawmakers compromise and change the rules so that lobbyists must yield to lawmakers who want to use the gym equipment they are on. 'I'm a gym guy; I've never seen anybody lobbied there,' said Rep. Jack Kingston (R-Ga.). 'I've never seen any nefarious plots hatched on the treadmill.'" Just in case, though, Boss DeLay voted against the change.
Update: It's Boehner on the second ballot over Blunt, 122-109. (Looks like the Shadegg-Boehner deal went through -- On the first ballot, Blunt, who will remain Majority Whip, was only 7 votes shy of winning.)
"'Clearly, Blunt has demonstrated great leadership; Cantor has, too,' Rep. Mark Foley (R-Fla.) said. 'Are we saying we don't trust anyone in our leadership? That makes the case that everybody in Washington is on the take, that we're all corrupt.'" Yeah, that sounds about right...Sensing electoral doom in the growing public perception that the GOP is rife with corruption, Boehner and Shadegg contemplate joining forces to knock off Boss DeLay's heir apparent, Roy Blunt, in the House leadership race.
"So what does real reform look like? There is no simple answer or silver bullet. If history is any judge, each round of ethics reforms lasts only a few years before lobbyists, lawyers and lawmakers pierce it full of holes. But ethics crusaders still hope to capitalize on this rare political moment, hurled forth on a powerful wave of corruption scandals plaguing the Republican Party." Salon's Michael Scherer outlines five lobbying reforms that'll determine whether Congress is serious about cleaning up the system in the wake of Casino Jack.
"'I don't get the sense many people are paying attention,' said Rep. Tom Feeney (R-Fla.), who has been hoping party activists would lead demands for a shake-up. 'Corruption is still 90 percent an inside-the-Beltway' issue." According to the WP, the GOP are finding that the Ballad of Casino Jack isn't playing in Peoria just yet, at least among the conservative base. "'The question is, is this a climate where an actual reform candidate could be elected to a leadership position?' [GOP Rep Zach] Wamp asked. An initial pulse-taking of voters suggests that the answer is no, he and others said.'" Well, I'd expect the issue will muster more enthusiasm among Democratic and independent voters, and particularly after the indictments start rolling in.
Still trying to get ahead of the Abramoff story, the House GOP unveil their new anti-lobbying bill. The package includeds "the banning of privately sponsored travel" (so long, Scotland boondoggles), as well as "a virtual ban on gifts, except for inconsequential items like baseball caps, and a provision that will affect few people: elimination of congressional pensions for anyone convicted of a felony related to official duties...One important part of the GOP plan would increase -- from one year to two years -- the waiting period before former lawmakers and senior staff members could lobby Congress." Common Cause's response: Sounds like a good start, but let's talk enforcement. As for the Dems, they'll announce their own plan -- with a stricter gift ban -- later this week.
Update: "Today we as Democrats are declaring our commitment to change, change to a government as good and as honest as the people that we serve." The Dems announce their own reform plans, which "go further than the Republicans' proposals. Rather than limiting the value of a gift to $20, as House Republicans are considering, Democrats would prohibit all gifts from lobbyists....Lawmakers would have to publicly disclose negotiations over private-sector jobs...House and Senate negotiators working out final versions of legislation would have to meet in open session, with all members of the conference committee -- not just Republicans -- having the opportunity to vote on amendments. Legislation would have to be posted publicly 24 hours before congressional consideration." And, as bc posted in the comments, James Carville and Paul Begala have offered their own comprehensive campaign finance-ethics plan, which involves public financing of candidates and a total ban on incumbent fundraising. Now that's the type of bold, outside-the-box thinking I'd like to see more of right now. Particularly given that, as the Washington Post pointed out, the GOP ethics bill won't work at all unless it's coupled with serious campaign finance reform.
Casino Jack's plea deal claims another Congressional victim: Over the weekend (when I discovered his name sounds like "neigh" and not "knee") and as expected, "Freedom Fries" sponsor and DeLay flunky Bob Ney agreed to step down as House Admin chair. And now, a few Congress-watchers are starting to take a closer look at Speaker Hastert's role in the Abramoff scandals, and in perpetuating the DeLay Ring's rule. "'I suppose that DeLay was simply a much more inviting target for the [Democrats], so Hastert is left alone,' said Rep. Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.). 'Maybe people will start focusing on Hastert now.'"
Meanwhile, as DeLay's numbers plummet in his home district, things aren't looking so hot either for former GOP wunderkind Ralph Reed, an old Abramoff college friend with a long and troubling e-mail evidence chain to Casino Jack. "'After reading the e-mail, it became pretty obvious he was putting money before God,' said Phil Dacosta, a Georgia Christian Coalition member who had initially backed Reed. 'We are righteously casting him out.'"
"'The Ney situation has changed after the plea agreement,' said a House Republican insider close to the talks. 'There are people that have pled guilty who have conspired to bribe him.'" As part of the post-Abramoff GOP clean-up/cover-up, Speaker Hastert pressures DeLay flunky Bob Ney to resign as chairman of the House Administration Committee. And conservative Arizona Republican John Shadegg joins the House Leadership race, hoping to benefit from his lack of lobbying ties compared to Blunt and Boehner, the two frontrunners.
In the continuing Abramoff fallout department, a disgraced Boss DeLay has picked up a primary challenger, Tom Campbell, in his home district. "'If we don't clean house in March, we'll lose the House in November,' Campbell said." Meanwhile, as the GOP tries to choose between two K-Street darlings for their new majority leader, the House looks to the McCain-Shays bill of last month as a template for new lobbying restrictions."The McCain bill would beef up lobbying disclosure considerably and cover grass-roots lobbying campaigns, which now go unreported. It would also require lobbyists to report each fundraising event that they host or sponsor for candidates for federal office, including the amount raised. In addition, the McCain bill would require lobbyists to report the donations they give to lawmakers directly and at events that honor lawmakers or entities that they created or control. It would also require lobbyists to disclose quarterly -- which would be twice as often as they file now -- any gift worth more than $20 that they give to lawmakers or their aides, including meals and tickets to events." Sounds like a start...but it'll take more than increased disclosure to transform a Washington culture that's turned rancid in recent years thanks to overwhelming lobbyist influence.
More bad news for Boss DeLay: Once again, a Texas court has refused to dismiss money-laundering charges against him. Meanwhile, Speaker Dennis Hastert taps David Dreier to pen new lobbying rules for the House (ignoring the fact that Dems, with the aid of Republican Chris Shays, composed stricter lobbying legislation months ago.) And GOP insiders (and, basically, DeLay flunkies) Roy Blunt and John Boehner scramble to take DeLay's place as majority leader, despite both being tainted by Abramoff contributions. Two days after the Hammer's fall, and it's already becoming clear: The only real way to cleanse Congress of this current wave of corruption is the ballot box, come November.
"The job of majority leader and the mandate of the Republican majority are too important to be hamstrung, even for a few months, by personal distractions." Whether it be due to Abramoff's encroaching testimony, the uprising of GOP moderates, Duke Cunningham's wire, or all of the above, Boss DeLay has admitted defeat and given up his post for good. While this is excellent news, there's still much work to do: The ringleader may be dethroned, but the DeLay Ring persists. Hopefully prosecutors in Texas and the Justice Department, as well as members of Congress shamed by the rampant corruption characterizing DeLay's reign, won't rest until the Hammer is thrown out of the House and taken to the woodshed. In fact, with any luck, Boss DeLay will be a featured member of the Big House before long.
"In the short run, members of Congress will get allergic to lobbyists." As Casino Jack enters a second plea and the fatcats of K St. begin to panic, many top GOP officials burn their Abramoff cash (and for good reason), including Ney, DeLay, Hastert, Blunt, and Dubya. "Abramoff raised at least $100,000 for the Bush-Cheney '04 re-election campaign, earning the honorary title 'pioneer' from the campaign. But the campaign is giving up only $6,000 that came directly from Abramoff, his wife and one of the Indian tribes that he worked to win influence for in Washington." Update: According to the NYT, the Abramoff plea may have put the dagger to Boss DeLay's comeback hopes.
Happy 2006, y'all. Today's a travel day for me (from San Diego back to Norfolk), so updates will be sparse. That being said, amid the grim news in West Virginia, I'd be remiss if I didn't post this glint of light for the new year: As rumored, the Feds have flipped Jack Abramoff, meaning trouble ahead for the DeLay-driven GOP corruption machine. While the inquiry into Boss DeLay, who just picked up a Dem opponent in the 2006 midterms, "could take up to a year and require the cooperation of other witnesses before issues are resolved," it seems prosecutors will move more quickly against DeLay deputy and GOP official Bob Ney, who corresponds to a "Representative #1" referred to in the plea agreement. Let's get this show started!
"'Jack would say, 'I gave that guy 10 grand and he voted against me!'" Previewing "what could become the biggest congressional corruption scandal in generations" when it fully erupts in 2006, the Washington Post offers a brief overview of the meteoric rise and sordid fall of Casino Jack Abramoff.
It's Boss DeLay's worst nightmare: the Feds might be close to flipping Abramoff. "Abramoff would provide testimony about numerous members of Congress and their staffs if he and the Justice Department reach an agreement, the sources said." Great...my only concern is that Casino Jack might try to pull a Wee-Bay (from The Wire), and take the fall for the higher-ups in his organization. Then again, with Abramoff, Adam Kidan, Michael Scanlon, and David Safavian all on the hook, one of the rats should likely squeal.
In an interview with FOX News's Brit Hume, Dubya backs Boss DeLay, saying he is innocent of money laundering. "It is highly unusual for a president to express an opinion on a pending legal case. Richard M. Nixon, for instance, was widely criticized for declaring Charles Manson 'guilty, directly or indirectly' of murder while Manson's trial was ongoing." Also in the interview, Dubya tried to pin Casino Jack on both parties and gave Rumsfeld the Brownie thumbs up. Update: The backlash begins.
Ten days after the Post unearthed a Justice Department memo deeming the recent Texas redistricting a violation of civil liberties, the Supreme Court says it will review the DeLay plan. "The panel stressed that it was deciding 'only the legality' of the redistricting plan, 'not its wisdom.'"
In a blow to the Hammer's hopes of regaining his seat of power in the near future, the judge in Boss DeLay's Texas trial offers up a split decision, dismissing a conspiracy charge against DeLay (the law apparently wasn't on the books when he broke it) while upholding the "far more serious allegations of money-laundering." Update: As a result of the judge's decision, DeLay's GOP opponents start to balk under his regime.
Another smoking gun...The Post obtains a memo showing that Justice Department lawyers generally agreed that the infamous DeLay redistricting in Texas violated the Voting Rights Act. "The memo, unanimously endorsed by six lawyers and two analysts in the department's voting section, said the redistricting plan illegally diluted black and Hispanic voting power in two congressional districts. It also said the plan eliminated several other districts in which minorities had a substantial, though not necessarily decisive, influence in elections." Nevertheless, higher-ups at John Ashcroft's Justice Dept. overruled the memo for partisan reasons, to great effect: "The redistricting was approved in 2003, and Texas Republicans gained five seats in the U.S. House in the 2004 elections, solidifying GOP control of Congress." As the illegalities pile up, one has to wonder: Is there any facet of the Republican operation that isn't rotten to the core?
The NYT examines yet another front in the widening Abramoff investigation: the quid pro quo hiring of GOP flunkies on K Street for legislative favors. "Investigators are said to be especially interested in how Tony C. Rudy, a former deputy chief of staff to Representative Tom DeLay of Texas, and Neil G. Volz, a former chief of staff to Representative Bob Ney of Ohio, obtained lobbying positions with big firms on K Street."
Another week, another Republican goes to jail. Today, it's Congressman Randy "Duke" Cunningham (R-CA), who once invoked 9/11 to push a flag-burning amendment and whom prosecutors have been eyeing for months. ("Duke," "Hammer," "Casino Jack," "Scooter," "Mayor of Capitol Hill"...really, the fact that every high-ranking GOP official has a street name should tell you something.) At any rate, Cunningham pleaded guilty 'to charges of conspiracy to commit bribery, mail fraud and wire fraud, and tax evasion for underreporting his income in 2004.'...[P]rosecutors said Cunningham admitted to receiving at least $2.4 million in bribes paid to him by several conspirators thro



