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Politico article baselessly suggested "culture of corruption" is bipartisan

June 07, 2007 4:57 pm ET
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In a June 5 article on the political implications of the June 4 corruption-related indictment of Rep. William Jefferson (D-LA), The Politico asserted that freshmen House Democrats who "campaigned against a 'Republican culture of corruption' and promised to clean up Congress once elected" must now "dispel the notion that little has changed in Washington." Yet, in suggesting that due to the Jefferson indictment, the "culture of corruption" is a bipartisan problem, The Politico failed to report the extent to which current and former Republican members of Congress have been convicted or indicted or are reportedly under investigation, or the fact that the House under Democratic control has passed several ethics reforms.

From the article by Politico staff writers Josephine Hearn and Patrick O'Connor, headlined "Copycats: The GOP Scandal Strategy":

Taking a page from the Democrats' playbook, Republicans hope to make vulnerable Democrats regret every association they ever had with Rep. William Jefferson (D-La.), indicted Monday on corruption charges.

[...]

Many of the Democrats' 41 new freshmen campaigned against a "Republican culture of corruption" and promised to clean up Congress once elected. But nearly six months into the new Congress, one of their own faces some of the most serious charges ever filed against a sitting lawmaker.

Now, the freshmen and other vulnerable Democrats must dispel the notion that little has changed in Washington, even though many of Jefferson's alleged crimes occurred long before the freshmen declared their campaigns for Congress.

The Politico made no mention of the fact that at least nine Republican members of Congress and Bush administration officials -- including former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay (TX) -- have been indicted or pleaded guilty to criminal charges, and that the "culture of corruption" charge stemmed from two Republican scandals relating to disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff and convicted former Rep. Randy "Duke" Cunningham (R-CA). The article described DeLay simply as "scandal-plagued" and did not note that he is currently under indictment for violating Texas state election laws (nor that he is a Politico contributor). The article noted that Rep. Zack Space (D-OH) "succeeded convicted former Rep. Bob Ney (R-Ohio)" but failed to note that Ney was convicted after pleading guilty to accepting bribes from Abramoff.

The Republican lawmakers and members of the Bush administration who have recently been indicted or convicted of various crimes include:

  • Rep. Randy "Duke" Cunningham (R-CA), who on November 28, 2005 pleaded guilty to taking bribes from defense contractor Mitchell Wade. Cunningham was ultimately sentenced to over eight years in prison, the longest term handed down to a former member of Congress.
  • A former DeLay aide, Tony Rudy, pleaded guilty in connection with the Abramoff scandal, while another former aide, Michael Scanlon, pleaded guilty to conspiring with Abramoff to bribe public officials.
  • Former White House procurement official David H. Safavian was convicted in June 2006 of lying and obstructing justice in the Abramoff investigation.
  • Former vice presidential chief of staff I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby was convicted in March 2006 of obstructing justice and making false statements. On June 5, he was sentenced to 30 months in prison and ordered to pay a $250,000 fine.
  • Former Deputy Secretary of the Interior J. Steven Griles pleaded guilty in March 2007 to obstructing justice. As a March 23 Associated Press article reported, Griles "admitt[ed] in a plea agreement that he lied in testimony before the Senate Indian Affairs Committee on Nov. 2, 2005, and during an earlier deposition with the panel's investigators on October 20, 2005."
  • Former CIA executive director Kyle "Dusty" Foggo was charged by federal prosecutors in San Diego with improperly trying to steer a $132 million contract to defense contractor Brent Wilkes.
  • Former FDA commissioner Lester Crawford pleaded guilty to charges of "conflict of interest and false reporting of information about stocks he owned in food, beverage and medical device companies he was in charge of regulating," according to an October 17, 2006, Associated Press report. "Beginning in 2002," the AP report stated, "Crawford filed seven incorrect financial reports with a government ethics office and Congress, leading to the charges."
  • Former Federal Housing Finance Board chairman John T. Korsmo "pleaded guilty to one count of making false statements to the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee, which oversees the Finance Board, and the Inspector General for the Finance Board."

In addition, several current and former Republican congressmen and senators are reportedly under investigation over corruption allegations. For example:

  • Rep. John T. Doolittle (CA) is reportedly under investigation by the FBI in connection to his dealings with Abramoff.
  • Rep. Jerry Lewis (CA) is reportedly under investigation in connection with the Cunningham scandal, and will reportedly not seek re-election. According to a January 31 article in The Hill, Minority Leader John Boehner (R-OH) said in an interview that "he believes Lewis is innocent until proven guilty, and that prevented him from toppling him from the top GOP spot on the [House Appropriations Committee]."
  • Rep. Gary Miller (CA) is reportedly under investigation for two land deals and related taxes, although he says FBI agents have not contacted him.
  • Rep. Rick Renzi (AZ) is reportedly the subject of a preliminary investigation into whether he pressured several landowners to buy land from a business partner.
  • Former Sen. Conrad Burns (MT) is reportedly under investigation in the Abramoff investigation.
  • Former Rep. Curt Weldon (PA) is being investigated over allegations that "he used his influence to obtain lobbying and consulting contracts for his daughter," the Associated Press reported on October 14, 2006.

In addition, as The Washington Post reported on March 8, Sen. Pete V. Domenici (R-NM) is the subject of a preliminary Senate ethics investigation into a phone call he made to then-U.S. Attorney David Iglesias before the 2006 elections. According to an April 12 Post article, "[B]ecause the House ethics committee keeps its probes secret, it is unclear whether the lower chamber is looking into the similar allegations concerning Rep. Heather Wilson (R-N.M.), a close ally of Domenici." Domenici and Wilson allegedly pressured Iglesias to indict a local Democratic official on corruption charges before the elections. Wilson eventually won her tight race for re-election.

By contrast, one Democrat, Rep. Alan Mollohan (WV), is reportedly the subject of an FBI investigation.

Moreover, despite suggesting that freshmen and other "vulnerable" House Democrats "must dispel the notion that little has changed in Washington," the Politico article made no mention of the ethics legislation and rule changes that have already passed the House in 2007. The Post reported on May 24:

Prodded by Democratic leaders and by freshmen elected partly on promises to clean up Washington, the House approved new ethics legislation yesterday that would penalize lawmakers who receive a wide range of favors from special interests, and would require lobbyists to disclose the campaign contributions they collect and deliver to lawmakers.

Party leaders and new lawmakers worked until the day before the vote to sway some longtime members who had balked at the proposals. It took weeks of persuasion by Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and other key lawmakers to convince recalcitrant Democrats -- among them some members of the speaker's inner circle.

The new proposals, which in the end passed overwhelmingly, would expand the information available about how business is done on Capitol Hill and make it available online. They would provide expanded, more frequent and Internet-accessible reporting of lobbyist-paid contributions and sponsorships, and would for the first time impose prison terms for criminal rule-breakers. They would also require strict new disclosure of "bundled" campaign contributions that lobbyists collect and pass on to lawmakers' campaigns. Yesterday's legislation passed 396 to 22.

[...]

The House in January passed rules banning gifts, meals and travel from lobbyists. The rules also require sponsors of pet spending projects, known as earmarks, to identify themselves and certify that they have no financial interest in them.

A bill passed by the Senate in January includes similar bans, as well as reporting requirements for earmarks and bundled campaign contributions from lobbyists. The differences between the House and Senate bills must be resolved before a final measure is sent for the president's signature, probably before the August recess, Democratic leaders said.

Democratic leaders and some watchdog groups hailed yesterday's bill as the most sweeping ethics package since the post-Watergate era. Even so, it lost proposals such as disclosure of "grass-roots" communications campaigns orchestrated by lobbyists and an extension from one year to two of the time lawmakers must wait between leaving their jobs and lobbying former colleagues. Instead, the bill would require that lawmakers interviewing for private-sector jobs publicly recuse themselves from issues involving their prospective new industry.

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    • Author by bingvangorden (June 07, 2007 4:59 pm ET)
         

      Republican math; 1 corrupt Democrat>several corrupt Republicans. The RNC should be disbanded. Throw 'em all in jail.

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      • Author by duncan12347948 (June 07, 2007 5:14 pm ET)
           

        Oh, when did William Jefferson join the Republican party?

        Alcee Hastings

        John Murtha Abscam

        Maxine Waters

        Etc. Etc.

        Report Abuse
        • Author by valentinian (June 07, 2007 5:20 pm ET)
             

          Alcee Hastings? ABSCAM? Weren't those things, like, twenty years ago? 

          I mean, why not let's talk about the Teapot Dome scandal...? 

          Report Abuse
          • Author by duncan12347948 (June 07, 2007 5:22 pm ET)
               

            Huey Long

            Report Abuse
            • Author by valentinian (June 07, 2007 5:44 pm ET)
                 

              John Wilkes Booth was a Democrat

              Report Abuse
              • Author by steve k (June 07, 2007 5:52 pm ET)
                   

                Abraham Lincoln was a Republican. In Duncan's eyes, that means that all Republicans from 1865 onwards are absolved for their sins no matter how bad they are.

                Report Abuse
          • Author by ChessGuy (June 07, 2007 5:26 pm ET)
               

            And you're missing the other side of the coin - the Repubnuts haven't committed a crime in a week so they've obviously cleaned up all their corruption. Ok, they haven't been caught in a week.

            Report Abuse
        • Author by bingvangorden (June 07, 2007 5:22 pm ET)
             

          Blah blah blah. Those are weak examples in comparison. I am more than willing to toss a rotten Democrat out of my party. Same can't be said for Republicans. They seem to celebrate their depravity, or hide it for them. Duke Cunnigham had a freakin bribe list. Tom Delay rejoced in violating Texas campaign laws. How many Republican former Congressmen have turned to lobbying? Conflict of interest? It doesn't exist in the Republican Party. Assuming this "culture of corruption" is bipartisan, get rid of yours and I'll get rid of mine. But don't hold up Jefferson's bribery and claim it evens out all the rotten Republicans in the 109th and 110th Congress. As well as the ones like Delay who have been indicted. 

          Report Abuse
          • Author by duncan12347948 (June 07, 2007 5:28 pm ET)
               

            That is the point it is bipartisan and MMFA is wrong to imply that it is not. Both parties have corrupt members over the years and always will.

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            • Author by bingvangorden (June 07, 2007 5:36 pm ET)
                 

              I'm sorry but I did not prove your point. It seems Republicans want to claim that corruption's always been a problem so Republicans shouldn't take their share of the blame and worse, only Democrats should be investigated. When there are as many Democrats indicted or in prison as Republicans we can call it a bipartisan problem. That's going to take a while for Dems to catch up. Instead of claiming it's bipartisan to deflect from the over whelming Republican criminal and unconstitutional activity, how about fixing the problem? They don't want to. Jefferson is no the norm for Democrats, Duke, Delay, Scooter, Frist, Goodling, Rove, Bush, Cheney, Card, and every Republican Jack Abramoff hung out with. It's not even close. This corruption being bipartisan is simply absurd. 

              Report Abuse
    • Author by jeter2 (June 07, 2007 5:02 pm ET)
         

      Ok enough of this crap.

      The "culture of corruption" is bipartisan.

      The only difference is that Republicans get "caught" more often ;-)

      Report Abuse
      • Author by DorisRussell (June 07, 2007 5:07 pm ET)
           

        I tend to agree, I think corruption does not see party lines.

        Report Abuse
        • Author by duncan12347948 (June 07, 2007 5:25 pm ET)
             

          Oh please Doris. I am losing faith in you. The Democrats are pure as the driving snow.

          Report Abuse
          • Author by bingvangorden (June 07, 2007 5:40 pm ET)
               

            Hardly. And no one is suggesting that. That accusation of yours is just another attempt to deflect from the serious legal and ethical challenges the Republicans have. It's party wide. Absolute power corrupts absolutely. Right now, in this moment in time the former majority party, the Republicans are as guilty as sin. To imply that it's all even is just plain nuts.

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            • Author by duncan12347948 (June 07, 2007 6:02 pm ET)
                 

              You are right. Please forgive me. The Democrats are have no corruption are as I said pure as the driving snow. Democrats never sin. Who was that guy that was the Mayor of Chicago? Was it Daily you got JFK elected? Democrats over time have been just as corrupt and still are as corrupt as ever. Was is it AL Gore who said there was no controlling law over his  illegal phone calls from the White House.   

              Report Abuse
              • Author by bingvangorden (June 07, 2007 6:11 pm ET)
                   

                You missed again but keep trying. You are leaning on past transgressions of Democrats who were corrupt to overlook the massive Republican corruption now. How about we deal with the present? As I have said, no one here is suggesting that all Democrats are squeaky clean. But you have fallen into the trap that Politico has set for you. Jefferson is a pig, it looks pretty bad for him. He should be bounced out of the party as many Democrats have said. The same treatment has not been made by the Republicans with their own. And until they do corruption will continue to be the norm. It's just laughable to compare one Democrat's wrong doings to the dozens of current investigations and incarcerations involving Republicans. Some idiots even think they are being persecuted unfairly. Even when the prosecutor and judge are Republicans appointed by a Republican, Scooter Libby, a Republican, is still being defended by other Republicans claiming it's all partisan. Now that's a sign of the times. No Democrats involved but somehow that poor poor stooge Scooter Libby is being sent up the river because of politics. Only a Republican could come up with circular logic like that.

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                • Author by duncan12347948 (June 07, 2007 7:29 pm ET)
                     

                  WILLIAM JEFFERSON

                  Report Abuse
                  • Author by bingvangorden (June 08, 2007 1:44 pm ET)
                       

                    Yep, that's all you got. And guess what, we, the Democrats want his filthy bribe taking butt out. Same can't be said for Repugnicans who try to protect their filthy money grubbing corrupt and ethically challenged colleagues. Give it up, you lose, you have nothing, no leg to stand on, no argument to make. Republican malfeasance is unprecedented in it's scope. Get a life there Duncan donuts, your party is full of criminals and serial liars. Clean your own house.

                    Report Abuse
              • Author by steeve (June 07, 2007 6:43 pm ET)
                   

                That's king-size stupid.

                When you can't argue, argue against no one.  Because that's who is claiming perfection among all democratic officials throughout eternity.

                There is a giant gulf between zero corruption and republican corruption.  The democrats are much closer to the zero end.

                Report Abuse
              • Author by solon (June 08, 2007 12:21 am ET)
                   

                Mayor Daily could NOT have 'gotten' JFK elected. That is another really stupid rightwing lie that dumb people regurgitate without checking the facts. IF Illinois electoral votes had gone to Nixon, Kennedy would STILL have won the election

                http://www.archives.gov/federal-register/electoral-college/scores.html

                Kennedy 303 electoral votes Nixon 219 take thirty from Kennedy that is 279 add thirty to Nixon 249 Kennedy STILL WINS.

                Report Abuse
      • Author by solon (June 07, 2007 5:22 pm ET)
           

        That isnt the only difference. I would add that the party in power has more opportunities. I have seen times the Dems dominated the corruption. That being said I have never seen the blatant level of corruption and hubris, I mean just not even hiding the corruption that we had the last six years.

        Report Abuse
        • Author by oscar the grouch (June 07, 2007 7:53 pm ET)
             

          Solon, as you look back through history, you will find that some of the things that have gone on in the recent past, as bad and wrong as they are, are no worse that what has gone on in the past 150 years or so in government.  Those in power, left in power long enough, will be corrupted by that power if they are so inclined.  Recent history shows the Rs as the ones "jobbing" the system for the most part, but we could if we wished take another 10 year slice out of history and find the Ds on the corrupt side.  It therefore is a bi-partisan issue.

          DeLay, indicted, resigned (almost 2 years and no formal charges filed)

          Jefferson, indicted (in limbo)

          Cunningham, Ney, convicted, out of Congress, in prision

          Traficant, convicted, out of Congress, in prision.

          We could go on, from the Federal level through State levels to local levels across the country and we will find corruption follows no party lines.  There has been a lot of publicity covering the problems of the Rs over the past several years, I believe in this instance the "reporter" was just pointing out that corruption is not a single party problem.

          Report Abuse
          • Author by solon (June 10, 2007 7:10 am ET)
               

            I have no problem with that assertion. As I said somewhere else the party IN power has more opportunity for corruption and often tend to an arrogance that leads that way. However it has ZERO to do with my point. This is another undead rightwing talking point I ALWAYS shoot down. If he wants to make a point he needs to back it up with REAL facts not something a rightwing blovating LIAR told him that has ZERO connection to reality as I have proven.

            Report Abuse
      • Author by steve k (June 07, 2007 5:41 pm ET)
           

        I said it before, Jeter: the degree and kind of systematic, institutionalized bribery and corruption the Republicans engaged in during the last decade is without precedent in the history of American politics. It's telling that it took forty years for the Democratic Congress to grow corrupt enough to get kicked out; it took the Republicans just twelve years. Perhaps someday the Democrats will grow equally corrupt, but that day is not now, nor will it be in the foreseeable future. 

        Equally telling is the difference between how the two parties deal with corruption. Nancy Pelosi asked Jefferson to step down when he came under investigation, and the Democrats removed him from the House Ways and Means Committee. Contrast this with how Dennis Hastert reacted when faced with evidence of Mark Foley's flirtations with underage pages: he covered it up for months, then when it finally broke, he stonewalled until he was forced to do something about it. 

        Saying that corruption is a bipartisan problem is just intellectually lazy. It's clear to anyone who pays any real attention that the occasional incidences of corrupt Democrats just don't compare with the scope and breadth of Republican criminality.

        If you're interested in learning about how thoroughly the Republicans in Congress screwed us over, I suggest Conservatives Without Conscience, by John Dean. There you can learn about how bad the Republicans were, and how close Tom Delay came to turning Congress into his own private little kingdom.

        Report Abuse
        • Author by jeter2 (June 07, 2007 8:33 pm ET)
             

          Steve,

          If it wasn't obvious, my posts on this topic have been tongue in cheek.

          I'll put Conservatives Without Conscience on my future reading list. I just finished Hubris...a must read if you haven't had the chance already.

          Report Abuse
    • Author by bingvangorden (June 07, 2007 5:08 pm ET)
         

      There you go Jeter. ;^} The Democrats are just too smart to get caught! I just wish the outrage Republicans have towards Democratic malfeasance was equal to their own. At least we want Jefferson to resign. If he were a Republican they put him next in line for Speaker or he'd quit and become a lobbyist.

      Report Abuse
      • Author by jeter2 (June 07, 2007 5:30 pm ET)
           

        Exactly Bing. I'll admit it. Republicans are dumb criminals ;-)

        However if it were up to me I'd clear the entire Capitol Building out & start over.

        Elect me! I'm honest...no really.

        If elected I'd be so happy with my Senate or Rep salary, health insurance & pension that I wouldn't feel the need to venture into criminal behavior.

        And I'd end the war, fix the illegal immigration problem, and make sure every citizen in this country has the good fortune that I have....great salary, great health care, & a great pension that assures a comfortable retirement.

        Report Abuse
        • Author by bingvangorden (June 07, 2007 5:43 pm ET)
             

          Wouldn't it be awesome if we could just start from scratch and fire them all? I am all for that. Let's start a petition, disband the government and hold new elections. If the electorate was as passionate about politics as we are we wouldn't have this problem of life long politicians and their entitlements. They are public representatives for Pete's sake, yet they act like royalty.

          Report Abuse
      • Author by snoopy (June 07, 2007 6:42 pm ET)
           

        Darn! All this time I thought the republicans were just flaunting their disregard for the law in our faces. And here you go, pointing out that they are just plain stupid! Drats!

        Report Abuse
    • Author by Harlequin (June 07, 2007 5:21 pm ET)
         

      This attack on Jefferson reminds me of this cartoon I saw.

      The cartoon shows a normal looking guy sitting in a bar talking to Frankenstein. This normal looking guy had a scar on his arm about an inch long. The normal looking guy says, "Scar you want to see scar I'll show you a scar".

      Jefferson is the one inch scar the Republicans want to brag about compared to their Frankenstein with all of these scars

      Former Federal Housing Finance Board chairman John T. Korsmo

      Rep. John T. Doolittle (CA)

      Rep. Jerry Lewis (CA)

      Rep. Gary Miller (CA)

      Rep. Rick Renzi (AZ)

      Former Sen. Conrad Burns (MT)

      Former Rep. Curt Weldon (PA)

       

      Report Abuse
      • Author by magnolialover (June 07, 2007 6:06 pm ET)
           

        Ney.

        Delay.

        Cunningham.

        Libby.

        And so on and so forth.

        Here's the big difference that I see between republicans (most, not all) and democrats talking about corruption. When someone in the democratic party trips up, and gets busted for something, most of the dems that I know rise up, and say get rid of the bum. When a republican gets busted, they twist around every which way to defend him or her (lots of times) and talk about how this person is playing politics, or how it's a witch hunt, and so on and so forth, and they defend, deflect, and attack the people trying to expose the corruption. It's true. Happens all the time, or at least recently.

        Jefferson = guilty, toss his butt out, which is what I believe when this whole thing first broke out and they found his cool hard cash in the freezer that the democratic leadership at the time pulled him from his committees and asked him repeatedly to resign. I never saw republicans doing that for Delay, Ney, et all...

        Report Abuse
    • Author by fantagor (June 07, 2007 6:47 pm ET)
         

      Finally, an issue which Republicans are all for Democratic inclusion.

      Randy

      Report Abuse
    • Author by greekfurnace (June 07, 2007 6:51 pm ET)
         

      Politicians in general seem to have very little trouble acting 'corruptly' when the occasion arises... on both sides of the aisle.

      However - what we have witnessed over the past 7 years... that is, single party rule... appears to potentiate said 'corruption' to the nth degree. This is something that cannot happen again. Period. 

      Report Abuse

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