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Politics : American Presidential Politics and foreign affairs -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: one_less who wrote (32523)2/10/2009 11:42:44 AM
From: Peter Dierks  Respond to of 71588
 
Eight years ago I thought that our Republic had maybe fifty years to go before it failed and broke into a few smaller countries. A couple years ago I was optimistic we might have closer to a hundred. As a result of the last three months politics I am less optimistic than at any of those times.



To: one_less who wrote (32523)2/19/2009 4:42:32 PM
From: Peter Dierks  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 71588
 
INSIDE WASHINGTON: Democrats hit ethics pothole
AP News
Thursday, February 19, 2009

The Obama administration and the new Congress are rapidly giving Republicans the same "culture of corruption" issue that Democrats used so effectively against the GOP before coming to power.

Democrats' ethical issues are popping up at a dizzying pace, after less than two months of party control of both the White House and Congress. Freshman Sen. Roland Burris, D-Ill. is only the latest embarrassment.

The only consolation is timing: It's nearly two years until the next congressional election, giving Democrats a chance to stop the bleeding in time.

Republicans know all about bad timing on ethics issues. Their scandals developed over a longer period. But they were hurt most by a scandal that broke shortly before the 2006 election.

It was revealed that then-Rep. Mark Foley, R-Fla., wrote suggestive notes to former teenage male pages, and several Republican lawmakers and officials failed to act when they learned of the situation.

The Democrats spun up their campaign theme of a "culture of corruption," and they collected seats from it. Democrats then regained control of the House.

Senate Democrats were blindsided by Burris, because they believed what he told them, that he was clean. Burris now acknowledges that he tried to raise money for Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich, who authorities say sought to sell President Barack Obama's former Senate seat.

"The story seems to be changing day by day," Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said Wednesday.

The political mess for the Democratic Party, however, isn't Burris' conduct alone; it's the pattern that has developed so quickly over the past few months.

_The chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, Rep. Charles Rangel, D-N.Y., is the subject of a House ethics investigation. It's partly focused on his fundraising practices for a college center in his name, his ownership financing of a resort property in the Dominican Republic and his financial disclosure reports.

_Federal agents raided two Pennsylvania defense contractors that were given millions of dollars in federal funding by Rep. John Murtha, D-Pa., chairman of the House Appropriations defense subcommittee.

_Blagojevich was arrested Dec. 9 on federal charges, including allegations that he schemed to sell the Senate seat to the highest bidder.

_Tom Daschle, the former Senate majority leader from South Dakota, abandoned his bid to become health and human services secretary and the administration's point man on reforming health care; and Nancy Killefer stepped down from a newly created position charged with eliminating inefficient government programs.

Both Daschle and Killefer had tax problems, and Daschle also faced potential conflicts of interest related to working with health care interests.

_Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner was confirmed to his post after revealing he had tax troubles.

_Obama's initial choice for commerce secretary, Bill Richardson, stepped aside due to a grand jury investigation into a state contract awarded to his political donors.

_While the Senate voted overwhelmingly to confirm William Lynn as deputy defense secretary, Obama had to waive his ethics regulations to place the former defense lobbyist in charge of day-to-day operations at the Pentagon.

The No. 2 Senate Democrat, Richard Durbin of Illinois, expressed anger about the Burris case Wednesday while he was on an official visit to Greece.

"I do believe that the public statements made by Mr. Burris to this point have raised questions ... as to the nature of his relationship with the former governor and the circumstances surrounding his appointment," Durbin said.

Reid said in Nevada, "Now there's some question as to whether or not he told the truth."

Where to go next? Reid had no answer.

"What I think we have to do is just wait and see," the Senate leader said.

Senate Democrats now may be trapped in their own ethics system. Disciplinary action against a senator usually requires a long investigation by the Senate's ethics committee.

While a preliminary inquiry on Burris is under way, that's only the first step. And, with ongoing criminal investigations in Illinois, the committee probably would have to postpone any action _ as it usually does _ to avoid interference.

___

EDITOR'S NOTE _ Larry Margasak has covered Congress, including major ethics investigations, since 1983.

townhall.com

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Peter's Notes:
New Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has never paid the taxes on the income from debt assumed by the McDougals in the Whitewater and Morgan Guarantee Trust projects. Bill Clinton later pardoned Susan McDougal after she served over a year in jail for contempt of court for refusing to testify about the Clintons.

Washington Representative Jim McDermott has never faced ethics charges for illegally distributing, illegally purchased, illegally taped conversations of his fellow Congressmen.

Democrat Senator Harry Reid has been insolated from ethics charges over his work to deacquisition lands in Nevada which financially benefitted his son.

Democrat Nancy Pelosi has avoided ethics charges over her false reporting of trips paid by lobbyists.

Attorney General Eric Holder was involved in several ethically questionable actions during his service in the Justice Department during the Clinton years. He was involved in the pardoning of the FALN gorilla terrorists to help Hillary Clinton win her New York Senate Seat. He was involved with the kidnapping of refuge Elian Gonzalez at gunpoint and returning him to the prison island of Cuba. Holder was the attorney involved in the pardoning of Marc Rich, along with the pardoning of Clinton ally Susan McDougal, the most ethically outrageous pardon Clinton issued in his last minute pardon fest.

Minnesota election fraudster Al Franken (and Senate hopeful) has failed to pay income taxes to multiple jurisdictions since 2003.

Senator Chris Dodd stonewalled disclosing his sweetheart mortgage loans from Countrywide, who benefitted handsomely from their association with Dodd as the head of the Senate Banking Committee.

Who can forget the $93,000 cold hard cash that the FBI found in democrat Representative William Jefferson's freezer which they believe was bribery proceeds?

Representative Allan Mollohan has accumulated over $20,000,000 in four years time according to The Washington Post through earmarks of "tens of millions of dollars to groups associated with his own business partners."

Jamie Gorelick received over $26,000,000 from Fannie Mae as Vice-Chairman to reward her for keeping the 911 Report from fingering Bill Clinton. This was the period of time during which most of the most egregious accounting irregularities occurred that contributed to her bonuses as well as the ultimate implosion of the federal government sponsored mortgage giant. Who can forget that Ms. Gorelick authored the Wall of Separation memo that many experts point to as a root cause for the failure to identify the 9/11 plot.

White house Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel was by far the youngest board member of Freddie Mac between roughly 1998 and 2002. This was the period of heavy accounting irregularities benefiting all who received bonuses and stock options including board members.

Timothy Geithner, new Treasury Secretary, failed to pay taxes on income he earned from the World Bank after having be advised to do so. A democrat tax cheater is the head of the IRS.

Obama’s appointee Nancy Killefer withdrew her candidacy to be the first “chief performance officer” for the federal government because she messed up paying payroll taxes on her household help.

The Congresswoman who was appointed to fill Hillary’s vacant seat in the Senate did not pay her taxes.

Democrat corruption ad nauseum...



To: one_less who wrote (32523)11/9/2009 9:40:09 AM
From: Peter Dierks  Respond to of 71588
 
Democrats' Ethics Targeted by GOP
By BRODY MULLINS
NOVEMBER 7, 2009.

Republicans are seizing on newly revealed ethics probes of congressional Democrats ahead of next year's midterm elections, accusing House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and her colleagues of failing to make good on their pledge to clean up Washington when they regained control of Congress.

None of the Democratic lawmakers under investigation by the House Ethics Committee is expected to lose in 2010. And ethics concerns are usually less important to voters than pocketbook issues. But Republican campaign strategists say ethics issues rumbling under the surface could help the GOP pick up a few House seats by tipping the balance in closely contested races.



"We plan to hold Democrats accountable for the ethics issues that plague their caucus and remind voters that Nancy Pelosi and her colleagues are knee-deep in the swamp that they promised to drain in 2006," said Paul Lindsay, a spokesman for the National Republican Congressional Committee, the campaign arm for the House GOP.

Democrats say the recent investigation disclosures demonstrate that Ms. Pelosi and Democratic leaders have kept their pledge to clean up Washington by following up on allegations. "I think people understand that we are trying to clean up the system, as opposed to covering it up like the Republicans did," said Jennifer Crider, a strategist for the House Democratic campaign arm.

Tuesday's election showed the Democrats' vulnerability on this issue, Republicans said. Republicans defeated New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine in part by portraying the state Democratic Party as corrupt, after a sting resulted in the arrests of dozens of state officials last summer. The Republican candidate, former federal prosecutor Christopher Christie, ran on a platform of cleaning up the state.

Exit polls found corruption to be the third-most important issue on New Jersey voters' minds, behind the economy and taxes. Those who cited corruption as a top issue voted 68% to 25% for Mr. Christie, who garnered 49% of the vote to Mr. Corzine's 45%; an independent candidate received 6%.

Congressional ethics burst into the spotlight late last month after the House Ethics Committee announced separate probes of two California Democrats for possibly violating congressional rules. That brought the number of House members under formal investigation this year to eight.

Separately, the Washington Post reported the Ethics Committee is reviewing the actions of five Democrats and two Republicans on the House's defense-spending panel to determine if they improperly traded "earmarks" -- spending provisions inserted into legislation -- for campaign contributions. The story was based on an accidentally leaked internal Ethics report.

Privately, some Democrats say they are worried about the ethics investigations, given the role played by such scandals the last two times control of Congress changed hands.

In 1994, Republicans swept into power after it was disclosed that a large number of House members overdrew their House checking accounts without penalty. In 2006, Democrats took back the majority partly by portraying the Republican-controlled Congress as corrupt amid a series of lobbying corruption scandals.

Nathan Gonzales, a nonpartisan political analyst with the Rothenberg Political Report, said that "if Republicans can convince voters that the Democratic Party has ethical troubles, then people might say, 'Oh, maybe I'll give the Republican a chance.' "

Two Democrats under investigation -- Reps. Charlie Rangel of New York and John Murtha of Pennsylvania -- have each drawn a challenger in the Democratic primary. Both are powerful veteran lawmakers whose position, for now, seems secure.

Instead, Republicans hope to tar more-vulnerable Democrats who aren't directly linked to the probes. One tactic: asking Democratic lawmakers to return campaign donations from Messrs. Rangel and Murtha.

In Pennsylvania, Republicans asked Democratic Rep. Chris Carney to return the $5,000 he received from Mr. Murtha's fund-raising arm. A spokeswoman for Mr. Carney didn't immediately return calls.

In New York, Republicans have sent emails to reporters in New York highlighting the $15,000 of campaign donations Rep. Mike McMahon accepted from Mr. Rangel in recent years.

Lauren Amendolara, a spokeswoman for Mr. McMahon, claims Republicans are "trying to make something out of nothing," since Mr. Rangel donates to many junior Democratic lawmakers.

Write to Brody Mullins at brody.mullins@wsj.com