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DeLay Indictments Ripple Across the Country
October 7, 2005
What Was
DeLay Indicted For?
One of the favorite talking points for the
dwindling number of defenders of Tom DeLay has been that nobody can
even explain the accusations against him. Actually, the specific
charges are not so complicated: conspiracy, money laundering, and
conspiracy to money launder. The allegations run something like this:
Tom DeLay wanted to sweep the Texas State House, and he set up a PAC
(Texans for a Republican Majority, or TRMPAC) to fund the takeover with
corporate donations. The problem was that Texas law specifically
forbids the use of corporate money, so one of TRMPAC's cute moves to
get around the law was to send $190,000 in corporate money to the RNC,
then have the RNC send back the exact same amount in non-corporate
money. Thus the money would be "clean." A report out today from the Washington Post
has DeLay's lawyer admitting that DeLay was informed that one of his
indicted employees sent the money to Washington, and most of the
evidence has not even been seen yet. Thus the money would be "clean."
Where it gets complicated is when one steps back to see what this was
all really about. The actions performed by DeLay and his PAC resulted
in a tidal wave of money that allowed Republicans to take the Texas
State House majority for the first time in decades. They quickly went
to work on legislation that benefited those same corporate
contributors, but there was one priority even higher than that. Just
two years after a new redistricting map for US Congressional districts
had been passed, the Republicans got to work passing another one. This
one was scientifically designed, using computer models to determine the
most Republican-favorable arrangement of districts possible - a map
worked out by DeLay himself, along with help from Karl Rove and some of
the same aides now indicted along with DeLay in Texas. The map would
ultimately result in at least five Democrats having their districts
taken out from under them.
An extraordinarily thorough and insightful article from John H.
Richardson in Esquire Magazine profiles Ronnie Earle, the Texas
DA who has been investigating DeLay's PAC. For an in-depth look into
the all that is at stake in this case, it's head and shoulders above
virtually any other report available. If you're interested in the
entire, spectacular story, give it a read.
An
Opportunity to Cleanse Themselves:
Republicans Pass
One might think that after years of watching
one's party leader straddle and cross ethical lines, including multiple
ethics admonishments at the hands of the Republican-led ethics
committee, the indictment of that leader might be the last straw.
Perhaps a moment to reflect on whether the party had lost its way.
Sadly, no...
Blunt Will
Seek to Continue Indicted DeLay's Political Agenda
Bloomberg - September 29, 2005
"U.S. House Republicans chose continuity
over change in selecting Roy Blunt, a long-time lieutenant to Majority
Leader Tom DeLay, to step into Delay's role after a Texas indictment
forced him out of his post...
"Republican lawmakers said they rallied around Blunt, a one- time
university president who became a top fund-raiser, in part to ensure
stability. 'This is very similar to a battlefield situation where a
leader has been wounded and taken out of battle,' Representative Dana
Rohrabacher, a California Republican, said in an interview. The party
decided to 'stick with the chain of command,' he said."
The Washington Post
fleshes out the Blunt-DeLay comparison...
"Although the two have very different
personalities, Blunt has modeled his political career on DeLay's,
becoming in many respects a replica of the former majority leader. Like
DeLay, Blunt quickly set up multiple political committees to establish
a power base in the House.
"Blunt has strengthened and enlarged DeLay's 'K Street' alliance with
Washington lobbyists. The two have a similar network of major corporate
donors. Both have extensive financial ties to the Washington lobbying
firm Alexander Strategy Group. Some of Blunt's actions have raised
ethical issues."
But the loyalty of House Republicans was
demonstrated by more than just the quick acceptance of his "replica" as
their Leader. Despite massive public pressure, only three out of 218
Republicans in the House who have taken DeLay's dirty money have
cleansed themselves of it by giving it back. And indeed, as soon as his
first indictment broke, the most powerful members of the party leapt to
his defense.
Rep. John Doolittle of California, not content with his ample ties to
indicted lobbyist Jack Abramoff, called accusations against DeLay
"Baseless Attacks". In a press release, Rep. John Doolittle states,
"Tom DeLay has provided and will continue to provide our country
principled and effective leadership in spite of these baseless
attacks."
Rep. David Dreier, also of California, the Rules Committee
Chairman and point man for the Republican attempts to gut the ethics rules,
states that the Republican Party will follow in Delay's path. In a
recent press release, Rep. David Dreier claims that, "We are united in
our determination to move forward for the good of the country, the
Conference and our agenda. Tom DeLay's leadership has given us all a
path to follow." [Dreier Press Release, 9/28/05]
Rep. Tom Reynolds of New York, who chairs our Republican
counterpart, the NRCC, apparently spoke for the collective Republican
congressional campaigns with a swift talking point defense. In a
press release, Rep. Tom Reynolds states, "The Majority Leader has been
a highly effective leader of our conference. Democrats resent Tom DeLay
because he routinely defeats them - both politically and legislatively.
Although much of Ronnie Earle's investigation has been conducted in
secret, we know that he is an unapologetic Democrat partisan."
What makes Reynolds' quote troubling is his
willingness to distort facts and smear an upstanding prosecutor. For
anybody wondering about DA Ronnie Earle's partisanship, the fact that
he has prosecuted about four times as many
Democrats as Republicans is only part of the extremely extensive
answer to the contrary of the Republican spin. The same article in Esquire
explains more about Earle...
If he wanted to lay it on thick, he
could mention that he's been voted Texas Prosecutor of the Year and
Public Administrator of the Year for Austin or that his office was
listed among the country's ten model offices by the National District
Attorneys Association or that the Harvard professor who wrote "Broken
Windows"?the influential study that helped Rudy Giuliani clean up New
York?called his office "one of the most thoroughly problem-oriented
agencies in criminal justice today." He could even give Fox a tweak,
pointing out that Bill "Fair and Balanced" O'Reilly once singled him
out for "innovative approaches to law enforcement." Or he could brag
about the time in the early nineties when crime in Austin and Travis
County dropped 19 percent a year, faster than in any other city in
America.
Consequences
of a Culture of Corruption
We have often discussed the culture of corruption that has enveloped
the Republicans in the House of Representatives, but it is all to easy
to lose track of the actual consequences of special treatment
for lobbyists and the institutionalization of pay-for-play. In theory,
Congressional Representatives are supposed to actually represent
their constituents, whether they are rich, poor, old, young, etc.
Unfortunately, the Republican Leadership in Washington has largely
determined that only lobbyists and major industry interests are worth
representing when it comes to major legislation.
Sadly, several reports on the roll-out of the new Medicare Prescription
Drug Benefit this week brought us a sad reminder of what happens when
bills are written for special interests, rather than for the people the
bills are ostensibly designed to help. Here's a brief flashback to how
just one terrible aspect of that bill came about.
Why we pay
so much for drugs
Time - January 27, 2004
Another provision in the bill, related
to pricing but with the opposite goal, managed to stay in the law.
"Subpart 2, Prescription Drug Plans" contained three paragraphs that
will have an enduring effect on how much America's elderly pay for
prescription drugs: "(i) Noninterference. In order to promote
competition under this part and in carrying out this part, the
Secretary? "(1) may not interfere with the negotiations between drug
manufacturers and pharmacies and [prescription drug plan] sponsors; and
"(2) may not require a particular formulary or institute a price
structure for the reimbursement of covered ... drugs."
In layman's terms, the bill bars the Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS), which purchases drugs for some seniors under Medicare,
from negotiating with drug companies to get better prices, a practice
the Federal Government employs routinely in negotiations with other
contractors, such as defense suppliers.
"We could have used Medicare's market power to negotiate lower prices
for the medicines the program will be buying," said Senator Patrick
Leahy, the Vermont Democrat, last fall before he voted against the
final version of the bill. "Instead, this compromise agreement actually
prohibits this commonsense approach to cost containment."
While Medicare doesn't currently pay for outpatient drugs, it does pay
for certain medications dispensed by hospitals and doctors. Government
auditors have long singled out Medicare for paying inflated prices
compared with what hmos and retail pharmacy chains pay for the same
drugs. An HHS inspector general's report in 2001 said Medicare
reimbursements for two dozen drugs "exceeded actual wholesale prices by
$761 million a year."
This is the kind of bill you get when the American people are not your
top priority...
Medicare
prescription-drug plan stumps seniors
USA Today - October 3, 2005
Most seniors don't understand the new
prescription-drug program being offered under Medicare and don't plan
to sign up for coverage, even after months of salesmanship by the Bush
administration.
A USA TODAY/CNN/Gallup Poll taken last week shows 37% say they
understand the program at least somewhat well, but 61% don't. Those
figures haven't changed much from polls in July and August.
About one in four seniors, 24%, say they plan to join the program
[emphasis added], compared with 54% who say they don't. Twenty-two
percent have no opinion. The poll of 275 adults age 65 and older has a
margin of error of +/- 7 percentage points.
[...]
"People are very confused," says Vicki Gottlich of the Center for
Medicare Advocacy, a consumer group. "Part of the confusion stems from
all the variables. If you're going to get mailings from 15 different
companies offering a different array of plans, you might throw it all
in the garbage."
Not only is the plan almost impossible to understand - even for seniors
who have received numerous advertisements (paid for by the American
taxpayer) touting the program and purporting to explain the enrollment
process - but its ever expanding price tag is well above what it would
be if reasonable cost-containment measures had been enacted.
In addition to the problems that are now surfacing with the Medicare
Prescription Drug Benefit, Hurricane Katrina has exposed major
shortcomings in the recently enacted Energy Bill, problems the
Republicans appear eager to exacerbate if it means they can shower more
money and favors on energy special interests. The DCCC communications
department has the details on their newest energy handout proposals:
How A Bill Becomes a Law: By
Congressman Joe Barton
According to a New Report Today, Americans Are Paying More
at the Pump but Getting a Free Lesson in How a Bill Becomes a Law in
the Republican Congress
How a Barton Bill Becomes a Law:
1. Call special interests.
"Both power plant and oil refinery officials said they had begun
lobbying for the bill's passage at the request of [Energy Committee
Chairman Joe] Barton's aides." [Washington Post, 10/6/05]
2. Rake in some cash.
$1,735,158: Energy money taken by Congressman Joe
Barton. [Center for Responsive Politics]
3. Push a bogus policy.
"Some of the bill's biggest beneficiaries, however, said they welcome
less regulation but cannot say whether it would translate into many new
refineries... in a series of memos in the 1990s, major energy companies
warned they needed to reduce the number of refineries to boost
profits." [Washington Post, 10/6/05]
4. Leave the American people behind.
$2.94: Average price per gallon of gas American families
are paying today.
(Washington, D.C.) - Tomorrow, Republicans will introduce a bill on the
floor of the House of Representatives that lays out plans to increase
air pollution under the guise of increasing domestic oil production.
According to a new Washington Post report, the Republican effort to
boost oil refineries will increase air pollution and experts say gas
prices may not even go down. Even the leaders in the petroleum industry
are say that this bill is not likely to boost capacity since the oil
corporations made a business decision to reduce the number of
refineries and therefore the bill will not bring down gas prices: "The
United States has not built a refinery since 1976, and in a series of
memos in the 1990s, major energy companies warned they needed to reduce
the number of refineries to boost profits." [Washington Post, 10/6/05]
"In what is only the latest example of Republican 'let's make a deal'
legislation, Congressman Joe Barton's GAS Act sacrifices the air we
breathe for petroleum corporation profits and doesn't do anything to
lower the price at the pump," said Bill Burton, communications director
for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. "With Americans
already having to change their way of life because of gas prices, now
is not the time for more special interest giveaways and rubber-stamp
representation."
Does Nothing to Lower Gas Prices. The only provision in
the bill which even claims to deal with high gas prices is toothless
and rolls back existing price gouging measures. The so-called price
gouging provision is directed toward small retail gas station owners
even though it is the large refineries posting record profits this
year. The provision lacks real enforcement authority since it does not
allow for state attorneys general to enforce the Federal law. Nor does
it make market manipulation a cause of action. Finally, the provision
fails to cover other fuels. The Energy Information Administration (EIA)
has forecast natural gas prices to rise by 71 percent in the Midwest
but natural gas, along with home heating oil and propane, are not even
covered under the proposal.
Gives Gifts to a Refining Industry Making Record Profits.
Even though the oil refinery industry has seen record profits, the bill
provides a new "regulatory insurance subsidy" that could put taxpayers
on the hook for unlimited damages if a refinery is stalled in
litigation or must meet new regulatory standards. The bill would give
away Federal lands and closed military bases to oil companies to build
refineries, without allowing any public input. The real reason
refineries haven't added capacity in the past 30 years is because by
removing capacity from the market, profit margins grow. We know that
refinery margins are now at an all-time high, and new regulatory
subsidies and special treatment for this industry are at best a dubious
policy.
Guts the Clean Air Act & Preventing Pollution from Power
Plants. The bill eliminates a key U.S. EPA Clean Air Act
enforcement program for U.S. industries known as New Source Review that
forces power plants to install modern air pollution technologies. The
result will be more toxic pollutants like mercury in the air and water
of communities living downwind from coal-fired power plants. According
to Congressional Quarterly, "Some industry analysts question whether
Clean Air rules need relaxing. They say the same market forces that
resulted in consolidation in the number of U.S. refineries in recent
decades are already spurring interest in expansion projects, even with
today's Clean Air guidelines." [CQ Weekly, 10/3/05]
Policies have consequences, consequences that directly impact the lives
of Americans. When a bill is written that places the desires of a
particular industry over the needs of individuals because industry
lobbyists have become part of the
legislative team, then it should be no surprise when the resulting
bill is a sham. We're seeing it with both the Medicare Prescription
Drug Benefit and the Republican approach to energy policy - bills that
costs too much and do too little for those who truly need help - and it
will continue as long as the party of corruption and cronyism continues
to run the Congress.
White House
of Scandal?
Despite the numerous scandals lapping at the heels of Republicans in
Washington, for the most part the White House has been spared from
official indictment. That all changed last month, however, as the top
White House procurement officer was arrested and later indicted in
connection to super-lobbyist Jack Abramoff. But perhaps even more
threatening, the Grand Jury investigating the outing of CIA operative
Valerie Plame seems to be winding down with its sights apparently
sitting squarely inside the White House.
Almost two years after the probe began, it appears to finally be coming
to a close. Two prominent White House officials, Vice President
Cheney's Chief of Staff Lewis "Scooter" Libby and Karl Rove, have both
been identified as having encouraged reporters to write stories on
Plame in a petty effort to discredit her husband (former diplomat Joe
Wilson, who wrote an Op/Ed raising questions about President Bush's
linking of Saddam Hussein with uranium from Africa):
Role of
Rove, Libby in CIA Leak Case Clearer
Washington Post - 10/2/05
As the CIA leak investigation heads toward its expected conclusion this
month, it has become increasingly clear that two of the most powerful
men in the Bush administration were more involved in the unmasking of
operative Valerie Plame than the White House originally indicated.
With New York Times reporter Judith Miller's release from jail Thursday
and testimony Friday before a federal grand jury, the role of I. Lewis
"Scooter" Libby, Vice President Cheney's chief of staff, came into
clearer focus. Libby, a central figure in the probe since its earliest
days and the vice president's main counselor, discussed Plame with at
least two reporters but testified that he never mentioned her name or
her covert status at the CIA, according to lawyers in the case.
His story is similar to that of Karl Rove, President Bush's top
political adviser. Rove, who was not an initial focus of the
investigation, testified that he, too, talked with two reporters about
Plame but never supplied her name or CIA role.
It has long been speculated that Miller's testimony was the final piece
of evidence that Fitzgerald was attempting to collect. Murray Waas, who
has written extensively on this subject, reported in early
August of this year that "the investigation had become
'stalled'...almost entirely by the refusal of Miller and Cooper to
testify." Thus, with Miller's testimony last week, all eyes have been
on Fitzgerald's next move. That appeared to finally come yesterday,
when reports surfaced that Karl Rove had agreed to testify for a fourth
time before the grand jury:
Rove Said to
Testify in CIA Leak Case
AP - 10/6/05
Federal prosecutors have accepted an offer from presidential adviser
Karl Rove to give 11th hour testimony in the case of a
CIA officer's leaked identity but have warned they cannot guarantee he
won't be indicted, according to people directly familiar with the
investigation.
Lawrence O'Donnell, who was the first to break
the story that Karl Rove was Matt Cooper's source, sees this as a sign
of desperation on the part of Rove and his attorney:
What this means is Rove's lawyer, Bob Luskin, believes his client is
definitely going to be indicted.
So, Luskin is sending Rove back into the grand jury to try to get
around the prosecutor and sell his innocence directly to the grand
jurors. Legal defense work doesn't get more desperate than this. The
prosecutor is happy to let Rove go under oath again--without his lawyer
in the room--and try to wiggle out of the case. The prosecutor has
every right to expect that Rove's final under-oath grilling will either
add a count or two to the indictment or force Rove to flip and testify
against someone else.
We will certainly stay tuned on this one. As Sidney Blumenthal noted
yesterday, if Rove is charged with a crime and forced to leave the
administration, it could have a disastrous effect on the entire
Republican machine:
Fall of the
Rovean empire?
Salon.com - 10/6/05
Now all the investigations are coming to a climax. Will it mean the
decline and fall of the Rovean empire? "Rove is the ultimate center of
everything," said [Marshall] Wittman. "All roads lead to Rove. If it's
Rove, everything collapses. People say there is no indispensable man.
That's not true."
In addition to the Plame investigation, David
Safavian, who until last month was the administration's top procurement
officer - meaning he was responsible (among other things) for doling
out the no-bid contracts after Hurricane Katrina that FEMA has now agreed to
re-open to competitive bidding - was indicted this week in
connection to one of the many Jack Abramoff investigations:
Former Chief
Procurement Officer Indicted
Washington Post - 10/6/05
A federal grand jury has indicted the
Bush administration's former chief procurement official on charges of
making false statements and obstructing investigations into Republican
lobbyist Jack Abramoff.
The five felony counts in Wednesday's indictment charge David H.
Safavian with obstructing Senate and executive branch investigations
into whether he aided Abramoff in efforts to acquire property
controlled by the General Services Administration around the nation's
capital.
Both probes looked into an August 2002 golf outing that Safavian took
to Scotland with Abramoff, former Christian Coalition executive Ralph
Reed, Rep. Bob Ney, R-Ohio, and others.
Safavian, a former lobbying associate of Abramoff, is the first person
beyond Abramoff himself to face charges arising out of the probe of the
lobbyist, who is a major Republican fundraiser with close ties to GOP
leaders in Congress.
If this represents the start of an invasion of the White House by the
myriad Abramoff scandals, then Republican troubles have only begun. As
Sidney Blumenthal also noted in his article linked above, the
Republican machine is chock full of connections between the various
players, and any one investigation could begin pulling the thread that
unravels the entire sordid web:
In stable systems, individuals are
replaceable parts. Republicanism as constructed under Bush is a
juggernaut that cannot afford to scrape an iceberg.
The Republican scandals converge on operators who are the center of the
oligarchy. Their own relationships are complicated and tangled. But the
outcome of the scandals affecting these major actors will inevitably
unravel the Republican project.
Surely more to come...
News From
the Blog
Cute, But No
Cigar
Tom DeLay's spin gets desperate.
Special
Counsel on Black?
House Dems demand special counsel to investigation the demotion of a US
Attorney who was probing Jack Abramoff's work in Guam.
Pombo At It
Again
Anti-environmental extremist Richard Pombo has set some new standards
in recent weeks.
Ethics
Committee Update
As DeLay's troubles bubble and boil, the Republican Ethics Committee
Chairman rushes to his defense.
Quotables
Read some rather ironic quotes from Tom DeLay's early days on the moral
high horse.
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TOM DELAY'S DELUSIONAL CLAIM OF A VAST CONSPIRACY
WOLF BLITZER: What evidence is there they consulted with Ronnie Earle,
that they talked to him, or they had any dealings with him whatsoever?
TOM DELAY: That evidence is coming.
****
TOM DELAY'S OWN LAWYER REFUTES DELAY?S CLAIM
ANDERSON COOPER: Your client has indicated this is part of some vast
left-wing conspiracy, to sort of coin a term that we have heard before
in other circumstances. Do you think Ronnie Earle is part of that or is
he working independent of that, in your belief?
DELAY LAWYER DICK DEGUERIN: ...I think Ronnie works independently.
****
"The credibility of the House leadership has not been this low since
1998."
-- A Republican lobbyist quoted in The Hill |
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