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Nbadan
12-11-2006, 04:05 PM
Looks like Bonilla has some esplaining to do....

Campaign Distortions in Texas Runoff
Henry Bonilla tries to link his opponent to "Islamic radicals."
December 8, 2006
Modified: December 8, 2006


Summary

The election still isn't settled in Texas' 23rd congressional district, where voters are being asked to go back to the polls on Dec. 12 to decide a runoff between Republican incumbent Rep. Henry Bonilla and his Democratic opponent, former Rep. Ciro Rodriguez. Bonilla's latest ad features a former FBI agent telling viewers that Rodriguez sponsored a "a new law to free suspected terrorists," was behind a meeting of "Islamic radicals" at the US Capitol, and "took contributions from those radicals." The ad features a photograph of Sheik Omar Abdel-Rahman, who was convicted in connection with the 1993 World Trade Center bombing.

We find this ad deceitful on several counts. The "new law" Rodriquez sponsored wasn't to "free terrorists." It was a bipartisan proposal to prevent the government from using classified intelligence information in certain immigration hearings. It was backed by the ACLU and some conservative Republicans alike, not just "Islamic radicals." The meeting in question wasn't "sponsored" by Rodriguez, though he may have reserved the room at the request of those who did sponsor it. And as for "contributions from those radicals," we found only a single donation of $250 that might fit that description.

Furthermore, there's also no evidence that Rodriguez knew the Blind Sheik or did anything on his behalf. The sheik would not have been freed by the legislation that Rodriguez co-sponsored, which would have applied only to immigration hearings and not to criminal trials. The ad is a misleading appeal to fear on the terrorism issue.

The Blind Sheikh

Why does the blind Egyptian Muslim cleric Omar Abdel-Rahman appear in this ad? Probably because he's a terrorist figure that most viewers will recognize, convicted of seditious conspiracy after an investigation that grew out of the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. Bonilla's surrogate in this ad, retired FBI agent Al Ortiz, connects Abdel-Rahman to Rodriguez in a roundabout and misleading way. He says, "In 2000 a summit was held in the US Capitol where Islamic radicals called for his [the cleric's] release and a new law to free suspected terrorists."

In fact, the meeting was a "Summit on Secret Evidence" in a House office building, the main thrust of which was to support a bill, HR 2010, to bar the use of secret evidence by the government in immigration hearings. It may be true that some attendees also called for the cleric's release. However, the group that

Bonilla "Ties"


Bonilla: I'm Henry Bonilla and I approve this message.
Ortiz: I'm Al Ortiz. For twenty-two years I tracked terrorists and criminals for the FBI. After the World Trade Center was first attacked by Sheik Abdel-Rahman he was convicted. In 2000 a summit was held in the U.S. Capitol where Islamic radicals called for his release and a new law to free suspected terrorists.
(On Screen: Image of Abdel-Rahman with words "Convicted Terrorist," "Free the Blind Sheik" and image of Capitol.)
Ortiz: All sponsored by Ciro Rodriguez, who took contributions from these radicals while pushing the law they wanted.
(On screen: Image of Rodriguez, words "Terrorist Law" and "Took Money")
Ortiz: I urge you, check the record. Judgment matters.
organized the meeting was the National Committee Against Repressive Legislation, which traces its roots back to the McCarthy era, long before the rise of today's Islamic radicals.

The only support Bonilla's campaign gives for the claim that Rodriguez "sponsored" the meeting is testimony in 2000 by Steven Emerson, a terrorism expert who told the House Judiciary Committee that Rodriguez had reserved the room used for the gathering. Even if true, that shows nothing more than an effort to marshal support for the bill he was cosponsoring.

Secret Evidence

The bill, the Secret Evidence Repeal Act, which Rodriguez co-sponsored as a member of the House in 1999, was of course not designed "to free suspected terrorists." The goal of the proposed legislation was to amend the Immigration and Nationality Act to allow aliens in immigration hearings to see the evidence against them, even if that evidence is classified. It had support across a wide ideological spectrum: it was backed by the liberal American Civil Liberties Union and eventually gained 128 co-sponsors including Republican Reps. Bob Barr of Georgia and John Sununu of New Hampshire, both of them quite conservative.

Proponents of the bill argued at a House Judiciary Committee hearing in 2000 that secret evidence “in the form of classified information often consists of mere rumor and innuendo, inherently unverified and unverifiable.” Opponents of the legislation argued that the changes were too broad, limiting INS official’s ability to use confidential information to deny potential security threats entrance into the United States. The FBI told the committee that secret evidence was in fact rarely used,claiming that it was involved in only 11 out of 300,000 pending immigration cases.

The topic was a hot one in 2000, so much so that even Gov. George Bush took a stand in his presidential campaign -- against secret evidence. He raised it in his second debate with Vice President Al Gore that year, and in a written statement entitled "Governor George W. Bush's Record of Inclusion" he said:

Bush: On the issue of secret evidence – another creation of the Clinton/Gore Justice Department – I am also troubled by the disturbing stories of how this policy is being implemented. More and more, new immigrants, often Arab or Muslim immigrants, face deportation or even imprisonment based on evidence they've never seen and never been able to dispute. That's not the American way.

Newsweek reported that after Bush took office, the Justice Department prepared a plan to restrict the use of secret evidence. It was supposed to be presented by Bush to a group of Muslim leaders at a meeting in the White House scheduled for 2:00 p.m. on the afternoon of September 11, 2001, a meeting that never took place. After 9/11 the notion of limiting government's ability to use classified evidence slipped right off the "to-do" list.

However, it is not the case, as the ad suggests, that criminals like Abdel-Rahman, who were convicted in federal court, would have been freed by this measure. The only "suspected terrorists" who might have been released would have been those against whom no criminal charges could be brought, only immigration proceedings in which classified evidence was crucial to having an individual deported. Abdel-Rahman is serving a life sentence in a Colorado prison.

Tainted Contributions?

Ortiz tells viewers that Rodriguez also "took contributions from these radicals while pushing the law they wanted." We did find a single contribution of $250 from Abdurahman Alamoudi, a naturalized U.S. citizen who was convicted for his role in facilitating the financing of a Libyan-backed plot to assassinate the Saudi Crown Prince. However, he was sentenced in 2004, and his contribution was given six years earlier in 1998. Alamoudi has also given money to former Rep. Bob Ney, the Ohio Republican caught up in the Jack Abramoff lobbying scandal; former Sen. Spencer Abraham, the Michigander who became Bush's energy secretary; and Hillary Rodham Clinton and Bush himself, both of whom received their donations in 2000 and returned them later the same year.

The ad gets a couple of smaller points wrong as well: The summit meeting it refers to wasn't held in the Capitol, but in a House office building nearby, and the World Trade Center was not "attacked by Sheik Abdel-Rahman." The cleric was convicted as a result of an investigation of the 1993 bombing, but not for carrying it out.

Ortiz concludes by telling us, "I urge you, check the record. Judgment matters." Well, we did, and it's our judgment that this ad misrepresents the facts.

OUCH! :p:


- by Viveca Novak, James Ficaro and Justin Bank
Sources

Source: factcheck (http://factcheck.org/article471.html)

Jefferson, Greg and Joseph S. Stroud, "Bonilla hits Rodriguez on terrorism matters." San Antonio Express News, 5 December 2006.

Isikoff, Michael and Mark Hosenball, "Terror Watch: Friends in High Places." Newsweek, 12 May 2005.

Nbadan
12-11-2006, 09:11 PM
It's really a shame that Bonilla has decided to muck the mud in this race, polls had it within 3 points at one time, and Bonilla, hoping to run for Senator in the future, blinked. The really sad part is that Bonilla could have beat Ciro by focusing his campaign on his positives accomplishments in Congress for the State, and making promises to keep bringing home the bacon for Texas, but he chose the dark side instead.

Now, I want him to lose worse than ever.

xrayzebra
12-12-2006, 10:58 AM
Both of them are politicians. Ciro, for goodness sakes, has been in a depressed
state every since he was voted out of office. Defeated twice by Cuellar, now
he wants another district to take him, the loser, as their representative.

For some reason Bonilla, is worried about the San Antonio area. And maybe he should be. Ciro has a real machine in San Antonio and big base.
Anyhow, I think that is where all the play is in the campaign. Further out west
I think Bonilla will do okay and Ciro has more or less written it off.

Nbadan
12-12-2006, 08:34 PM
U. S. Representative District 23 From the Bexar County Elections Dept:

Total San Antonio: (early voting)

U.S. Rep, Dist 23

Vote For 1

(WITH 0 OF 151 PRECINCTS COUNTED)

Ciro D. Rodriguez (DEM). . . . . . 11,846 56.31 0 11,846

Henry Bonilla (REP) . . . . . . . 9,191 43.69 0 9,191


Bexar County Elections Dept. (http://www.bexar.org/elections/Online/online.asp)

Total Bexar: (early voting)

Henry Bonilla 10,914 45.13%
Ciro D. Rodriguez 13,193 55.12%

13 of 267 Precincts 4.87%

Go Ciro Go!!

Nbadan
12-12-2006, 09:16 PM
Run Date:12/12/06 07:58 PM

Election Early

TOTAL VOTES % Day Vote

PRECINCTS COUNTED (OF 151). . . . . 25 16.56

REGISTERED VOTERS - TOTAL . . . . . 37,072

BALLOTS CAST - TOTAL . . . . . . . 24,778 3,691 21,087

VOTER TURNOUT - TOTAL . . . . . . 66.84

U.S. Rep, Dist 23

Vote For 1

(WITH 25 OF 151 PRECINCTS COUNTED 16.56%)

Ciro D. Rodriguez (DEM). . . . . . 14,448 58.47 2,602 11,846

Henry Bonilla (REP) . . . . . . . 10,264 41.53 1,073 9,191

1369
12-12-2006, 09:48 PM
AP declares Rodriguez the winner.

Nbadan
12-12-2006, 10:02 PM
astounding.

:toast

01Snake
12-12-2006, 10:17 PM
astounding.

:toast

Wow. I'll sleep better tonight.
:rolleyes

Nbadan
12-12-2006, 10:38 PM
This is a tremendous set-back for Bonilla who had dreams of Senator or Governor...

Bonilla Loses House Seat After 7 Terms
Wednesday December 13, 2006 3:01 AM
AP Photo TXEG102, TXEG101
By ELIZABETH WHITE
Associated Press Writer


SAN ANTONIO (AP) - Former Congressman Ciro Rodriguez defeated seven-term Republican Henry Bonilla in a runoff election Tuesday, adding another Democrat to Congress.

With more than half the precincts reporting in the state's largest district, Rodriguez
had 57 percent to Bonilla's 43 percent.

They were the top vote-getters in a special election held Nov. 7, but neither got 50
percent, prompting the runoff.

Bonilla was seeking an eighth term in Washington, while Rodriguez was hoping to return
after a two-year absence. He served from 1997-2005 in another district but was ousted in the March 2004 Democratic primary by Henry Cuellar, a Laredo Democrat. Rodriguez lost again to Cuellar in this year's primary.

Guardian (http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldlatest/story/0,,-6276884,00.html)

Crookshanks
12-12-2006, 10:55 PM
This just goes to show how stupid the average voter is. Ciro was, and is, a loser; and he was the biggest do nothing congressman in Washington. Yet, the people voted him back in! Well, all those who voted for him deserve whatever they get!

exstatic
12-12-2006, 11:01 PM
Bonilla is NO BETTER, and had every advantage, being the incumbent. Guess the GOP loses their SINGLE poster boy Hispanic congressman.

Oh, and Crooky? Ciro isn't a loser for at least one night. :elephant

Johnny_Blaze_47
12-12-2006, 11:27 PM
This just goes to show how stupid the average voter is. Ciro was, and is, a loser; and he was the biggest do nothing congressman in Washington. Yet, the people voted him back in! Well, all those who voted for him deserve whatever they get!

Or maybe the average voter got a little tired of Bonilla coming just short of calling Ciro a terrorist?

Frankly, I dislike both men as politicians/statesmen and personally as I've met and briefly talked with both, but I don't expect anything close to objective thoughts from you.

midgetonadonkey
12-13-2006, 12:06 AM
I like how Ciro had Johnny Canales at his Clinton Rally. If I was a registered voter, I would've voted for him just based on that.

boutons_
12-13-2006, 03:42 AM
Two extremely high quality, uplifting individuals produced by our wonderful, world-leading, democratic processes.

The sheeple get the gold, or the shit, they deserve.

JoeChalupa
12-13-2006, 07:26 AM
This just goes to show how stupid the average voter is. Ciro was, and is, a loser; and he was the biggest do nothing congressman in Washington. Yet, the people voted him back in! Well, all those who voted for him deserve whatever they get!

Same can be said for those who kept re-electing Boneheadilla. I"m glad his ass is gone!!!

George Gervin's Afro
12-13-2006, 08:08 AM
And the purge continues..

xrayzebra
12-13-2006, 10:17 AM
This just goes to show how stupid the average voter is. Ciro was, and is, a loser; and he was the biggest do nothing congressman in Washington. Yet, the people voted him back in! Well, all those who voted for him deserve whatever they get!


Oh, well. Clinton's bunch have another lap dog that they can make do
tricks when called upon. Ciro will be a good solider in the dimm-o-crap
party. Just like good ole Charlie.

JoeChalupa
12-13-2006, 11:26 AM
Just like repugs follow Dubya like whipped puppies. :lmao

JoeChalupa
12-13-2006, 11:27 AM
Henry had his so far up Dubya's ass he even sounded like Dubya.

ChumpDumper
12-13-2006, 02:02 PM
Sorest


losers



ever.

Crookshanks
12-13-2006, 02:25 PM
We'll see how happy the voting public are in two years!

Yonivore
12-13-2006, 02:41 PM
Sorest


losers



ever.
Ah, c'mon, be honest. It'd be hard to top Al Gore for that spot. Besides, I'm not seeing any Diebold, stolen election, suppressed voter conspiracies yet...even though the outcome surprised a few in this forum.

ChumpDumper
12-13-2006, 03:05 PM
Eh, Bush would have done the same in 2000 had he been on the short end.
Besides, I'm not seeing any Diebold, stolen election, suppressed voter conspiracies yetYet.

Yonivore
12-13-2006, 03:29 PM
Eh, Bush would have done the same in 2000 had he been on the short end.
Yet another unsupportable mischaracterization by Chumpy.


Yet.
Well, even if it started today, it couldn't beat the pre-election whining done by Nbadan and others on this board -- not to mention the conspiracy sources they quoted in their whinings.

Say, speaking of which, what happened to the Diebold theft Dan?

ChumpDumper
12-13-2006, 03:33 PM
Yet another unsupportable mischaracterization by Chumpy.You honestly think Bush would have just stepped aside if the roles had been reversed? You know nothing about politicians.
Well, even if it started today, it couldn't beat the pre-election whining done by Nbadan and others on this board -- not to mention the conspiracy sources they quoted in their whinings.

Say, speaking of which, what happened to the Diebold theft Dan?The thing about that is, there's no way to tell if an election was stolen by rigging the electronic voting machines. If you are happy and perfectly satisfied with that, you are an even bigger fool than I knew you to be.

xrayzebra
12-13-2006, 03:39 PM
You honestly think Bush would have just stepped aside if the roles had been reversed? You know nothing about politicians.The thing about that is, there's no way to tell if an election was stolen by rigging the electronic voting machines. If you are happy and perfectly satisfied with that, you are an even bigger fool than I knew you to be.

Well, first off, Bush didn't step aside when then election was attempted to
be stolen FROM him. He fought and won.

Secondly, machines, all of them, can be rigged. Optical readers, which are
used can be rigged, I am sure you knew that. And the old mechanical voting
machines could be rigged. So what is the point. Ballot boxes have been
stuffed since they started having elections. You can only hope enough
honest people are at the polls that you get. And this crap about paper
trails. What a joke. Even when they were all paper ballots, counted by
hand and kept for however many days. The elections were rigged.

Yonivore
12-13-2006, 03:41 PM
You honestly think Bush would have just stepped aside if the roles had been reversed? You know nothing about politicians.
Well, the most recent Republican example we have is 1960. In an election clearly stolen by the Democrats, Nixon let it go -- for the sake of the country.

No, Gore set a new precedent for how low politicians will stoop to attempt to steal an election. You have nothing on which to base your characterization so, you defend Gore with the tired-old-Bush-woulda-done-it-too.


The thing about that is, there's no way to tell if an election was stolen by rigging the electronic voting machines. If you are happy and perfectly satisfied with that, you are an even bigger fool than I knew you to be.
No, I'd prefer there to be a paper trail created by the damn things. But, the point is, you don't see any Republicans claiming a Diebold conspiracy and, even if one were to start today, it would have been eclipsed by Nbadan's pre-scandal proclamation.

ChumpDumper
12-13-2006, 03:41 PM
Well, first off, Bush didn't step asideNo shit, dummy.
Secondly, machines, all of them, can be rigged.And you are happy with that, dummy.

ChumpDumper
12-13-2006, 03:45 PM
Well, the most recent Republican example we have is 1960. In an election clearly stolen by the Democrats, Nixon let it go -- for the sake of the country.:lmao @ using Nixon 40 years ago to prove a point about Bushy.
No, Gore set a new precedent for how low politicians will stoop to attempt to steal an election. You have nothing on which to base your characterization so, you defend Gore with the tired-old-Bush-woulda-done-it-too.Not a defense. An observation. If you feel Bush would be a quitter, fine. That's your mischaracterization.
No, I'd prefer there to be a paper trail created by the damn things. But, the point is, you don't see any Republicans claiming a Diebold conspiracy and, even if one were to start today, it would have been eclipsed by Nbadan's pre-scandal proclamation.So you're happy with the distinct possibility (however unlikely -- or is it?) that the Democrats DID steal the elections by rigging the machines and you never knew and never will know it happened.

Tek_XX
12-13-2006, 03:46 PM
Nixon only stepped aside publically not privately.

ChumpDumper
12-13-2006, 03:47 PM
Nixon only stepped aside publically not privately.And everyone lived happily ever after.

Tek_XX
12-13-2006, 03:51 PM
Did the Northsiders in this election stay home or did Ciro do uncommonly well there?

Yonivore
12-13-2006, 04:04 PM
Nixon only stepped aside publically not privately.
Really, so what did he do privately? Because, I believe all states certified their votes in that election and there was no hand-wringing over whether or not the House would have to settle the election or if Texas or Illinois would have to send two slates to Washington, etc...

The fact remains, whatver "private" efforts Nixon may have made to set the record straight, the nation was unaware and the election was settled peacefully and amicably.

The Idiot, I mean Gore, actually conceded and then took it back.

xrayzebra
12-13-2006, 04:12 PM
No shit, dummy.And you are happy with that, dummy.


Obviously you aren't! But since you are so damn smart and smug, why
don't you come up with a solution and make yourself a cool billionaire.

You are all talk and no go. Come on do something about what you are
moaning about. But be forewarned, a bunch of politicians, on both sides
of the aisle, might want to oppose your efforts.

Yonivore
12-13-2006, 04:36 PM
:lmao @ using Nixon 40 years ago to prove a point about Bushy.
Okay, ChunkDunker, if you would have read the post, it was the most recent example of how a losing candidate dealt with a contested election. I can't help that every losing Presidential candidate between Nixon and Dole handled their losses with dignity and grace or that all the elections between 1960 and 2000 were pretty much uncontested.


Not a defense. An observation. If you feel Bush would be a quitter, fine. That's your mischaracterization.
No, I just don't believe he would have been so self-absorbed as to cause a constitutional crisis over the Presidential election.


So you're happy with the distinct possibility (however unlikely -- or is it?) that the Democrats DID steal the elections by rigging the machines and you never knew and never will know it happened.
No, but I don't think arguing over a past election will solve the issue. Plus, there is nothing but conspiracy theories to suggest there is anything untoward occurring. The biggest argument (that Republicans would steal the election using rigged Diebolds) pretty much went down in flames.

I'm not accusing the Democrats of stealing the election. In fact, I applauded them, right after the election, for targeting the right 26 districts and 6 states.

I merely stated I would prefer the machines leave a paper trail so they can be validated. I'd like to be able to see my vote in print.

Tek_XX
12-13-2006, 05:42 PM
No politician would have stepped aside after what happened in Florida. If things were reversed Bush, Baker and the clan would have fought tooth and nail

Yonivore
12-13-2006, 05:52 PM
No politician would have stepped aside after what happened in Florida. If things were reversed Bush, Baker and the clan would have fought tooth and nail
I disagree. Didn't we just have a Senate race that ended in a virtual tie but, yet, the Republican candidate conceded?

Just because your politicians can concede gracefully don't expect all politicians don't see the greater good to keeping the electoral system, flawed as it is, intact.

boutons_
12-14-2006, 08:07 AM
House Win Adds Insult to Injury for DeLay

By Sylvia Moreno and Chris Cillizza
Washington Post Staff Writer and washingtonpost.com Staff Writer
Thursday, December 14, 2006; A04

AUSTIN, Dec. 13 -- Former congressman Ciro Rodriguez's victory in a House runoff election Tuesday in Texas not only allowed Democrats to pick up their 30th seat of the 2006 elections but served as a final rebuke to one of the architects of the Republican House majority: Tom DeLay.

The former congressman from Texas was the mastermind of a 2003 redrawing of congressional lines in the state that led to the removal of six House Democrats in the 2004 elections.

Two years later, DeLay's fortunes have suffered a near-total reversal, as the redistricting map that once seemed certain to cement his legacy and GOP majorities for years has instead led to the end of that career and may well be a building block for a reenergized Democratic Party in the state.

On Nov. 7, a Democrat won the seat vacated by DeLay, and on Tuesday, Rodriguez defeated seven-term Rep. Henry Bonilla in the runoff in Texas's 23rd District. With nearly all precincts reporting in the state's largest district, Rodriguez had won 54 percent of the vote to Bonilla's 45 percent.

"The genius of Tom DeLay is now seriously in question," said Cal Jillson, a political science professor at Southern Methodist University. He added that the overall result of the DeLay-led redistricting plan was, "at best, a wash for Texas."

Asked about the effect of the plan, DeLay flashed a bit of the hardball rhetoric that made him both famous and infamous. "The redistricting plan was quite successful -- after all, it made a political has-been out of Martin Frost," he said, referring to his longtime Democratic nemesis, who lost to Rep. Pete Sessions in 2004.

Frost was one of four Democratic congressmen defeated in that year's general election. Two others lost in a primary or chose not to run for reelection.

DeLay has begun his own blog, TomDeLay.com, aimed at building a home for conservatives on the Internet as well as rehabbing his somewhat tarnished reputation. The blog logged 150,000 page views in its first days.

If DeLay decimated Democrats in 2004, he also seems responsible for their revival. He was forced to resign as House majority leader after his indictment by a grand jury in Travis County, Tex., in connection with the alleged funneling of illegal corporate contributions into state legislative races. This past April, he announced that he would not seek reelection. Former congressman Nick Lampson, a victim of the Republican-led redistricting, claimed DeLay's seat.

The Supreme Court struck another blow to DeLay when it ruled that portions of the map he devised were in violation of the Voting Rights Act. That decision forced the redrawing of Bonilla's district to include thousands more Hispanic voters.

Even so, Bonilla nearly avoided a runoff when he won 49 percent of the vote on Nov. 7. Six Democrats and an independent split the remainder, with Rodriguez, who had held the neighboring 28th District from 1996 until 2004, leading the pack with 20 percent.

Phil Ricks, Bonilla's campaign spokesman, cautioned against reading too much into the race, saying that "if not for some voter confusion," the congressman would have won without a runoff.

But Democrats would have none of it, insisting that Rodriguez's win on Tuesday coupled with DeLay's departure signal a new day for the party in the state. Matt Angle, a former senior strategist for Frost, said that Democrats are looking to 2010 to break the Republican lock on statewide offices.

As for DeLay, Angle offered a bitter assessment. "Before this election, DeLay was in the grave with dirt on top of him," he said. "This is a final repudiation of DeLay's arrogance and bullying ways."

Cillizza reported from Washington.

George Gervin's Afro
12-14-2006, 11:25 AM
House Win Adds Insult to Injury for DeLay

By Sylvia Moreno and Chris Cillizza
Washington Post Staff Writer and washingtonpost.com Staff Writer
Thursday, December 14, 2006; A04

AUSTIN, Dec. 13 -- Former congressman Ciro Rodriguez's victory in a House runoff election Tuesday in Texas not only allowed Democrats to pick up their 30th seat of the 2006 elections but served as a final rebuke to one of the architects of the Republican House majority: Tom DeLay.

The former congressman from Texas was the mastermind of a 2003 redrawing of congressional lines in the state that led to the removal of six House Democrats in the 2004 elections.

Two years later, DeLay's fortunes have suffered a near-total reversal, as the redistricting map that once seemed certain to cement his legacy and GOP majorities for years has instead led to the end of that career and may well be a building block for a reenergized Democratic Party in the state.

On Nov. 7, a Democrat won the seat vacated by DeLay, and on Tuesday, Rodriguez defeated seven-term Rep. Henry Bonilla in the runoff in Texas's 23rd District. With nearly all precincts reporting in the state's largest district, Rodriguez had won 54 percent of the vote to Bonilla's 45 percent.

"The genius of Tom DeLay is now seriously in question," said Cal Jillson, a political science professor at Southern Methodist University. He added that the overall result of the DeLay-led redistricting plan was, "at best, a wash for Texas."

Asked about the effect of the plan, DeLay flashed a bit of the hardball rhetoric that made him both famous and infamous. "The redistricting plan was quite successful -- after all, it made a political has-been out of Martin Frost," he said, referring to his longtime Democratic nemesis, who lost to Rep. Pete Sessions in 2004.

Frost was one of four Democratic congressmen defeated in that year's general election. Two others lost in a primary or chose not to run for reelection.

DeLay has begun his own blog, TomDeLay.com, aimed at building a home for conservatives on the Internet as well as rehabbing his somewhat tarnished reputation. The blog logged 150,000 page views in its first days.

If DeLay decimated Democrats in 2004, he also seems responsible for their revival. He was forced to resign as House majority leader after his indictment by a grand jury in Travis County, Tex., in connection with the alleged funneling of illegal corporate contributions into state legislative races. This past April, he announced that he would not seek reelection. Former congressman Nick Lampson, a victim of the Republican-led redistricting, claimed DeLay's seat.

The Supreme Court struck another blow to DeLay when it ruled that portions of the map he devised were in violation of the Voting Rights Act. That decision forced the redrawing of Bonilla's district to include thousands more Hispanic voters.

Even so, Bonilla nearly avoided a runoff when he won 49 percent of the vote on Nov. 7. Six Democrats and an independent split the remainder, with Rodriguez, who had held the neighboring 28th District from 1996 until 2004, leading the pack with 20 percent.

Phil Ricks, Bonilla's campaign spokesman, cautioned against reading too much into the race, saying that "if not for some voter confusion," the congressman would have won without a runoff.

But Democrats would have none of it, insisting that Rodriguez's win on Tuesday coupled with DeLay's departure signal a new day for the party in the state. Matt Angle, a former senior strategist for Frost, said that Democrats are looking to 2010 to break the Republican lock on statewide offices.

As for DeLay, Angle offered a bitter assessment. "Before this election, DeLay was in the grave with dirt on top of him," he said. "This is a final repudiation of DeLay's arrogance and bullying ways."

Cillizza reported from Washington.


Poetic justice? Karma? Whatever it was this election cycle sure was SWEET! I can't explain how happy I am that Tom DeLay lost and that his 'redistricting' pplan failed.. :lol

Of course since the Supreme Court said it was ok for state legislatures to redraw boundries whenever they felt like it the State GOP could push for more redistricting... :oops