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  1. #51
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    The New York Times
    October 2, 2005

    The War Against Tom DeLay
    By ANNE E. KORNBLUT

    WASHINGTON

    TO hear Tom DeLay tell it, his indictment last week by a Texas grand jury resulted from a vast left-wing conspiracy - the culmination of years of relentless pursuit by Democrats who, in Mr. DeLay's words, "drug my name through the mud."

    Democrats, of course, brushed the accusation aside, saying Mr. Delay, a Texas Republican, had only himself to blame for the conspiracy charge that forced him to step aside as the House majority leader.

    But in fact an extensive network of forces has been aligned against Mr. DeLay - a kaleidoscope of activists and liberals, clean-government advocates and legal experts, even a smattering of resentful conservatives and Republican moderates, all bound by their desire to see him stopped.

    Some have launched daily blogs devoted to the House leader, rented billboard ads denouncing him and mobilized phone banks to spread the word. Others have staged protests and written opinion pieces. A few have invoked his name to recruit Democratic candidates - one, predictably, in his Texas district, but many more in other parts of the country, where the DeLay name has slowly become Democratic code for Republican corruption after many months of a public relations campaign with that very goal in mind.

    Whether the roaring anti-DeLay machine deserves even partial credit - or blame - for his tumble last week is up for debate. Mr. DeLay has painted the veteran Democratic prosecutor in the case, Ronnie Earle, as a partisan fanatic, while Mr. Earle's defenders claim he is an evenhanded seeker of justice. The grand jury Mr. Earle convened brought a count of conspiracy against Mr. DeLay alleging that he funneled illegal corporate contributions to Republican candidates for the Texas Legislature in 2002.

    Regardless of how the criminal case unfolds, it is clear that Mr. Delay's persona has produced a cottage industry of forces that trace his every step and draw negative public attention to it.

    "I think it's entirely his own undoing, but the good-government groups definitely decided to focus on him," said Tom Matzzie, the Washington director of the liberal organization MoveOn, which spent hundreds of thousands of dollars running advertisements against Mr. DeLay and for his current Democratic opponent.

    Or from a different perspective: "The anti-DeLay groups are sore losers - or 'Soros losers' as we call them," said Barbara Comstock, a former spokeswoman at the Justice Department under President Bush who has been active in Mr. Delay's defense, referring to the billionaire George Soros, who contributes heavily to Democratic causes, including MoveOn.

    Exactly how much money has been spent by partisan donors to drive Mr. DeLay from power is difficult to determine. Even the Republican National Committee and prominent Republican opposition researchers do not put a precise figure on it, although House Republicans did launch a drive earlier this year to link anti-DeLay groups to prominent Democratic donors.

    According to the Washington newspaper The Hill, the Republican National Committee issued talking points in March that accused four independent watchdog groups, including Democracy 21 and Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, known as CREW, of having "close ties to left-wing leaders like George Soros."

    Proving the extent of collaboration among Democrats, watchdog groups and their intermediaries is no simple task: Nonprofit groups have fewer campaign-finance disclosure requirements, making it harder to connect the dots, if any.

    At the same time, the line between genuinely nonpartisan advocacy groups, which monitor the fund-raising of Democrats and Republicans, and partisan en ies, which seek to unravel the Republicans' success, has grown blurry. Their strategies have overlapped - much the way those of Newt Gingrich and the watchdog group Common Cause did in 1988 when they highlighted ethics violations by Speaker Jim Wright, a Democrat.

    Perhaps the most famously zealous Ahab in pursuit of Mr. DeLay's resignation is David Donnelly, the national campaign director for the Public Campaign Action Fund, a nonprofit organization with an adjoining political committee that has devoted its efforts to tracking the House leader. Its heavily trafficked Web log, the "Daily DeLay" compiles negative articles about Mr. DeLay's activities. It spent some $200,000 in his district in the 2004 campaign, according to Mr. Donnelly, and has circulated an online pe ion demanding that Mr. DeLay quit.

    "There's no question that a lot of people have been out after DeLay for a long time," said Norman Ornstein, a scholar at the American Enterprise Ins ute. Still, Mr. Ornstein said, "They wouldn't have gotten anywhere if there weren't a lot of grist for that mill."

    Although the often-attacked Mr. Soros has not donated money directly to the Public Campaign Action Fund (his financing went to an affiliated but separate organization, the Public Campaign), other reliably Democratic en ies have made such donations, including the MoveOn.org Voter Fund, which gave $150,000 in 2004, according to the Web site of the Center for Responsive Politics.

    Over all, Mr. Soros's Open Society Ins ute has given at least $12,274,388 toward campaign-finance reform efforts in the last eight years, according to the same site. That money has contributed to his status as a favored culprit for Republicans seeking to identify the source of the anti-DeLay effort.

    Another popular Republican target is CREW, which has doggedly monitored the ethics allegations against Mr. DeLay. Although CREW says it is nonpartisan, its director, Melanie Sloan, was once a lawyer for House Democrats.

    The alignment of clean-campaign organizations and Democratic partisans "is something that's been very consistently done over the years, and these are groups that certainly cross-pollinate," said Ms. Comstock, now a principal at the Blank Rome government relations firm. "There's certainly a very strong over-arching theme here - to go after Tom."

    On the contrary, the watchdog groups say. When the Democrats were in power, they faced similar scrutiny. "It just happens to be that the Republicans are in power in Washington now," Mr. Donnelly said. "We find ourselves being critical of those who are in power because money flows to them."

    Mr. DeLay's claim of a witch hunt is also muddied by his conservative critics. The editorial board of The Wall Street Journal has not been a fan, nor has the editor of National Review, Rich Lowry, who said Mr. DeLay had become "too comfortable with the perks of power."

    Yet, neither The Journal nor Mr. Lowry seem to enjoy themselves as much as the anti-DeLay groups, which have launched lively campaigns that ridicule Mr. DeLay in his own district, in Washington and nationally. Democracy for America, a New England group run by Howard Dean's brother Jim, posted billboards in Texas mocking Mr. DeLay's golf trip with Jack Abramoff, the Republican lobbyist.

    Campaign for America's Future, a progressive group best known for its work on the mustier subject of Social Security, ran a $75,000 advertising campaign after Mr. DeLay's controversial involvement in the case of Terri Schiavo, the Florida woman taken off life support earlier this year.

    Last week, the group posted a picture of Mr. DeLay on its Web site under the red-lettered headline, "Indicted."

    Now, having accomplished at least one of its goals, the anti-DeLay movement seems to have diverted some of its focus from the Texas Republican and turned it toward unearthing the records of Roy Blunt, the Republican Congressman from Missouri who was elected as temporary majority leader.

    Nevertheless, Mr. DeLay seems likely to keep his foes in the spotlight - much as Hillary Rodham Clinton turned the tables on what she called the "right-wing conspiracy" when her husband was under fire.

    Mr. DeLay referred to his firing squad as a "left-wing syndicate" in interviews last April. "These people are all hooked up," he said on Fox News. "The same people that went after George W. Bush have just changed their focus onto me."

    Following his indictment last week, he suggested that Democratic critics, specifically Rahm Emanuel, a leading House member, are directly in cahoots with Mr. Earle, the Texas district attorney.

    That level of coordination has yet to be backed up with evidence. And Democrats argue that they would benefit from keeping Mr. DeLay on the national stage at least through the 2006 midterm elections. He could serve as a reminder of Republican misdeeds. "I think it's a ridiculous claim that there would be a coordinated effort," Mr. Matzzie of MoveOn said. "Nobody I know has talked to Ronnie Earle."

    At the same time, he acknowledged, "In the crassest sense, having Tom DeLay as a punching bag plays to the advantage of his political opponents."


    * Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company

    ===========================

    Last edited by boutons; 10-02-2005 at 05:46 AM.

  2. #52
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    October 2, 2005

    In the Beginning, There Was Abramoff

    By FRANK RICH

    "Terri Schiavo is not brain-dead; she talks and she laughs, and she expresses happiness and discomfort. Terri Schiavo is not on life support."
    - Tom DeLay, March 20, 2005

    IF you believed Tom DeLay then, you no doubt believe now that the deposed House majority leader is only on "temporary" leave from his powerful perch in Washington and that he'll soon bounce back, laughing all the way, from a partisan witch hunt that unjustly requires his brief discomfort in a Texas courtroom.

    Those who still live in the reality-based community, however, may sense they're watching the beginning of the end of something big. It's not just Mr. DeLay, a k a the Hammer, who is on life support, but a Washington establishment whose infatuation with power and money has contaminated nearly every limb of government and turned off a public that by two to one finds the country on the wrong track.

    But don't take my word for it. And don't listen to the canned talking points of the Democrats, who are still so busy trying to explain why they were for the war in Iraq before they were against it that it's hard to trust their logic on anything else. Listen instead to Andrew Ferguson, of the conservative Rupert Murdoch magazine, The Weekly Standard. As far back as last December in a cover article on the sleazy lobbyist Jack Abramoff, Mr. Ferguson was already declaring "the end of the Republican Revolution."

    He painted the big picture of the Abramoff ethos in vibrant strokes: the ill-gotten Indian gambling moolah snaking through the bank accounts of a network of DeLay cronies and former aides; the "fact-finding" Congressional golfing trips to further the cause of sweatshop garment factories in the Marianas islands; the bogus "think tank" in Rehoboth Beach, Del., where the two scholars in residence were a yoga instructor and a lifeguard (albeit a "lifeguard of the year"). Certain names kept recurring in Mr. Ferguson's epic narrative, most prominently Ralph Reed and Grover Norquist, Republican money-changers who are as tightly tied to President Bush and Karl Rove as they are to Mr. Abramoff and Mr. DeLay, if not more so.

    The bottom line, Mr. Ferguson wrote, was a culture an hetical to everything conservatives had stood for in the Gingrich revolution of 1994. Slaying a corrupt, bloated Democratic establishment was out, gluttony for the G.O.P. and its fat cats was in. Mr. Abramoff and his gang embodied the very enemy the "Contract With America" Congress had supposedly come to Washington to smite: " 'Beltway Bandits,' profiteers who manipulate the power of big government on behalf of well-heeled people who pay them tons of money to do so." Those tons of Republican money were deposited in the favors bank of K Street, where, as The Washington Post reported this year, the number of lobbyists has more than doubled (to some 35,000) since the Bush era began in 2000. Conservatives who once aspired to cut government "down to the size where we can drown it in the bathtub" - as a famous Norquist maxim had it - merely outsourced government instead to the highest bidder.

    Mr. DeLay's latest plight is only a tiny detail within this vast Boschian canvas of depravity. If this were Watergate - and Watergate itself increasingly looks like a relatively contained epidemic of corruption - the Texas grand jury's indictment of the congressman and his associates would be a sideshow tantamount to the initial 1973 California grand jury indictment of the Nixon aide John Ehrlichman and his pals in the break-in at Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist's office; Watergate's real legal fireworks were still in the wings. So forget about all those details down in Texas that make your teeth hurt; don't bother to learn the difference between Trmpac and Armpac. Fasten your seat belt instead for the roller coaster of other revelations and possible indictments that's about to roar through the Beltway.

    The most important plot development of the past two weeks, in fact, has nothing to do with Mr. DeLay (as far as we know). It was instead the arrest of the administration's top procurement officer, David Safavian, on charges of lying and obstructing the investigation of Mr. Abramoff. And what an investigation it is: The F.B.I., the I.R.S., the Treasury Department and the Interior Department have all been involved. The popular theory of the case has it that Mr. Safavian, a former lobbying colleague of both Mr. Abramoff and Mr. Norquist, is being muscled by the feds to rat on the big guys in Washington - much as another smaller fish may have helped reel in Mr. DeLay in Texas.

    The DeLay and Abramoff investigations are not to be confused with the many others percolating in the capital, including, most famously of late, the Justice Department and S.E.C. inquiries into the pious Bill Frist's divine stock-sale windfall and the homeland security inspector general's promised inquiry into possible fraud in the no-bid contracts doled out by FEMA for Hurricane Katrina. The mother of all investigations, of course, remains the prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald's pursuit of whoever outed the C.I.A. agent Valerie Wilson to Robert Novak and whoever may have lied to cover it up. The denouement is on its way.

    But whatever the resolution of any of these individual dramas, they will not be the end of the story. Like the continuing revelations of detainee abuse emerging from Afghanistan, Iraq and Guantánamo, this is a crisis in the governing culture, not the tale of a few bad apples. Every time you turn over a rock, you find more vermin. We've only just learned from The Los Angeles Times that Joseph Schmitz, until last month the inspector general in charge of policing waste, fraud and abuse at the Pentagon, is himself the focus of a Congressional inquiry. He is accused of blocking the investigation of another Bush appointee who is suspected of siphoning Iraq reconstruction contracts to business cronies. At the Justice Department, the F.B.I. is looking into why a career prosecutor was demoted after he started probing alleged Abramoff illegality in Guam. According to The Los Angeles Times, the demoted prosecutor was then replaced by a Rove-approved Republican pol who just happened to be a cousin of a major target of another corruption investigation in Guam.

    We have to hope that the law will get to the bottom of these cases and start to connect the recurring dots. But while everyone is innocent until proved guilty, the overall pattern stinks and has for a long time. It's so filthy that the Republican caucus couldn't even find someone clean to name as Mr. DeLay's "temporary" stand-in as House majority leader last week. As The Washington Post reported in 2003, Roy Blunt, the Missouri congressman who got the job, was found trying to alter a homeland security bill with a last-minute provision that would have benefited Philip Morris-brand cigarettes. Not only had the tobacco giant contributed royally to Mr. Blunt's various campaign coffers, but both the congressman's girlfriend (now wife) and his son were Philip Morris lobbyists at the time.

    This is the culture that has given us the government we have. It's a government that has spent more of the taxpayers' money than any since L.B.J.'s (as calculated by the Cato Ins ute, a libertarian research ins ution), even as it rewards its benefactors with tax breaks and corporate pork. It's a government so used to lying that Mr. DeLay could say with a straight face that the cost of Katrina relief could not be offset by budget cuts because there was no governmental fat left to cut. It's the government that fostered the wholesale loss of American lives in both Iraq and on the Gulf Coast by putting cronyism above patriotism.

    The courts can punish crooks, but they can't reform democracy from the ground up, and the voters can't get into the game until 2006. Meanwhile, on the Republican side, the key players both in the White House and in the leadership of both houses of Congress are either under investigation or joined at the hip to Messrs Rove, DeLay, Abramoff, Reed or Norquist. They seem to be hoping that some magical event - a sudden outbreak of peace and democracy in Iraq, the capture of Osama bin Laden, a hurricane affording better presidential photo ops than Rita - will turn things around. Dream on.

    The one notable anomaly is John McCain, who retains a genuine hunger for reform, a rage at the corruption around him and the compelling motive of his presidential ambitions to push him forward; it's his Indian Affairs Committee, after all, that exposed the hideous Abramoff cesspool to public view last year. The Democrats, bereft of leadership and ideas (though not of their own Beltway bandits), also harbor a number of would-be presidents, but they are busier positioning themselves politically than they are articulating actual positions that might indicate what a new governmental order would look like. While the Republican revolution is dead, it says everything about the power vacuum left in its wake that Geena Davis's fictional commander in chief has more traction, as measured in Nielsen ratings and press, than any of the real-life contenders for that job in D.C.

  3. #53
    Keith Jackson mookie2001's Avatar
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    Tom Delay that crooked smug gerrymandering rich piece of is going down

  4. #54
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    At the Justice Department, the F.B.I. is looking into why a career prosecutor was demoted after he started probing alleged Abramoff illegality in Guam. According to The Los Angeles Times, the demoted prosecutor was then replaced by a Rove-approved Republican pol who just happened to be a cousin of a major target of another corruption investigation in Guam.

    Bush administration MO. People who start looking at inconvienient facts tend to have bad things happen to them. Valerie Plame anyone?

  5. #55
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    The reason was simple: It is entirely possible both that your enemies are out to get you and that you did exactly what you are being accused of doing. The two concepts are not mutually exclusive.

    Bingo. This statement is consistant with the generally accepted rules of logic, re: cir stantial ad hominem.

  6. #56
    Chronic User Bandit2981's Avatar
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    So Delay was indicted by a partisan prosectuor with a film crew following him around in the case? We saw where he got with Kay Bailey
    The grand jury indicted Delay, the prosecutor just provides his evidence findings.

  7. #57
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    "At the Justice Department, the F.B.I. is looking into why a career prosecutor ..."

    http://www.spurstalk.com/forums/showthread.php?t=25828

  8. #58
    I don't really care... Yonivore's Avatar
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    The grand jury indicted Delay, the prosecutor just provides his evidence findings.
    A corrupt District Attorney could get a grand jury to indict an eggplant. So, just what findings did the District Attorney's office provide to get them to indict? I wasn't a sealed indictment...and, for the life of me, I can't find where a crime, implicating Tom DeLay, is described. Heck, even Ronnie Earle himself seemed unprepared to support the indictment at the press conference. It was as if he thought the question wouldn't come up or something.

  9. #59
    e^(i*pi) + 1 = 0 MannyIsGod's Avatar
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    It obviously has to do with a different interpretation of the finance laws than the one you are using. Whether or not that stands up in court is a different matter.

    Of course this is all politics, but to be quite frank the type of money laundering that was used to finance these campaigns was pretty damn shady at best, and criminal at worst. The intent of the law was crystal clear, and if this didn't violate the letter of the law it sure as did violate the spirit and intent.

    To me in the long run this means unless someone figues out a way to level the playing field in campaign money, and I'm not holding my breath on that side of the story. More likely than not, this will be used for short term political gain and nothing more. People will eventually forget about it.

    Everything in politics is so damn short term now.

  10. #60
    Veteran exstatic's Avatar
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    Speaking of money laundering, Manny...
    Second DeLay indictment...

  11. #61
    I don't really care... Yonivore's Avatar
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    Speaking of money laundering, Manny...
    Second DeLay indictment...
    Second indictment, indeed. It's only because Earle knew the first was crap and went shopping for a second.

    Earlier today, Tom DeLay's lawyers moved to dismiss Ronnie Earle's conspiracy indictment on the ground that Texas's conspiracy statute had no application to the election laws until it was amended in 2003--subsequent to the 2002 election cycle that is the subject of the indictment. The Austin Statesman notes that the term of the grand jury that Earle used to indict DeLay expired last week, and the statute of limitation may have run in the meantime.

    DeLay's lawyer, DeGuerin, adds an interesting observation:

    DeLay's lawyer DeGuerin said "rumors are flying" that prosecutors were trying to find a sitting grand jury, who hadn't heard any of the DeLay case, to return a new money-laundering indictment.
    As Mann will certainly attest, grand jury proceedings are ex parte, which means that the DA has the grand jury all to himself. The target of an investigation, like DeLay, doesn't get to be represented by counsel and participate in the proceedings. Now that the indictment has been leveled, however, the playing field is even. DeLay gets to hire a lawyer--he's hired a very good one--and he gets equal time with the Court.

    So, sure enough, late this evening Earle got a new grand jury to indict DeLay on a new charge of "money laundering," which I assume we can take as an acknowledgement that the original charge can't stick. DeLay issued a statement in response to the new indictment:

    Ronnie Earle has stooped to a new low with his brand of prosecutorial abuse. He is trying to pull the legal equivalent of a 'do-over' since he knows very well that the charges he brought against me last week are totally manufactured and illegitimate. This is an abomination of justice.
    Sounds about right to me. Earle may be routed again, as he was when he brought a specious indictment against Kay Hutchison. It helps a lot when you get to hire a lawyer and defend yourself, doesn't it?

    Now, if I understand the news reports correctly, Earle just started scrambling around today, or at best within the last day or two, looking for a new grand jury with no prior knowledge of the DeLay matter. And he already had an indictment for "money laundering" by this afternoon? Unbelievable. If this is really correct, someone needs to start investigating Earle.

  12. #62
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    Second indictment, indeed. It's only because Earle knew the first was crap and went shopping for a second.
    And I am *sure* your legal expertise and psychic abilities allow you the expertise to be able to say that for certain.

    It couldn't *possibly* be due to the fact that there might be something to the charges that a trial might bring out.

  13. #63
    W4A1 143 43CK? Nbadan's Avatar
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    And I am *sure* your legal expertise and psychic abilities allow you the expertise to be able to say that for certain.

    It couldn't *possibly* be due to the fact that there might be something to the charges that a trial might bring out.
    Earlier in the thread I wrote that from a legal stand-point, it seemed as if Delay already had a deal with Earle in the works dropping the statue of limitations on the lesser charge conspiracy charge, which he initially did, for a promise from Earle that he would not seek prison time for Delay if convicted. Well, today Delay's attorney's decided to back out on their word to Earle, so Earle decided to go ahead with the more serious charge of money laundering.


  14. #64
    W4A1 143 43CK? Nbadan's Avatar
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    Delay should have stuck with his deal. The new indictment carries a sentence of life in prison...

    "The new indictment, handed up by a grand jury seated Monday, contains two counts: conspiring to launder money and money laundering. The latter charge carries a penalty of up to life in prison. Last week, DeLay was charged with conspiracy to violate campaign finance laws."
    Yahoo News

  15. #65
    I don't really care... Yonivore's Avatar
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    And I am *sure* your legal expertise and psychic abilities allow you the expertise to be able to say that for certain.

    It couldn't *possibly* be due to the fact that there might be something to the charges that a trial might bring out.
    2 1/2 year investigation and he waits a week to get a new grand jury?

  16. #66
    Hint Hint ClintSquint's Avatar
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    Tom is covered.

  17. #67
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    Arguing over the details and merits of the indictments is hardly the central or high-level issue. Abusing the legal system for political purposes is hardly shocking.

    I'd really like the dirty bas Delay in jail, but even if get barred from office, his 10 years of filth and corruption, with all of Congress, esp the Repugs, as accomplices, will live on after him.

    His legacy is that influence-peddling is no longer a crime, but an accepted, expected banality. Another legacy, along with Rove, is that there is no middle in politics, there is no civility. It's all out war, with resistors in his own party being punished and destroyed, and enemy combattants fall under take no prisoners. The Repubs, as head so clearly indicated after winning the 2002 mid-terms, see winning the war as permitting them to treat the US govt as spoils of war, raping and pillaging every aspect of govt until it is ineffective and destroyed.

    This is not a rhetorical question: do the last 5 years of Repug govt have ANY redeeming values, any qualities, beyond enriching the rich and corps?

    ==========================

    washingtonpost.com

    DeLay's Influence Transcends His le

    By Jeffrey H. Birnbaum and Jim VandeHei
    Washington Post Staff Writers

    Monday, October 3, 2005; A01

    For the indefinite future, Washington will remain Tom DeLay's capital. Dislodged by a criminal indictment last week from his post as House majority leader, DeLay in his decade of steering the Republican caucus dramatically -- and in many cases inalterably -- changed how power is amassed and used on Capitol Hill and well beyond.

    Proteges of the wounded Texan still hold virtually every position of influence in the House, including the office of speaker. DeLay's former staff members are securely in the lobbying offices for many of the largest corporations and business advocacy groups.

    But even more than people, DeLay's lasting influence is an ethos. He stood for a view of Washington as a battlefield on which two sides struggle relentlessly, moderates and voices of compromise are pushed to the margins, and the winners presume they have earned the right to punish dissenters and reward their own side with financial and policy favors.

    His take-no-prisoners style of fundraising -- in which the classic unstated bargain of access for contributions is made explicitly and without apology -- has been adopted by both parties in Congress, according to lawmakers, lobbyists and congressional scholars. Democrats, likewise, increasingly are trying to emulate DeLay-perfected methods for enforcing caucus discipline -- rewarding lawmakers who follow the dictums of party leaders and seeking retribution against those who do not.

    Most of all, DeLay stood for a blurring of the line between lawmakers and lobbyists so that lobbyists are now considered partners of politicians and not merely pleaders -- especially if they once worked for Republicans on Capitol Hill. Lawmakers-turned-corporate lobbyists such as Bill Paxon (R-N.Y.) and aides such as Ed Buckham, DeLay's former chief of staff, remain among the most influential figures on Capitol Hill -- often more involved than lawmakers in writing policy and plotting political strategy.

    For a vivid sign of how what was once considered controversial has gone mainstream, consider the K Street Project. That was the name for a DeLay-inspired campaign -- for which he was chastised by the House ethics committee -- to demand that lobbying firms seeking access hire loyal Republicans. Rather than going underground, the project has gone unabashedly public, with a Web site, http://www.kstreetproject.com/ , providing news about the latest lobbying vacancies.

    "People who have worked for Mr. DeLay become, like other senior Republican staffers, members in good standing of a club and are accepted back by many members [of Congress] and staffers," said Andrew M. Shore, chief of staff of the House Republican Conference. "The idea is that we are a team. What's good for one is good for all; anything to cultivate that team mentality is seen in a positive light."

    Usually, staffers-turned-lobbyists lose their cachet when their former bosses retire or lose their jobs. But the DeLay fraternity -- so large that it is called DeLay Inc. -- does not look as if it will suffer the same fate. "Has the value of these people diminished? I would say no," Shore said. "As they transition into the private sector, the benefits are shared by the [Republican] conference. There's a symbiosis between the former staffers and many members of the conference."

    None of the tactics used so effectively by DeLay and his allies were invented by them. The Texan's innovation was to systematically ins utionalize them within the GOP. It's possible his zeal in these methods could ultimately bring about his downfall.

    Texas prosecutor Ronnie Earle won a grand jury indictment of DeLay on a charge of conspiring to illegally evade fundraising restrictions. DeLay, still in Congress, has vowed to return to his leadership post after clearing his name at trial -- though his future is shadowed by a tall stack of other legal and political problems. But scholars say his methods are imprinted on Washington like a tattoo. "Even if Boss DeLay leaves, his legacy stays," said James A. Thurber, director of congressional studies at American University.

    Part of the reason for this is that DeLay's temporary replacement, Rep. Roy Blunt (R-Mo.), is a DeLay protege whose rapid rise was spawned by the Texas Republican. So were the careers of almost everyone else in the House Republican leadership, including Rep. Eric I. Cantor of Virginia and Thomas M. Reynolds of New York. They are all social conservatives who support such pro-business policies as deregulation and tax cuts.

    The DeLay network is just as formidable in downtown Washington. Former DeLay aides Buckham, Tony Rudy and Karl Gallant form the core of one of Washington's largest and fastest-growing lobbying firms, Alexander Strategy Group. Susan Hirschmann, a former DeLay chief of staff, is a senior member of Williams & Jensen, another major lobbying firm. Congressional aides said that these and other DeLay alumni are part of their "team" and will be welcome in their offices no matter what happens to their old boss.

    Speaking of Hirschmann, Mike Stokke, deputy chief of staff to House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.), said, "Having DeLay in her background is a strength; having worked for Tom brings credibility."

    There has been no sign that DeLay personally has been active in the K Street Project since he was admonished by the House ethics committee for pressuring the Electronics Industries Alliance to hire a Republican as its president seven years ago. Nonetheless, the project is still going strong; other lawmakers and lobbyists have taken up the cause. Job listings on K Street are still distributed in regularly scheduled meetings held by other GOP lawmakers, including Sen. Rick Santorum (Pa.). Lobbying executives report that former Republican aides and lawmakers have telephoned them to suggest that their top openings should be filled with loyalists. The K Street Project Web site is run by well-connected conservative Grover Norquist of Americans for Tax Reform.

    In the House, DeLay enhanced the leadership's role by ending the practice of automatically promoting the most senior lawmakers to committee chairmanships and, instead, choosing loyalists to fill the powerful slots. Rep. Christopher H. Smith (R-N.J.) was booted from the chairmanship of the Veterans Affairs Committee at the beginning of the current Congress because he repeatedly bucked DeLay and other GOP leaders on key votes. DeLay also arranged to have the chairmen elected by the committees themselves, whose members he also selected and was thus better able to control.

    The same technique is now used in the Senate by Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tenn.), who won the authority to select committee members after the 2004 elections increased his majority to 55 seats. "There is only one reason for that change, and it is to punish people," Sen. Olympia Snowe (R-Maine) told the newspaper Roll Call in November.

    Even House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), an outspoken DeLay critic, has started to crack down on her own members with DeLay-like tactics. After this summer's vote on free trade with Central American nations -- a plan that several House Democrats supported despite her strong objections -- Pelosi summoned Democratic lawmakers to a private meeting and threatened to take away their committee assignments if they did not start voting with party leaders, according to participants.

    DeLay's fundraising focus has also permeated Washington. Over the years, DeLay has raised tens of millions of dollars for Republicans through nearly a dozen fundraising en ies. Today, no leader of either party or lawmaker with leadership ambitions would even consider not forming at least two such fundraising committees. "DeLay set a new benchmark for fundraising and that's not going to go away," said Larry Noble, executive director of the Center for Responsive Politics, a nonpartisan watchdog group.

    DeLay established as common practice the requirement that House GOP in bents with safe seats collect at least some money for the party as a whole. Chairmen of committees were particularly on the line to raise large sums, Republican aides said. Unless they paid up, their chairmanships were in danger.

    In late June, Pelosi adopted a similar tack. She sent a letter warning that Democratic lawmakers who did not raise money for the House campaign committee would be deprived of everything from financial resources to telephone access. "If you are on the team, you have to" pay up, a House Democratic aide said.

    Meanwhile, anyone looking for signs of the ongoing influence of DeLay Inc. will find another one today. It's the starting date for Time Warner Inc.'s new vice president for global public policy. The new executive is Tim Berry, former chief of staff to Tom DeLay.

    © 2005 The Washington Post Company
    Last edited by boutons; 10-04-2005 at 09:32 AM.

  18. #68
    Pimp Marcus Bryant's Avatar
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    Harry S. Truman was bought and paid for by organized crime in Kansas City, for example. Running a little money through the RNC back to some campaigns in Texas is a non-starter.

    Earle got an indictment based on a law that wasn't even in effect at the time of the alleged crime. That goes to show you how much weight you should abscribe to a grand jury in Austin, Texas indicting a conservative GOP congressman.

    What will be interesting is what the film crew following Earle around has caught on tape.

  19. #69
    W4A1 143 43CK? Nbadan's Avatar
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    Harry S. Truman was bought and paid for by organized crime in Kansas City, for example. Running a little money through the RNC back to some campaigns in Texas is a non-starter.

    Earle got an indictment based on a law that wasn't even in effect at the time of the alleged crime. That goes to show you how much weight you should abscribe to a grand jury in Austin, Texas indicting a conservative GOP congressman.

    What will be interesting is what the film crew following Earle around has caught on tape.
    A corrupt politician? What are the chances? There are traces of mob money being used to influence national elections going back all the way to Calvin Coolidge.

    As I mentioned before, Earle indicted Delay on the lesser charge first because
    they likely had a deal worked out where Delay would plead guilty, not have to serve Jail time, but his political career would be over. Yesterday morning, Delay's lawyers backed out of that deal challenging, as you said, the statue of limitations. By yesterday afternoon, Earle had gotten a Grand Jury to indict Delay on two new charges, conspiracy to commit money laundering and money laundering.

    I suspect what will be on the tape will be a hard working state prosecutor.

  20. #70
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    Yeah, just like back in '93...

    :guffaw

  21. #71
    Roll The Dice Hook Dem's Avatar
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    "I suspect what will be on the tape will be a hard working state prosecutor."...................................... .................................................. ...........Of course you do Dan. He's a Democrat! Duh!

  22. #72
    I can live with it JoeChalupa's Avatar
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    It'll all come out soon and the millions of dollars in tax dollars will be well worth it.
    I know I was satisfied with the results that 200 million dollars in tax money got me. I was dying to know if Bill really got oral in the Oval Office.

    What ever it takes!!

  23. #73
    Retired Ray xrayzebra's Avatar
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    It obviously has to do with a different interpretation of the finance laws than the one you are using. Whether or not that stands up in court is a different matter.

    Of course this is all politics, but to be quite frank the type of money laundering that was used to finance these campaigns was pretty damn shady at best, and criminal at worst. The intent of the law was crystal clear, and if this didn't violate the letter of the law it sure as did violate the spirit and intent.

    To me in the long run this means unless someone figues out a way to level the playing field in campaign money, and I'm not holding my breath on that side of the story. More likely than not, this will be used for short term political gain and nothing more. People will eventually forget about it.

    Everything in politics is so damn short term now.
    Manny, are you saying it is the seriousness of the charge that we should look at, not if he is guilty or not? It was a state law passed years ago to stop the railroads from buying pols.

    Also, why does the playing field have to be level. Nothing is fair in this world. And you can always be sure of one thing, no one is going to level your playing field of life.

  24. #74
    I don't really care... Yonivore's Avatar
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    It'll all come out soon and the millions of dollars in tax dollars will be well worth it.
    I know I was satisfied with the results that 200 million dollars in tax money got me. I was dying to know if Bill really got oral in the Oval Office.

    What ever it takes!!
    So, you had no interest in the fact that he lied, under oath (perjury), in order to deny Paula "Trailer Trash" Jones her day in court? So, you futher had no interest in him getting other people to lie to investigators (suborning perjury & obstructing justice) so that the court -- hearing the lawsuit filed by Ms. Jones -- wouldn't know about his sexual misconducts in other areas?

    I see. Pretty elitist Joe. Why is Clinton better than the thousands of other philandering husbands who have served time in prison for this very exact crime?

  25. #75
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    Dan has a real woody on for this one. lol

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