Dennis Hastert will not seek re-election
By Kirstin Ellison Posted on Fri Aug 17, 2007 at 12:37:04 PM EST
Former Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert (R-IL) has announced that he will retire at the end of his term, ending 20 years in office.
He may have been the longest-serving Republican Speaker in history, but his legacy is forever tarnished by his bungling of the Mark Foley scandal and his fervent belief in putting partisan politics above the public interest.
Will Congress Finally Get It?
By James Benton Posted on Mon Jun 04, 2007 at 02:48:30 PM EST
So now Rep. William "Dollar Bill" Jefferson, D-LA (or D-Freezer, if you're the Feds) has been indicted on federal bribery, racketeering and money-laundering charges.
Aside from the obvious (never stash 90 grand in your freezer or try to solicit bribes while holding elected office), do you think Congress, and specifically, the Democratic leadership, will learn anything from this?
Here's a suggestion: You campaigned to create an "ethical Congress" but then you came up short on reform, specifically tracking the money that pays for "Astroturf lobbying" and a two-year "cooling off" period for yourselves and key staff.
But you've got one more shot to make things better. Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-CA, has a task force out there led by Michael Capuano, D-MA, to study whether the House should have some independent ethics oversight.
The House Stalls on Ethics Reform
By James Benton Posted on Wed May 16, 2007 at 03:21:10 PM EST
The House Democratic leadership appears to think you don't care about House ethics reform anymore.
They were all for it last fall, when control of Congress was in the balance and everyone was shocked that former Rep. Mark Foley (R-FL) had been chasing teenage pages for years, and no one had bothered to blow the whistle on him. That was when the Democrats promised they would stop the scandals that had plagued Capitol Hill for years and left members resigning from Congress in disgrace or heading to prison.
They said they would tighten ethics rules and lobbying requirements, and they did do that. But they have consistently ignored action on the most critical ethics problem: the toothless House Ethics Committee and its inability to punish members who break ethics rules.
How much does a scandal cost?
By Kirstin Ellison Posted on Fri Apr 27, 2007 at 09:26:28 AM EST
Have you ever wondered what exactly embattled, scandal-ridden politicians have to pay in legal fees? The Washington Post has a partial list of legals fees for the first three months of 2007 alone:
RNC: $500,000 last month alone. No official statement, but it's known that the RNC is still paying bills concerning the New Hampshire phone-jamming scandal.
Senator Mel Martinez (R-FL): $4,800 paid and $5,149 unpaid legal bills. The FEC has cited his 2004 campaign for problematic contributions to the tune of $800,000.
Former Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert (R-IL): $70,000 paid and $20,000 unpaid bills. Two words: Mark Foley.
Mark Foley himself: more than $200,000. And much more to come, I'm sure.
House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-OH): $52,533. Well, this is news to me. Boehner has a long-running lawsuit against Rep. Jim McDermott (D-WA) stemming from an illegally-recorded phone call.
DSCC: $50,466. They say this is their normal quarterly retainer for help complying with election laws.
Rep. John Conyers (D-MI): $75,000. His office says they don't know what these legal fees are for. Yeah, that sounds strange to me, too. If you know anything about this, fill us in in the comments.
Former Senator Conrad Burns (R-MT): $120,000 from his leftover campaign funds. No concrete details, but Burns has long and storied ties to Jack Abramoff.
Former Rep. Curt Weldon (R-PA): $132,025. The FBI is investigating contracts Weldon's daughter received while he was in office.
Rep. John Doolittle (R-CA): $13,516 so far. And sure to skyrocket.
House ethics: You snooze, you lose
By Kirstin Ellison Posted on Thu Apr 12, 2007 at 11:13:28 AM EST
House Democrats want to be seen as the standard-bearers of ethics reform in government - but their efforts seemed to have stalled somewhere after the "100 hours" ended.
From today's Post:
The promise to end the "culture of corruption" they said developed in Washington under Republican rule helped propel Democrats into the majority in November elections. But after a promising start, lawmakers appear to be backing off a proposal for an independent entity to investigate ethics charges...after weeks of meetings, a House task force studying the issue says the group has not begun discussing a plan and will probably miss its May 1 reporting deadline.
Let the excuses begin! There's something called an "options menu" out there...and this gem from task force Chairman Rep. Michael Capuano (D-MA):
"We were asked to consider whether there is a need for, a desire for this," Capuano said. "The answer we might come up with is, 'No, we don't need one.'"
Pardon me? Did I misread that? After DeLay, Ney, Cunningham, Jefferson, and Foley, they can't possibly delude themselves that the current ethics process works and doesn't need outside enforcement.
Or can they?
"We've got to do something or be wildly ridiculed," said a staffer working on the issue. "But members are always going to be worried about giving up some of their power."
Follow me inside to read what the watchdogs are saying, including a quote from our own Sarah Dufendach.
Hastert, Reynolds Testify in Foley Inquiry
By James Benton Posted on Wed Oct 25, 2006 at 03:00:35 PM EST
With elections less than two weeks out, Washington these days is fairly quiet as all of the House and a third of the Senate has gone home to campaign.
About the only members left in town these days are the ones testifying to the House Ethics Committee as it investigates former Rep. Mark Foley's digital wooing of House pages.
Yesterday, House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert, R-IL, and Rep. Tom Reynolds, R-NY, went before the committee. Hastert became the first Speaker to go before the committee since Newt Gingrich did in 1997 during its investigation into Gingrich's book deal.
Reynolds, the chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee, appeared before the committee just before Hastert. Reynolds has said he personally told Hastert that Foley had sent suspicious e-mails to a teenager in Louisiana. Hastert has said he didn't recall that conversation.
Without Ethics Oversight, Congress Runs Amok
By James Benton Posted on Wed Oct 18, 2006 at 02:15:06 PM EST
Ethics enforcement, like Rep. Cunningham: Locked up (AP)
If you ever wanted to know what things are likely to happen when Congress doesn't really police its ethical misdeeds, today's Washington Post provides three sobering examples.
First, they report that the scandal involving sexually suggestive e-mails and instant messages between former Rep. Mark Foley, R-FL, and House pages appears to be expanding again (registration required), with the new focus on an incident five years ago that involved a 16-year-old page and Rep. Jim Kolbe, R-AZ. Kolbe, the only openly gay Republican in Congress, is retiring this year. The ethics committee's review comes after the Justice Department "had opened a preliminary inquiry into a camping trip" Kolbe took with male former pages 10 years ago.
Then, the Post points out that the investigation into Rep. Curt Weldon, R-PA, by the FBI (reported on this blog yesterday) is focusing on ties among Rep. Weldon, his daughter Karen, and their connections to a Serbian businessman with reputed ties to former Yugoslav leader Slobodan Milosevic. Appears Rep. Weldon was trying to get the businessman, Bogoljub Karic, removed from a list of people barred from visiting or trading with the United States -- while Karen Weldon was doing business with Karic's family.
And if that wasn't enough, there's news of a report from a House committee's investigation that shows former Rep. Randy "Duke" Cunningham, R-CA, channeled more than $70 million worth of Pentagon and intelligence agency contracts to two companies that bribed him, which required the "cooperation or at least the non-interference of many people" in government to succeed. The full report is still classified, but you can see an executive summary of it here.
Rep. Weldon Now In FBI Probe
By James Benton Posted on Tue Oct 17, 2006 at 01:55:07 PM EST
FBI investigators in Oct. 16 raid on Karen Weldon's home (Philadelphia Inquirer).
Here we go again with another potential ethics flap involving a member of the U.S. House.
After two and a half years of percolating beneath the surface, today's morning papers are abuzz with news of FBI raids on the homes and offices of Karen Weldon, the daughter of Rep. Curt Weldon, R-PA. The feds also raided the home of Charles P. Sexton Jr., a Weldon ally, and the Florida offices of the Itera Group, a Russian natural-gas supplier.
And if that wasn't enough, Rep. Dale Kildee, D-MI, a member of the House Page Board, said yesterday that the investigation into Rep. Mark Foley's explicit communications with House pages may expand to other members.
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