Guest guest Posted June 10, 2005 Report Share Posted June 10, 2005 A Thu, 9 Jun 2005 16:53:03 -0700 (PDT) Example of government corruption Here's why we are in this mess. Our government has been corrupted by big money and special interests. Yet, they won't any longer investigate corruption. If anyone should be investigated it's Tom Delay: ETHICS DeLay Rescued by the Right House Majority Leader Tom DeLay has won a major victory. The Washington Post reports that the House ethics committee " has shut down...for the second time this year, " thanks to a conflict over staff hiring initiated by ethics chairman (and former Abramoff associate) Rep. Doc Hastings (R-WA). Now, the Post reports, " it could be months -- and perhaps next year " before the panel investigates the activities of DeLay or others accused of violating ethics restrictions. News of the setback broke last night, just as DeLay was enjoying a " high-dollar 'wine and cigar' fundraiser " for his political action committee. THE HAMMER RETOOLS: With the media distracted by the " nuclear option " showdown, Tom DeLay has been reorganizing. In addition to raising money for his legal defense fund for the first time in two months, DeLay has hired a second attorney (apparently, DeLay only dislikes lawyers when other people need them). It's all part of " DeLay's emerging strategy, " says the Post, which is to " argue that the ethics panel should not focus on him alone, but should conduct a broad investigation of members' compliance with travel rules. " DOC NEEDS AN EYE DOC: The ethics committee is paralyzed again because chairman Doc Hastings insists that he be able to appoint his own personal chief of staff, Ed Cassidy, to oversee committee operations. Hastings needs to re-read the ethics committee rules. The rules explicitly call for the hiring of " a professional, nonpartisan staff. " This is no " dispute " -- just a transparent stall tactic. HASTINGS MUST STEP DOWN: No wonder Delay says he " welcomes " a House Ethics Committee investigation into the charges against him. The New York Times yesterday revealed that chairman Hastings is closely tied to the lobbying firm at the very heart of the ethics scandals involving DeLay. The firm, Preston Gates & Ellis, was home to shady lobbyist Jack Abramoff, who allegedly teamed up with DeLay in the 1990s in a scheme to help the Marianas Islands avoid U.S. labor laws. (The Marianas Islands run brutal sweatshops where workers are " paid barely half the U.S. minimum hourly wage, " are forced to live behind barbed wire in squalid shacks minus plumbing, " and report having been forced into prostitution.) Hastings has received $14,000 from the firm over the past 10 years; in 1996, he stood on the House floor denouncing stricter labor laws for the Marianas shortly after a meeting with Preston Gates. Today, Hastings' home-state paper, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, called on Hastings " to step back and turn the DeLay investigation over to a congressionally appointed special prosecutor. " We agree entirely. WHAT WE REALLY NEED IS MORE CASH IN OUR POLITICAL SYSTEM: How's this for gall? Even as " serious ethics charges involving influence-seeking money are swirling around the House, " conservatives yesterday introduced a bill that would " scrap post-Watergate restrictions on the total amount of money individuals can donate and parties can spend on candidates. " That means opening up the floodgates for cash to enter into our political system (and further empowering the tiny few who can afford to spend tens of thousands on political parties instead of mortgages and college tuitions). Under today's rules, a person " can donate $101,400 to federal candidates and parties in each two-year election cycle. " Under the new rules, the limit would be more than $1.1 million every two years. With a congress like this who needs enemies? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.