Kicking Ass: The Democratic Party's Blog

Hastert Says He's Staying

Posted by on October 3, 2006 at 03:22 PM

He says he is staying:

Speaker J. Dennis Hastert said today that he would not step down, even as questions intensified about why Republican leaders in the House did not act more aggressively when they learned months ago that Representative Mark Foley was sending e-mails to a teenage page that disturbed the youth and his parents.

But it seems others want him to go:

Boehner:

“I believe I talked to the speaker and he told me it had been taken care of,” Mr. Boehner told a Cincinnati radio station. “My position is it’s in his corner, it’s his responsibility. The clerk of the House who runs the page program, the Page Board — all report to the speaker. And I believe it had been dealt with.”

Reynolds:

“I did what most of us would have done in the workplace,” Mr. Reynolds told reporters in Amherst, N.Y., on Monday night. “I heard something, I took it to my supervisor.

The Washington Times:

House Speaker Dennis Hastert must do the only right thing, and resign his speakership at once. Either he was grossly negligent for not taking the red flags fully into account and ordering a swift investigation, for not even remembering the order of events leading up to last week's revelations -- or he deliberately looked the other way in hopes that a brewing scandal would simply blow away.

Conservative Groups:

David Bossie, who runs a group called Citizens United, called yesterday for Hastert's resignation and said other conservative leaders are likely to follow suit. Bossie said the initial e-mails alone, which included Foley's request of a minor's picture, should have prompted an immediate inquiry. "That was a cry for an investigation," Bossie said. "Why couldn't the speaker of the House muster the will to stop this?"

Leaders from about six dozen socially conservative groups held a conference call late yesterday afternoon, and participants were described as livid with House GOP leaders.

"They are outraged by how Hastert handled this," said Paul M. Weyrich, a conservative activist who participated in the call. "They feel let down, left aside. How can they allow a guy like [Foley] to remain chairman of the committee on missing and exploited children when there is any question about e-mails?"

Republicans are trying distance themselves as fast as possible from the questions they are facing regarding Mr. Foley. Yet, it is clear that the leaders of both the GOP House re-election committee and the Speaker of the House knew that Foley had engaged in behavior that was, at best, highly questionable.

According to ABC News, a Republican staffer warned pages about Foley five years ago. Statements from House Republican leaders indicate that they knew of Foley’s behavior but did not act to stop Congressman Foley at the time that they first learned about the inappropriate emails.

They were all culpable:

Since 1995, when Foley arrived in Washington and his party took power, Republicans have turned the House into an institution that serves its members and its patrons, not the public. Bad as those earlier cases involving money and election laws were, the deplorable revelations about Foley have House leaders scrambling as never before to contain damage and avoid blame. Rep. Reynolds faces a tough reelection campaign, and a House staffer told The Washington Post that Rep. Reynolds took on the speaker because "this is what happens when one member tries to throw another member under a bus."

In that spirit, Republicans competed with each other to demand criminal investigations of Foley. To investigate themselves, however, House Republicans prefer the Ethics Committee, which gave Tom DeLay pass after pass before public pressure finally forced the committee to strip Mr. DeLay of his majority leader post. Remembering that, it's no surprise that the House Republican leadership can't issue a good explanation for why it worked in secret to protect Mark Foley. The only plausible explanation is that political values mattered more than American values.

Comments (29) «

How's this for a name:

Pagegate.

1
Shelley on October 3, 2006 at 03:56 PM

I want to know what Marsha Blackburn TN-7 knew and when she knew it also?
As a rising star in the House! I would think that a person who claims so much on their website should be in the know. A fast riser as declared should have been in the Hastert Loop of information being the "assistant whip on the majority whip team"

The voters in TN-7 want to know Marsha's involvement in a possible coverup. Bill Morrison run against her also want's to know, I am sure.


"Marsha Blackburn was sent to the U.S. House of Representatives at the start of the 108th Congress where she was one of only a few newly-elected congressmen selected to serve as an assistant whip on the majority whip team. Within her first few months in Washington, Blackburn was named a "freshman to watch" by National Journal, while Roll Call, the Capitol Hill newspaper, called her a "rising star." In 2004, a survey of senior Capitol Hill staff by Washingtonian Magazine declared Blackburn the Republican "top newcomer" in the House of Representatives."
here

2
dk2 on October 3, 2006 at 04:07 PM

I just saw a clip from the Reynold's press conference where he had a ring of children around the podium as he spoke. That's so wrong.

3
SandyH on October 3, 2006 at 04:34 PM

Oh John Laesch that seat and gavel is coming your way soon to be new leader sir.

4
ap215 on October 3, 2006 at 04:42 PM

Moderate Republicans, Congressional Elections and Foley

In the closing weeks of the 2006 Congressional Elections, Republican incumbents should be very worried about the impact of Congressman Foley’s sexual misdeeds and the widespread cover-up by top Republican Congressional leaders. Many Republicans in Congress have carefully crafted public images as “independent” or “moderate” politicians that often do not reflect their actual voting records. Voting for these Republicans helps keep in power the same Congressional leaders involved in the cover-up. This in turn keeps in place the unpopular, corrupt policies of the Republicans on issues like Iraq, media concentration, campaign finance, prescription drugs and taxes.

Will the voters make the connection in local races? If they do, Republican Congressmen like Mike Castle in Delaware and Wayne Gilchrest in Maryland may see safe seats seriously threatened. Democratic challengers like Dennis Spivack in Delaware and Jim Corwin in Maryland may quickly see large increases in the amount of campaign cash flowing into their efforts. If they get funds to air TV and radio ads making the connection between the Republican incumbents and keeping the corrupt national leaders in control of Congress, campaigns like these will show surprising life.

Foley is part of a national pattern of Republican scandals. Delay in Texas, Ney and Taft in Ohio, Cunningham in California are joined by hundreds of other Republican politicians mired in various public scandals at all levels of government reaching into almost every state in the nation. Jack Abramoff opened many eyes and scandals keep piling on. Republicans are facing an internal corruption crisis. However, the Foley incident has the strongest potential to influence the Election.

Foley victimized children. His actions are likely to be the final straw for large numbers of Christian voters. The Republican Right has used gay-bashing to gain Christian votes in many past elections and the tactic looks likely to come back to bite them this Fall. Many of these Christians will react strongly against the Republican scandals by voting Democratic or not voting. These voters are already uneasy with the financial corruption tied to the Republicans. Republicans cannot win in many places around the nation without these voters.

Senate candidates will be impacted as well by the public revulsion and outrage against Republican hypocrisy. Democrat Harold Ford is looking more like a winner in Tennessee. Republican Lincoln Chafee is more likely to lose in Rhode Island. Missouri and Montana are looking much better for the Democrats. Republicans are very unlikely to retain the Senate seat in Pennsylvania. Even Snowe in Maine may face a newly reinvigorated challenge from her Democratic opponent. Moral issues might be the key to outcomes in those states and not be favorable to the Republicans.

The Bush White House is intentionally downplaying the significance of the Foley emails and instant messages. Those efforts are actually linking the White House to Foley in the minds of many voters. The Republican Congressional campaign committee efforts to get Foley to donate his campaign kitty of $2.7 million will hurt Congressman Tom Reynolds who heads the committee. Reynolds has been implicated in the cover-up along with the Speaker of the House and the Republican Majority Leader according to published reports.

Tom Delay is not the only Congressional Republican leader to be disgraced this year. Unlike Delay, the current scandal is unlikely to be off the front pages of newspapers or televised news reports before the voters go to the polls.

Written by Stephen Crockett (co-host of Democratic Talk Radio http://www.DemocraticTalkRadio.com ). Mail: P.O. Box 283, Earleville, Maryland 21919. Phone: 443-907-2367. Email: midsouthcm@aol.com .

Feel free to publish without prior permission as a Letter to the Editor, Op-Ed, Guest Editorial or Democratic Voices column in your newspaper, newsletter, blog or website.

5
Crockett on October 3, 2006 at 06:23 PM

Pat Buchanan says that while the public thinks the Democrats might have a few rotten eggs like Jefferson, they now believe that the Republicans have a rotten barrel.

6
SandyH on October 3, 2006 at 07:59 PM

an independent investigation is the only type that is going to get to the bottom of this- the republicans have turned the house of representatives into the house of ill-repute- their ethics committee has proven time and again to be a sham

boner was on local radio here in cinci today changing his story for the umpteenth time- this from a guy who handed out envelopes to house members back in the '90's with money from tobacco companies during a live vote on legislation affecting tobacco companies-

sadly, maybe this is the scandal that uninformed voters who care more about the latest reality show and monday night football can wrap their heads around and understand the level of depravity to which the republican party has sunk- to listen to boner, gingrich and others today, it was hard not to have an image of a party sunk to their eyeballs in feces and all the while all of them arguing that it doesn't stink

7
jefro on October 3, 2006 at 08:04 PM

and pat buchanon is right- look at the laundry list of republicans involved in this type of sex scandal alone- not just sex scandals either, but sex scandals that involve the criminal behavior of pedophilia

8
jefro on October 3, 2006 at 08:06 PM

Dennis The Menace is just another regressive that
refuses to take responsibility for his decisions and actions.

9
pee-wee on October 3, 2006 at 08:27 PM

Shelley -

Over at Eschaton, it's been dubbed "Masturgate."

I do so love a good feeding frenzy - particularly when it's Republicans eating their own.

10
malcontent on October 3, 2006 at 08:38 PM

well, is this another of the october surprises?

woodward exposes bush as the iraq moron ... spendin' 'n blundern'

hastert proves that the repub congress is infested ... pimpin' 'n plunderin'

they say it always comes in 3's ... next?

11
america1st on October 3, 2006 at 09:23 PM

Hastert needs to step down. What he did was unacceptable for a man in his position. He has a responsibility to show these emails to the proper people instead of doing what he did by attempting to cover it up.

12
tfruge1 on October 3, 2006 at 10:29 PM

Well, of course.

Everyone knows that Repedophilicans always "stay the course".

;p

13
FreedomOfSpeechForProgressiveMajority on October 3, 2006 at 11:57 PM

I was asked to provide my views in relation to assisting the Democratic party in pursuing and adding several toss-up states as blue.

Firstly, your race thus far has been exceptional and as an outsider looking into the fish bowl I would be compelled during the last few important weeks of the race to address some fundamental flaws in the GOP and hence give the people an alternative message. Listed below are some salient hard hitting points which may be of value during the campaign:

1/ The Republicans say that the Democrats want to ‘cut and run’ with regards to Iraq, if this is the case the Republicans are in ‘Quagmire and Chaos’ in Iraq.

2/ In reference to Bob Woodward’s book “State of Denial”, it is clear that the CIA director in 2001 George Tenant and his deputy were not given the appropriate airtime by Condi Rice if the statement is true. Hence, their position that Al Qaeda was not important, putting a dampener to the Republicans and their storyline regarding protecting the American people better than the Democrats.

3/ The NIE report clearly states that the situation in Iraq will get worse in 2007, not better. The troops are strained and do not have the resources to be effective in a country where civil war has already broken out.

4/ There is no link what so ever between Iraq and 9/11, and this has been acknowledged by President Bush along with the fact that there were no WMDs.

5/ What about Afghanistan and where is Bin Laden? The resurgence of Taliban in Afghanistan is worrying and troublesome. 9/11 was linked to Bin Laden not Iraq and yet we have found ourselves in a mess in Iraq due to misguided foreign policy and advice from right wing fascists like Henry Kissenger.

6/ Hardly any of the 9/11 commission findings have been implemented by the Republicans, hence not making the USA any more safer than before 9/11.

7/ The Middle East now thinks worse of the USA than prior to 9/11 and have recruited several more thousands of terrorists in Iraq who are hell bent on causing harm to the USA. How does this make the USA safer now?

8/ The whole ‘war on terror’ was based on protecting the Democracy, Freedom and Civil Liberties of the American people. But the very fact that we have illegitimate warrantless wire taps tells us that the Republicans have abused and failed to protect these fundamental rights. They have therefore allowed those that harmed the USA to believe in their minds that they achieved victory, since many in the USA have had their civil liberties stolen from them.

9/ The Republican corruption and rubber stamping in Congress and in the Justice Department is an absolute disgrace and needs to be stopped with a Democratic balance. The special interest groups like big oil and pharmaceuticals have an incensus relationship with the Republican Party. However, they should not have any place in the White House. Republican scandals seem to be ongoing.

10/ The estimated cost of the War is between $1 and $2 Trillion rather than the $200 Billion initially estimated. If we were not in Iraq, how could these funds have been more effectively used to help the American people find new jobs, receive effective training, sensible health care options, as well as ensuring safer sea ports, airports and borders? This is the trillion dollar question!

If I was at the voting booth I would want to know about the above to allow me to make a more informed decision regarding which party will serve the best interests of the American people going forward.

Best wishes and good luck.

Kind Regards,


Baldev S Gill

Email: bsingh67@hotmail.com
Tel: 213-617-0242

14
Baldev on October 4, 2006 at 01:13 AM

Please allow me to intervene in whatever discussion is being had on this tabloid level topic. This matter is a scandal and scandals of this sort, regarding sexual deviance and criminally erotic behavior invite more attention than they merit. This has little or no impact on the right and the welfare of the general public and should be relegated to discussion in backrooms with friends.

A more important question is this: Is this a bigger deal than the filing legislation that would permanently hold all legislators criminally responsible for any action performed in their capacity as public servants that can be proven to be civilly liable. For example, wrongful death legislation and perjury before Congress.

While this is a tempting tidbit to be distracted by, be wise, avoid the tempation to be distracted. This flirtation is a matter far to the sideline of what must be done. And, to my knowledge no Democratic leader has stepped forward to file charges against the Republicans or Mark Foley on behalf of the child. The rhetoric that has been presented throught the media falls well short of action. Criminal charges need to be pressed immediately, particularly, if the emails indicate solicitaiton. And, then all parties with any knowledge of said event need to be named as defendants for criminal prosecution.

And, this matter, with or without the headlines can then be explored and adjudicated. By the way, we're spending 23 million dollars a day in a Iraq and many of us commute on congested highways in the US and no significant progress has been made toward clean coal technologies, hydrogen fueling station, or withdrawal from overseas military engagements. Please focus.

What are you goals?

15
cindybell on October 4, 2006 at 02:24 AM

Please allow me to intervene in whatever discussion is being had on this tabloid level topic. This matter is a scandal and scandals of this sort, regarding sexual deviance and criminally erotic behavior invite more attention than they merit. This has little or no impact on the right and the welfare of the general public and should be relegated to discussion in backrooms with friends.

A more important question is this: Is this a bigger deal than the filing legislation that would permanently hold all legislators criminally responsible for any action performed in their capacity as public servants that can be proven to be civilly liable. For example, wrongful death legislation and perjury before Congress.

While this is a tempting tidbit to be distracted by, be wise, avoid the tempation to be distracted. This flirtation is a matter far to the sideline of what must be done. And, to my knowledge no Democratic leader has stepped forward to file charges against the Republicans or Mark Foley on behalf of the child. The rhetoric that has been presented throught the media falls well short of action. Criminal charges need to be pressed immediately, particularly, if the emails indicate solicitaiton. And, then all parties with any knowledge of said event need to be named as defendants for criminal prosecution.

And, this matter, with or without the headlines can then be explored and adjudicated. By the way, we're spending 23 million dollars a day in a Iraq and many of us commute on congested highways in the US and no significant progress has been made toward clean coal technologies, hydrogen fueling station, or withdrawal from overseas military engagements. Please focus.

What are you goals?

16
cindybell on October 4, 2006 at 02:24 AM

Momma don't let your children grow up to be pages.

Washington Post - pages warned to stay away from Foley in 1995

Wrote letter to former page suggesting they get together at convention in SF in 1996

Invites page to apartment in DC for drinks, "crusing in him BMW", taking page to lunch.

Big supporter of DeLay. Repug cover up may go back farther than Hassert.

Things that concern me from yesterday's statement by Foley's attorney.

COMPUTERS WILL NOT BE ALTERED!!! NO PROBABLE CAUSE FOR ANY LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICIAL TO SEIZE THESE COMPUTERS????

HE DID NOT HAVE SEXUAL CONTACT WITH ANY CHILDREN.
At this point in time, I have not read of any accusations other than email and im's. Me thinks he doth protest too much. Remind anyway of clinton's line - I did not have sex with that woman.

HE WAS A CLOSET DRINKER. I won't go into the pictures this can put in your mind. He thought he was a closet gay. Now he is in the closet drinking? This statement was only made after his treatment for alcholism was not being received.

HE WAS ABUSED BY A CLERGYMAN. Even if true, it is not justification, in my mind, for his actions. I personally know someone who was abused by a clergyman. It took time for him to recover from this abuse and he has often said he would go to the ends of the earth to prevent this from happening to any other child. I spoke to him last night and what I can quote "This is f---ng bs, this is an attempt to make the perp into the vic"

LEST, WE FORGET PAGES ARE CHILDREN - THEY COULD BE YOURS OR MINE - ENTRUSTED TO OUR LEADERS IN WASHINGTON - THEY HAVE BETRAYED THAT TRUST AND DO NOT WANT TO BE HELD ACCOUNTABLE FOR THEIR ACTIONS


17
dixiehen on October 4, 2006 at 06:16 AM

I wonder if Governor Jeb Bush is also culpable. I just searched the Florida Predator Database for anyone named Foley, and Republican Foley is not listed yet.

http://www.fdle.state.fl.us
http://offender.fdle.state.fl.us/offender

My guess they have "30" days Florida residents may consider themselves safe, unless Mark Foley has access to a computer and alcohol in that "Undisclosed Rehab Center."

18
McCain-in-4 on October 4, 2006 at 06:20 AM

These trolls are very funny!Gee let's refocus on more intelligent issues,like all the ones that we already agree on and have little or no chance of meaning anything to the simple-minded reds.That will really keep them home!This election requires that we focus on the issues that the AVERAGE voter can understand.We can discuss the more intellectual issues only with intellectuals.We already know them inside and out.Tabloid sex scandals sell because they speak to the common people.So feeley-gate we go!

19
ER on October 4, 2006 at 06:57 AM

Now seems like a time for a good mix of outrage with the repubs,and sane policies presented by the Democratic Party.Our Democratic Party needs to be out there speaking to both topics.We have a great shot at getting both the house & senate. Please find it within yourselves to play this to win!America needs you!The world needs you!Bring some sanity back to our way of life.All my life I!ve had a vision of what this country could be! We need to get back to people matter.We need to get back to that our country can show other countries by example, not pushing other countries around.It doesn`t work and it never will.

20
virgo on October 4, 2006 at 08:24 AM

As long as we are asking leaders to step down when someone under them screws up, I will take this opportunity to ask Nancy Pelosi to step down. I want to know what she knew and when did she now about William Jefferson-D or Louisiana. I think all Democrates should be affected by his behavior. Why is he still a Congressman? He ripped off the voters!!! He is a crimanal, her broke to law!! All Democrats should be made to awnser for his actions. Nancy you should step down now and so should Jefferson!! How can any of you want Pelosi as your speaker she has no control and just lets those under her run amok. No double standards Step down Now, Nancy!!

21
angie210 on October 4, 2006 at 09:44 AM

this may amuse ... Enjoy !

HAIKU MARK FOLEY


‘Turning’ the ‘Page’

Hip Mark Foley, oh !
'turns' the Republican page
of whip portfolio

In turn intern freaks
as AIM hits mark close to home, -
ex-congressman (s)peaks ...

Minor misdemeanour
mocks electoral pretence,
taken to cleaner …

© Jonathan Robin 1 October 2006

22
JonathanRobin on October 4, 2006 at 08:54 PM

Hey---you know what I think it would be real fun to watch---Cheney presiding over a DEMOCRATIC senate---that would be great fun to watch!!!!

23
oled on October 5, 2006 at 10:05 PM

Cheney presiding over a Democrat senate fun to watch. Yeah, especially during the impeachment hearings!

24
Butte on October 6, 2006 at 10:32 AM

Re: Foley
It is very distressing that this happens in the halls of the greatest democracy on the planet. It has all the signs of the begining of the end. When our media stops reporting the truth and we are given our daily dose of propaganda by powerful media giants that have taken over the airwaves, newspapers, and soon internet. We will then be fed our dose of what they want us to know and in what direction they want us to travel.Our forefathers were aware of these perils when they formed this great country.So I say "question and investigate everthing, seek your own answers and please all of us preserve our democracy. Maybe everyone should look a bit deeper into this Foley situation off this link.

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=359924937663867563&q=genre%3Aeducational+duration%3Along&hl=en

25
Knotsheepish on October 6, 2006 at 01:08 PM

I believe that the Democratic Party should be shouting from the rooftops that Dennis Hatsert should be forced to resign if for no other reason than he would become President Of The United States were something to happen to Messrs. Bush and Cheney. Is this the kind of man America wants running the country in a national emergency. I think not.

26
ConstitutionFan on October 6, 2006 at 08:17 PM

I am from the great blue state of Illinois and it makes me sick to have Hastert and Shimkus both deeply involved in this scandal. Both former teachers that should know better if they hadn't changed their priorities from what is best for children to what is best for staying in command. All this talk about the speaker stepping down from his leadersip post does not go far enough. He needs to follow Newt's example and retire. (Future) speaker Pelosi needs to sponsor HR-BS signaling the removal of Hastert, Reynolds, Boehner and Shimkus. If Dennis leaves quick, he might be able to get Alan Keyes to take his place on the ticket. Don't wait for November, let's start cleaning house NOW.

27
4now on October 7, 2006 at 01:55 AM

Let's try to be the big person here - let them fix their problem and don't use it for a politicial crutch, but rather use your plans on making things better sell your campaign. I am sick of a small group of radicals making all Dems look bad. Grow up, please. You are embarrassing me. I am a true Democrat. True dems aren't finger point radicals. Please, grow up. You will never win with finger pointing childish games. Let's be teh solution, not part of the problem.

28
TheRealDem on October 8, 2006 at 09:23 PM

OK, the Republicans are unethical, immoral scum masquerading as fundamentalist Christians. We all know this, this scandal only proves an already obvious point.
Pushing this issue could result in a "Well, yeah, but look at what Bill did." backlash.
We need to get back to real issues. Issues like the runaway national debt, cutbacks on social services and no raise in the minimum wage for the working poor, destruction of foreign economies which is flooding the US with economic refugees, continual tax cuts for the richest 10% while the rest of carry the tax burden, the mistreatment of our military personnel in the form of shoddy equipment, targeted pay raises, and cutbacks in veterans' services, the lack of concern for Katrina victims both before and still even one year later, our eroding infrastructure, and the no-bid contracts for war profiteers.
Let's stay on task, people!!!!

29
Butte on October 9, 2006 at 12:03 PM


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