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Wolverine was a step ahead of ya:
http://www.tranceaddict.com/forums/...12&pagenumber=4
You really think Delay's gonna get the boot? Call me skeptical (yeah I know, big leap), but right now Senator McCain is investigating Tom Delay and Jack Abramoff's debacle with the Indian Casino affairs, but has been quoted by CQ Today last week as saying the following (subscription only):
| quote: | Senate Indian Affairs Chairman John McCain is walking a tightrope.
He has promised an aggressive investigation of lobbyist Jack Abramoff, but insists he will not target other lawmakers linked to Abramoff, including House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, R-Texas.
"I'm not going after Tom DeLay. It's not my job," McCain said. "If I was the chairman of the ethics committee, and somebody brought an ethics charge, I would go after that. But we're not the ethics committee."
Steering the investigation clear of his Republican colleagues would seem the prudent thing to do if McCain, R-Ariz., hopes to win the party's presidential nomination in 2008. But it may prove difficult to keep a probe of Abramoff away from lawmakers. |
So he won't indict or go after Delay, even though his hands are dirty as fuck in this affair. And this doesn't even include his dirty influence and involvement with his Texans for a Republican Majority (TRMPAC) fundraising. If you don't know about his involvement with the Indian Casinos, boy what a piece of work! He and Abramoff worked both sides of the fence - taking money from folks who wanted the casino shut down, THEN turning around and taking money from the Indian Tribe to open it back up! Snippet from Newsweek:
| quote: | The payments to the National Center for Public Policy Research were meant for a PR campaign promoting Indian gaming, center officials said. But internal e-mails obtained by NEWSWEEK show the lobbyists, Jack Abramoff and Michael Scanlon, DeLay's former press secretary, never documented any work performed or explained what they did with the money despite repeated requests.
[snip]
The widening probe in D.C. may prove more troubling for DeLay than the separate investigation into his fund-raising in Texas. DeLay has had a longstanding relationship with the center; the group, for which he has signed a fund-raising letter, paid for two of his overseas trips--including a $70,000 excursion in 2000 during which he and Abramoff (a member of the center's board) played golf in Scotland. The Washington Post reported last week the trip was mostly paid for by two $25,000 checks from two Abramoff lobbying clients that were sent to the center the day the trip began. In 2002, the center received a $1 million contribution from one of those Abramoff clients, the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians. The funds were intended to finance "educational" efforts promoting the idea that casinos like the one operated by the Choctaws helped Native Americans, Ridenour said. At Abramoff's urging, the center allotted $500,000 to a public-relations firm owned by Scanlon, and an additional $450,000 was paid to a foundation controlled by Abramoff. The next year, the center received its largest donation, $1.5 million, from another Abramoff client, an Internet gambling group in Gibraltar. This time, Abramoff suggested most of the grant, $1.28 million, be given to a firm called "KayGold LLC." Unbeknownst to Ridenour, KayGold was owned by Abramoff.
Ridenour said she and the center's lawyers became concerned in 2003 about the absence of any work product and began pressing Abramoff for documentation. By March 2004, worried about a possible audit, she sent an e-mail saying it would be "extremely helpful" if he could supply any polls or even "leftover printed materials" in order to "reassure anyone, such as the IRS, who might wonder if the effort really took place." But, she said, nothing was ever turned over; Abramoff later resigned from the center's board. The group is now cooperating with the Feds and may sue Abramoff. Asked about the payments, Abramoff's lawyer, Abbe Lowell, said, "No comment." Scanlon's lawyer said suggestions the work was not completed "are totally inaccurate," but declined to elaborate. DeLay, whose spokesman said the congressman knew nothing of the payments, is distancing himself from his former golfing partner. "I go about my job," he told reporters. "Jack Abramoff has his own problems. Any other questions?"
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7169454/site/newsweek/ |
McCain's trying a bit too hard to protect his own for his personal Presidential aspirations. I'm fucking tired of trying to respect the guy for being "no nonsense" when the ****** is anything but that at times like this.
What's more, this whole Indian Casino thing involves someone in your neck of the woods, Shakka:
| quote: | In the first week of his new career as a political candidate, Ralph Reed found himself at a small country club on the edge of the Okefenokee Swamp.
The topics of discussion for the prospective lieutenant governor included education funding, roads, classroom sizes, immigration and taxes, taxes, taxes.
The four-hour, all-Republican evening - which later moved to a private living room - stretched from Friday night to the edge of Saturday morning.
None of the attendees mentioned abortion. They didn't have to. This was the former head of the Christian Coalition before them.
No one mentioned the $4 million Reed's company allegedly received for helping to close an Indian casino. No one cared.
http://www.ajc.com/news/content/metro/0305/27reed.html? |
More here from the WaPost - snip:
| quote: | E-mails obtained by The Post show that Abramoff and Scanlon worked with conservative religious activist Ralph Reed to help Texas shut a casino operated by the Tigua Indians in 2002, then persuaded the tribe to pay them $4.2 million to lobby Washington lawmakers to reopen it.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dy...-2004Sep28.html |
Lou Dubose chimes in too:
| quote: | Abramoff and Scanlon were doing something remarkable: directing a $4 million statewide campaign to shutter the Tigua casino and managing to stay completely out of sight. Almost $2.4 million of Reed's bill was paid by a Delaware think tank run by a yoga instructor and lifeguard. Before The Washington Post exposed the fraudulent nature of Scanlon's American International Center, it had taken in $1.1 million from the Mississippi Choctaws and $1 million from the Louisiana Coushattas and passed the money through to Reed, along with an additional $300,000. Scanlon's PR firm, Capitol Campaign Strategies, paid Reed the other $1.8 million owed to him. When Reed left the Christian Coalition in 1997 to start his own company, he announced he would only accept clients who oppose gambling, abortion, and higher taxes. Four years later he was doing deals with Jack Abramoff and Mike Scanlon, and his company, Century Strategies, was awash in money befouled by gaming tables or slot machines.
"Reed's a Christian and he's too sanctimonious to take money directly from a casino operator," said a Louisiana political consultant who works on gambling issues. "But he'll take it from lobbyists who take it from casino operators." There was no way, despite Reed's denials, the consultant said, that he could be unaware of Abramoff's clients. (The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal had both done page-one profiles on Abramoff, focusing on his Indian clients.) Tom Grey, a Methodist minister who runs the National Coalition Against Legalized Gambling, agreed, telling The National Journal's Peter Stone that Reed must have known. "When you get paid big money, it's got to be gambling money," Grey said. "Ralph Reed with all his sophistication should have known where that money was coming from."
It seems they were both right. On the day before Abramoff made his pitch to the Tiguas, he sent Reed an e-mail in which he discussed the Indians' stupidity - and their money: "I wish those moronic Tiguas were smarter in their political contributions. I'd love to get my hands on that moolah!! Oh well, stupid folks get wiped out." As the various investigations unfold, Reed will find it increasingly difficult to lay claim to any moral high ground.
http://www.mollyivins.com/showArtic...?ArticleID=1830 |
ThinkProgress has a nice summary of Delay's dirty involvement:
http://thinkprogress.org/index.php?p=430#more-430
And to top things off, the WSJ editorial came out ripping him pretty good too. Here's a snip:
| quote: | Taken separately, and on present evidence, none of the latest charges directly touch Mr. DeLay; at worst, they paint a picture of a man who makes enemies by playing political hardball and loses admirers by resorting to politics-as-usual.
The problem, rather, is that Mr. DeLay, who rode to power in 1994 on a wave of revulsion at the everyday ways of big government, has become the living exemplar of some of its worst habits. Mr. DeLay's ties to Mr. Abramoff might be innocent, in a strictly legal sense, but it strains credulity to believe that Mr. DeLay found nothing strange with being included in Mr. Abramoff's lavish junkets.
Nor does it seem very plausible that Mr. DeLay never considered the possibility that the mega-lucrative careers his former staffers Michael Scanlon and Mr. Buckham achieved after leaving his office had something to do with their perceived proximity to him. These people became rich as influence-peddlers in a government in which legislators like Mr. DeLay could make or break fortunes by tinkering with obscure rules and dispensing scads of money to this or that constituency. Rather than buck this system as he promised to do while in the minority, Mr. DeLay has become its undisputed and unapologetic master as Majority Leader.
Whether Mr. DeLay violated the small print of House Ethics or campaign-finance rules is thus largely beside the point. His real fault lies in betraying the broader set of principles that brought him into office, and which, if he continues as before, sooner or later will sweep him out.
http://www.opinionjournal.com/editorial/?id=110006479 |
A point of note, the first half of that editorial makes the same dubious claim about the Texas DA is being a "partisan" for going after Delay. I heard this same tripe bullshit from Fred Barnes last night on Fox, who went even further in claiming a fucking "gang-up" conspiracy by the media and the Democrats. Nevermind the fact that the Texas DA has prosecuted many more Democrats than Republicans, including the former Texas Democratic Speaker of the House. From 60 Minutes:
| quote: | Is he saying that Earle is deliberately doing this? "I don't know whether he's doing – if he does it or not. I just know," says Carter. "I just know that you've seen a history that seems that way."
Carter is alluding to the charge made by DeLay and other Republicans that Earle’s motives are partisan, and he points to Earle’s unsuccessful attempt to prosecute Republican Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison on ethics charges.
Hutchinson said: "I know he prosecutes for political purposes. He did it to me."
"I'm not surprised that she would say that," says Earle. "That's pretty much what other politicians that I've prosecuted have said."
But does he believe that example casts a shadow over this case, and these indictments?
"That was one case. There have been somewhere around 15 cases involving elected officials, that my office has prosecuted," says Earle. "Of the 15, 12 were Democrats; three were Republican. But now, he’s dealing with one of the most powerful politicians in the country."
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2005...ain678234.shtml |
So that talking point by the few Republicans still trying to defend this crooked bastard really needs to be put to rest.
This ****** needs to go down, HARD. If the Dems. had someone this corrupt in office, you don't think it wouldn't be all over the news nonstop? The Republicans should be moving on this fast in order to distance themselves from any connection or association for the '06 elections. The question is, will they?
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Whence September dusk grows crisper still,
with leaves all crimson conquered,
I yearn to shout,
and dance about,
and stick pickles in my honker...
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