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View Full Version : Another Corrupt Repuke, another Plead deal and Disgrace



LoungeMachine
10-14-2006, 11:48 PM
October 14, 2006 |
Ney Cops a Plea: Another Blow to the GOP

Corruption Gives Democrats Ammo for Nov. Elections, but Are Voters More Interested in Iraq and Security?

Radar Congressman Bob Ney Will Resign

Foley or Abramoff -- Which Scandal Is Bigger?

The Faces of Political Scandal



Analysis By MARK HALPERIN, ABC News Political Director

Oct. 13, 2006 — The guilty plea and planned resignation of Ohio Republican Rep. Bob Ney is more of a symbolic blow to the GOP and its hopes for maintaining control of Congress than a substantive one.

Ney pleaded guilty in a Washington courtroom today to conspiracy and making false statements.

He got caught up in the wide-ranging federal investigation into corruption that involved the once-powerful Republican lobbyist Jack Abramoff.

Abramoff faces jail time stemming from his efforts to defraud his clients and curry favor with lawmakers.

Democrats for months have tried to make corruption part of their overall call for change as part of a rhetorical attack on the party that has dominated Washington for most of the last six years.

The timing of Ney's guilty plea — along with the controversy involving former Rep. Mark Foley, and ethics committee and FBI probes of how Republican leaders handled the Foley matter — has given Democrats new impetus to talk about a "culture of corruption" in Washington.

In races around the country, Democratic House candidates are raising issues of personal morality and past actions of Republicans, even in cases that do not directly relate to Abramoff or Foley.

In one race, for instance, Democrats have focused on a decades-old incident involving allegations of drunken driving by a veteran Republican congressman.


Still, these scandals — which also include the indictment of another Republican congressman, the resignation of former GOP House leader Tom DeLay, and the indictment of several senior congressional aides and one Bush administration official — have not become the dominant issue in the midterm elections.


President Bush is leading a Republican charge to frame the campaign around national security and taxes.

And even in Ohio — where a series of state scandals has made the allegations of a "culture of corruption" even more powerful — Republicans have a chance to hold onto the seat Ney plans to vacate.


Only minutes after Ney appeared in court, House Republican leaders put out a joint statement denouncing him in harsh terms.


Continued

DEMON CUNT
10-15-2006, 01:28 AM
Here comes MsSaddBawls' famous list o' Democrat criminals.

This American Idle fan does that to avoid discussion of our current problems.

He uses crimes of the past as an excuse for the current ones.

BigBadBrian
10-15-2006, 06:06 PM
You gotta admit, at least R's resign when they fuck up.

What do the D's do?

Excuses, excuses, excuses.

Example: William Jefferson (D-LA).

Nickdfresh
10-15-2006, 07:57 PM
Originally posted by BigBadBrian
You gotta admit, at least R's resign when they fuck up.

What do the D's do?

Excuses, excuses, excuses.

Example: William Jefferson (D-LA).

Oh that's brilliant, simply priceless! He resigned as part of a plea deal! Did Delay ever "resign?" Didn't he basically fight to the bitter end?

And you could also say that at least Democrats fire the corrupt assholes in their party. Example: Nancy Pelosi asked for Jefferson's resignation, and then threw him off, a key committee. She also denounced the Congresswoman from Georgia saying basically that there's never an excuse for hitting cops.

What we should say is Republicans cover for and excuse their gay pedophiles...