The Coming Storm: Jack Abramoff’s Bipartisan Sleaze
by
Joshua Frank
by Joshua Frank
It is far too
early to tell what kind of impact it will ultimately have on the
Republican establishment, but the Jack Abramoff scandal could well
be the most perilous of all the storms developing in Washington.
And the cloud forming on the horizon is a dark one indeed.
The most fascinating
aspect of this whole controversy is the number of people it potentially
involves. From elected officials in Congress to top conservative
activists, the Abramoff lobbyist sham could ravage the neocons far
worse than the CIA-leak affair. It could also take a top Democrat
or two down as well.
The Abramoff
saga is more than one sordid tale of an insider gone wild; it’s
a vivid narrative of how business is done in Washington. From legal
maneuvering to backroom bribes and pay-offs, Abramoff is just one
in a long line of power hungry lobbyists.
At the heart
of the Abramoff inquiry is the work he did for six Indian tribes
during the 1990s up until 2004. At question is whether or not Abramoff
along with his partner Michael Scanlon bilked at least $80 million
from his clients, evaded taxes and violated lobbyist disclosure
laws.
There are a
handful of politicians currently under scrutiny. Rep. Tom DeLay
is the most notable, but now in the hot seat is Sen. Conrad Burns
of Montana, Rep. John Doolittle of California and Rep. Robert Ney
of Ohio, all Republicans, are reported to be the most central to
the ongoing investigation. But on the periphery, and I’m told a
potential addition to the aforementioned list in the near future,
could be Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada.
Last week the
Associated Press reported that almost three dozen congress people
moved to halt the construction of a Louisiana Indian casino while
they simultaneously collected large donations from Jack Abramoff
and his tribal clients. Senator Harry Reid was one of those elected
officials.
Reid sent a
letter to Interior Secretary Gale Norton on March 5, 2002, which
was also signed by Sen. John Ensign, R-Nev. "The next day,
the Coushattas issued a $5,000 check to Reid's tax-exempt political
group, the Searchlight Leadership Fund. A second Abramoff tribe
sent another $5,000 to Reid's group. Reid ultimately received more
than $66,000 in Abramoff-related donations between 2001 and 2004,"
the AP reported.
It was a political
tit-for-tat. Reid opposed the construction of the casino and was
paid handsomely for his choice. Another Democrat caught up in the
legal chaos is former Senator John Breaux of Louisiana, who, according
to tribal records, wrote Norton on March 1, 2002 about the same
matter. Coushattas wrote a $1,000 check to his Senate campaign five
days later and handed over $10,000 to his library fund.
We’ve
all heard how Tom DeLay was allegedly flown all over the country
on Abramoff’s clients’ tab. But what we don’t hear much about is
that two Democratic congressmen, James E. Clyburn of South Carolina
and now the vice chairman of the House Democratic Caucus, along
with Bennie Thompson of Mississippi, now the senior Democrat on
the Homeland Security Committee, were flown to the Northern Mariana
Islands in the mid-1990s, paid in part by Jack Abramoff. And the
list of Democratic culpability in the Abramoff affair goes on.
Chances
are high that the black cloud engulfing Washington will eventually
rain down on both the Republicans and the Democrats.
November
29, 2005
Joshua
Frank [send him mail]
is the author of Left
Out!: How Liberals Helped Reelect George W. Bush, just published
by Common Courage Press. To learn more visit www.BrickBurner.org.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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