November 19, 2004
Revolution In Reverse
In solidifying its power, the GOP is loosening its
ethics.
By E. J. Dionne Jr.
Friday, November 19, 2004; Page A29
"And I want to say to you bluntly: You live today
with the most corrupt congressional leadership we have
seen in the United States in the 20th century. You have to
go back to the Gilded Age of the 1870s and 1880s to have
anything comparable that we've lived through."
Gosh, those Democrats must be really bitter about this
year's elections to say stuff like that. Isn't it time to
put aside partisan invective?
But however appropriate that ringing indictment may seem
to the moment, it did not issue from any Democrat this
week. The words were spoken in February 1992 by a House
Republican named Newt Gingrich. Gingrich was then building
the momentum that led to the historic Republican takeover
of Congress two years later. The GOP modestly called what
it was up to a "revolution."
As the old rock song taught us: Meet the new boss, same as
the old boss.
What's surprising is how shameless House Republicans were
on Wednesday in casting aside their 11-year-old rule
requiring a member of their leadership to step aside
temporarily if he or she comes under indictment.
The repeal might be called the Tom DeLay Protection Act of
2004. DeLay, the House majority leader, is under
investigation by Ronnie Earle, the district attorney in
Texas's Travis County. Earle, who is a Democrat, is
investigating charges that corporate money was used
illegally to help Republicans win Texas legislative races
in 2002. Republican victories that year paved the way for
changes in the state's congressional district lines that
helped Republicans win additional U.S. House seats in
Texas this year, solidifying their hold on power.
Earle has already obtained indictments against three of
DeLay's political associates. The Hammer, as DeLay is
known, must be worried.
Recall how Republicans dismissed any and all who charged
that the investigations of President Bill Clinton by
special prosecutor Ken Starr were politically motivated.
Ah, but those were investigations of a shady Democrat by a
distinguished Republican. When a Democrat is investigating
a Republican, it can only be about politics. Is that
clear?
Rep. Henry Bonilla, the Texas Republican who sponsored the
resolution to protect DeLay, said it was designed to
protect against "crackpot" prosecutors whose
indictments might get in the way of the ability of House
Republicans to choose their own leaders. Can't let a
little thing like an indictment get in the way of the
sovereignty of House Republicans, can we?
"Attorneys tell me you can be indicted for just about
anything in this country," said Bonilla. Remember the
old days during the Clinton impeachment when Republicans
went on and on about the importance of "the rule of
law"? Oh well.
DeLay's response to the whole thing came, almost word for
word, from Clinton's old talking points. "We must
stop the politics of personal destruction," Clinton
said in December 1998 after the House impeachment vote
that DeLay had rammed through. On Wednesday, DeLay said
that Democrats "announced years ago that they were
going to engage in the politics of personal destruction,
and had me as a target." Maybe it's time for Bill and
Tom to sit down at that big new library in Little Rock for
a friendly drink.
About the only defense Republicans can make for repealing
their rule on indicted leaders is that the original
motivation for passing it in 1993 was blatantly political.
Republicans were trying to make hay over an investigation
of Dan Rostenkowski, an Illinois Democrat who was then
chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee.
Rostenkowski was later convicted of mail fraud. If
politics was behind the rule in the first place, why not
be political now that the rule is inconvenient? Isn't this
a case of admirable consistency?
Some Republicans, at least, remember what they stood for
10 years ago. "We took a strong stand in 1994 to make
clear the Republican conference would live by a higher
standard than our Democratic colleagues," Rep. Chris
Shays, a Connecticut Republican, said in a statement.
Shays also told reporters: "We won election in '94
because we were going to be different, and what I continue
to see is a slow but very consistent erosion in what made
us different."
Shays reminds us that when and he and Gingrich were in the
opposition, they gave voice to many who worried about the
dangers of an entrenched majority that came to assume it
had a right to power and could do whatever was necessary
to keep it. Gingrich's line about the Gilded Age just may
have come 12 years too early. You don't have to be a
crackpot to believe that the Gilded Age is now.
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