A Matter of Visibility
Eight-term Louisiana Congressman William Jefferson may have been tossed off the influential Ways and Means Committee behind closed doors by his fellow Democrats, but he didn't go quietly. Jefferson and the Congressional Black Caucus, noting that a white Democrat, West Virginia Congressman Alan Mollohan, has been allowed to keep his seat while under investigation, implied that race may be an issue.
I would find the spectacle of a falling out between the Congressional Black Caucus and the Democratic Party an interesting turn of events as we go into the '06 elections, especially in light of the fact that black conservatives have a fair chance of picking up governorships in Pennsylvania and Ohio and a high-profile U.S. Senate Seat in Maryland. That said, I don't think the different treatment of Jefferson and Mollohan is as much an issue of race as it is one of visibility, and hence, politics. When it comes right down to it, Alan Mollohan's alleged transgressions fly well below the radar of most people, even many of those of us who are very interested in politics. William Jefferson's circumstances, however, are anything but under the radar. The public easily latched onto the mental image of foil-wrapped frozen stacks of bribe money found in Jefferson's freezer, and the furor over the raid on his Washington, D.C. offices surpassed even that. Fair or not, William Jefferson has quickly become the image in many people's mind when they think of corrupt politicians, and almost single-handedly killed the “culture of corruption” storyline Democrats wanted to use this fall. Being a public relations liability for the Democratic Party in an election year has far more to do with his ouster than does the color of his skin.
Posted by: Confederate Yankee at 10:53 AM
Comments
You're using selective memory. Of all the congressional corruption that has come to light recently, Jefferson and Mollohan are the only Dems I know of, and both of them have been sanctioned.
It's not fair to say that the Dems ousted Jefferson and Mollohan for PR -- it was after all the right thing to do, and I'm glad they did it.
Look at the Repubs. Cunninham didn't quit until he pleaded quilty.
Jerry Lewis, R-CA is Chairman of the House Appropriations Committee. He sure looks guilty, yet he's in good standing. There's a defense contractor CEO named Tom Casey who claims the Lewis told him to give Bill Lowery stock options in exchange for Lewis passing on an earmark, and that's only the beginning.
You will be a better citizen of this country if you can let go of the childish notion that one party is god-like and the other is vile and useless. There are good and bad Democrats and Republicans.
Posted by: Cyrus McElderry at June 17, 2006 07:32 AM (DixoE)
How quickly the left forgets why Alcee Hasting is a congressman rather than still a Federal judge.
Of course, now he's more careful about his corruption after having been impeached and removed as a judge.
Posted by: Purple Avenger at June 17, 2006 10:46 AM (LnS+d)
Of course, now he's more careful about his corruption after having been impeached and removed as a judge.
I'm not sure who that is. Okay, there are three crooked Democrats. I don't doubt that there are a lot more. However the Dems are making clear steps to address their corruption, and it's wrong to call it PR.
By the way, Denny Hastert is a crook too. I wonder if they'll ask him to step down? By the way, I don't know much about the site this comes from; if what they say is factually wrong, fine, but don't give me any grief about the site being too liberal or whatever (I'm not a reader, I followed a link to it) without saying how the facts are incorrect. It sure looks damning.
Posted by: Cyrus McElderry at June 17, 2006 10:25 PM (DixoE)
http://thinkprogress.org/2006/06/15/hastert-pictures-of-corruption/
Posted by: Cyrus McElderry at June 17, 2006 10:26 PM (DixoE)
Posted by: Thomas J. Jackson at June 17, 2006 11:00 PM (A7X8u)
Posted by: Purple Avenger at June 17, 2006 11:35 PM (LnS+d)
I don't follow Florida's 23rd ditrict, but like I said, I'll assume you're right and that Hastings is a crook.
The Dems have made concrete steps to discipline Jefferson. The Republicans did nothing about all the guys above I mentioned. Go on and explain to me how the Dems are behind the corruption in Washington.
Posted by: Cyrus McElderry at June 18, 2006 10:50 AM (DixoE)
Posted by: Thrill at June 18, 2006 05:31 PM (DYb4r)
Seems to me Cunningham recently checked into the Greybar hotel.
The Dems have made concrete steps to discipline Jefferson.
The man was caught red handed taking 100 large in cash. Concrete steps would be booting him out on his ass.
Posted by: Purple Avenger at June 18, 2006 06:12 PM (LnS+d)
I hope the Dems do lean on Jefferson to quit before he's indicted. I'm glad they stripped him of his committee.
I don't know what the rules are for forcing a congressman out.
Posted by: Cyrus McElderry at June 18, 2006 07:20 PM (DixoE)
I was thinking, "Good Lord, what is Jefferson doing now!"
Posted by: Kevin at June 18, 2006 08:56 PM (+hkUo)
Posted by: Foobarista at June 18, 2006 09:45 PM (0IxK6)
Posted by: Scrapiron at June 19, 2006 11:33 AM (Ffvoi)
How can you believe there's more Dem corruption now than Repub? That's ludicrous. Hastert, DeLay, Cunningham, Lewis, Ney, Pombo, Safavian, Libby, Abramoff... I can't even keep track, that's just off the top of my head.
I know Jefferson is a crook, and somebody said there's another one named Hastings.
What are you talking about?
Posted by: Cyrus McElderry at June 19, 2006 01:02 PM (DixoE)
Processing 0.0, elapsed 0.0054 seconds.
18 queries taking 0.0035 seconds, 22 records returned.
Page size 12 kb.
Powered by Minx 0.8 beta.