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red states rule
07-30-2007, 05:05 AM
This should be funny as hell to watch. The Dems have not "been draining the swamp" they have been filling it up



Congress set to vote on ethics reform

By: Chris Frates
Jul 29, 2007 12:38 PM EST

After weeks of private talks, House and Senate Democrats this week will take up sweeping ethics legislation that would require disclosure of lobbyist bundled campaign contributions and funding for lawmakers' pet projects.

Critics worry the reforms will not be aggressive enough, but the agreement, if passed, would mark a significant victory for Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California.

Both promised to provide more disclosure about the relationship between lobbyists and lawmakers after a spate of scandals, mostly involving Republicans.

Democratic leaders have not released the new proposal’s details, and that has some Senate Republicans -- and nonpartisan interest groups -- worried that its language was watered down in final closed-door negotiations.

Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.), a key player in the negotiations over the bill, expressed concern that the leadership is hoping to push it through both houses before the scheduled August recess begins Friday.

“Once again, Sen. Reid appears to want to ram a secret bill that is several hundred pages long through the Senate without a full debate and the chance to offer amendments,” DeMint said in a statement Saturday.

Steve Ellis, vice president of Taxpayers for Common Sense, will also be watching the measure closely.

“There’s a lot of ways you can fiddle with this," he warned.

"That’s going to be our concern: that there’s going to be some gamesmanship that leaves us with less than what we were promised and by the time we realize it they will have voted and left town.”


Already, the Democratic majorities have weakened a provision that would require lobbyists to disclose how much cash they raised on behalf of candidates. Sitting lawmakers now would have to report only twice a year, rather than quarterly, how much lobbyists raised for them – and only if the amount is over $15,000 per six months, rather than $5,000 as originally planned.

Another change: Those reports would be filed by lawmakers, not lobbyists, who had called the proposal a new burden that would be a bookkeeping nightmare for many small lobbying shops.

The new package would also require that senators report their requested earmarks online at least 48 hours before a vote.

If an earmark -- often used to steer pet projects to a lawmaker’s state -- is added in conference committee, any senator could request a floor vote on whether it should remain in the bill. Without 60 votes, the earmark would be stripped, a senior Democratic aide said.

The bill would also expand the definition of earmarks to include tax and tariff benefits. The aide was unsure whether the earmarking provisions were new or had been included in the legislation that both houses passed earlier this year, but has since stalled.

for the complete article

http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0707/5149.html

red states rule
08-01-2007, 04:27 AM
House passes ethics overhaul
By S.A. Miller
August 1, 2007
The Democrat-led House overwhelmingly approved tougher rules governing the relationship between lawmakers and lobbyists, and on legislators trying to slip "pork" projects into spending bills.

The legislation, which passed 411-8, requires senators to list pet spending projects, known as earmarks, on a public Internet site 48 hours before the bill goes to a vote and to certify that neither they nor their family have a financial interest in the project.

It also calls for lawmakers to identify lobbyists who bundle political contributions from several donors for them, if the lobbyists gives more than $15,000 in a six-month period; and it bans most lobbyist gifts to lawmakers, including junkets and lavish parties thrown at political conventions.

Speaker Nancy Pelosi, California Democrat, said the bill made good on her party's promise to clean up Washington corruption.

"Today, with passage of the Honest Leadership Open Government Act, we draw back the curtains, throw up the windows and let the sunshine in," she said.

The measure attacks practices that permeated recent corruption scandals involving former lobbyist Jack Abramoff and former Rep. Randy "Duke" Cunningham, California Republican. Both are in prison.

But many of the 190 Republicans voting for it did so begrudgingly, criticizing Mrs. Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, Nevada Democrat, for writing the bill behind closed doors and making it weaker than earlier versions.

"Left on the cutting room floor were reforms added to the earlier bill by Republicans that won bipartisan support on the House floor — reforms that would do more than anything in the current bill to restore trust between the American people and their elected leaders," said House Minority Leader John A. Boehner, Ohio Republican.

for the complete article

http://washingtontimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070801/NATION/108010087/1001

red states rule
08-01-2007, 04:28 AM
Does anyone believe the Dems did any good or they will actually cut back on the pork?

red states rule
08-01-2007, 04:42 AM
The liberal media will help in shielding Dems from their ethics issues


LAT Highlights Republican 'Culture of Corruption' Ignores Dem Troubles
By Warner Todd Huston | August 1, 2007 - 03:45 ET
Well, the L.A.Times certainly followed the Democratic National Committee's stylebook for reporting the News with this one, it is obvious. In a story about the new "sweeping ethics bill" making its way through Congress this week, they mention all the Republican corruption they can dredge up, but somehow miss every single Democrat example of the same. They also misreport a Nancy Pelosi rules change that makes it seem as if she is a corruption fighter when the truth is that she backed off from the very rule the Times cites as an example of how "ethical" the House is! This one is a perfect example of partisan, agenda driven "reporting," for sure.

So, the L.A.Times gives us the hero Democrat Party who has quashed that "culture of corruption" and cleaned up Congress' "sullied image." Yaaa, Democrats and boo Republicans who are so "corrupt." Read on for some fair-and-balancedness that'll curl yer hair!

WASHINGTON — In what would be the most sweeping overhaul of ethics rules since the Watergate era, the House today gave final approval to a bill aimed at reining in the influence of lobbyists and repairing Congress' sullied image.

Democrats promised to pass it after winning control of Congress following a campaign in which they denounced the Republicans' "culture of corruption" on Capitol Hill.

The measure passed the House, 411-8.


Except, look at that number, would you? The Times forgets to mention that the GOP almost to a man supported this effort!

Yet, the Times helpfully finds it must remind us about all those evil Republicans' corruption, of course.

The measure's approval comes as two former Republican congressman, including California's Randy "Duke" Cunningham, and former lobbyist Jack Abramoff reside behind bars and about a dozen other lawmakers from both parties, including two other California Republicans, have come under scrutiny.

And later they add...


In addition, Rep. Jerry Lewis (R-Redlands) has come under scrutiny for his ties to lobbyists whose clients have received millions of dollars in earmarks from the Appropriations Committee, which he chaired. Rep. John Doolittle (R-Rocklin) and his wife, whose home was searched by the FBI earlier this year, are under investigation for their ties to Abramoff.

...and...


And just Monday, federal agents searched the home of Sen. Ted Stevens (R-Alaska) in an investigation into public corruption in his state.

Amazingly there is not one mention of Congressman John Murtha's many ethical troubles, nor a scant line about Democrat congressman William Jefferson of Louisiana, nor a word about Diane Feinstein's ethics troubles. Not word one about a single Democrat ethical lapse made this story.

Amazing how "ethical" the Dems are according to the L.A.Times, eh?

Then we get what amounts to a lie by the L.A. Times:

On the other hand, the House forbade members from flying on corporate jets. Senators and presidential candidates would be permitted to fly on corporate jets but would have to pay charter rates instead of the less costly equivalent of first-class tickets.

The Times makes several lies by omission, here. First of all, the entire report is couched in a focus on the new House with a Democratic majority under Nancy Pelosi (hence their line "Democrats promised to pass it after winning control of Congress"). But, the rules change that the Times is talking about that clamped down on using corporate Jets was passed in January of '07 when the Republicans still controlled the House.

Worse, the Times neglects to mention that since she took over Nancy Pelosi has RELAXED those rules to benefit her Democrat pals in Congress. And still worse, she made that rules change in a vote that happened in the middle of the night when no one was looking last May!

Yeah. It IS amazing how "ethical" the Times thinks the Democrat House of Representatives is. It's a tale that ranks right up there with the "Lord of the Rings" or "Harry Potter," all just as fantastic.

Thanks for the fantasy, L.A. Times.

http://newsbusters.org/blogs/warner-todd-huston/2007/08/01/latimes-highlights-republican-culture-corruption-ignores-dems-tr

PostmodernProphet
08-01-2007, 07:05 AM
Isn't this the third time they have reformed ethics since they took over?

red states rule
08-01-2007, 07:06 AM
Isn't this the third time they have reformed ethics since they took over?

I do not know about that

What I do know, Dems have not accomplished much since they took over - except set record low approval numbers

:lol:

actsnoblemartin
08-01-2007, 08:44 AM
Politicians voting on ethics. Thats like terrorists voting on rules.

red states rule
08-01-2007, 08:45 AM
Politicians voting on ethics. Thats like terrorists voting on rules.

or Al Copone sitting on the Liquor Control Board

actsnoblemartin
08-01-2007, 08:47 AM
or convicted criminals decideding their own sentence.

:lol:

red states rule
08-01-2007, 05:58 PM
or convicted criminals decideding their own sentence.

:lol:

or Rosie O' Donnell doing ads for Jenny Craig