Two other congressmen in on the deal "do expect to be taken care of," the lawmaker says. But for the time being -- and he says repeatedly that he might change his mind and take money down the road -- he'd rather trade his help for investment in his district, maybe a hefty deposit in the bank of a political supporter who's done him favors.If Rahm Emanuel is remaking the National Democrats in Illinois image, you really hope he's trashing this very Illinois sounding behavior in the make-over. It kills the party before they even start.
"I'm not interested -- at this point," he says of the dangled bribe. "You know, we do business for a while, maybe I'll be interested, maybe I won't, you know." Indeed, he acknowledges, even though he needs to be careful -- "I expect to be in the [expletive] leadership of the House," he notes -- the money's awfully tempting. "It's hard for me to say, just the hell with it."
This is John Murtha, incoming House speaker Nancy Pelosi's choice to be her majority leader, snared but not charged in the Abscam probe in 1980. "The Democrats intend to lead the most honest, most open and most ethical Congress in history," Pelosi pledged on election night. Five days later she wrote Murtha a letter endorsing his bid to become her No. 2.
Not the most promising start.
“Chicago is an October sort of city even in spring.” ― Nelson Algren, Chicago: City on the Make
Wednesday, November 15, 2006
Ruth Marcus on Pelosi, Murtha, and Abscam
From Marcus's column in todays WAPO: Unfit for Majority Leader,
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