ETHICS
Beyond Larry Craig
Conservative elected officials such as Sen. John McCain (R-AZ), Sen. Norm
Coleman (R-MN), Rep. Peter Hoekstra (R-MI), and others, quickly
sought to distance themselves last week from Sen. Larry Craig (R) after
the longtime Idaho lawmaker pled guilty to misdemeanor
disorderly conduct. The ethically-challenged former House Majority Leader,
Tom DeLay (R-TX), proudly heralded Craig's temporary
resignation as an example of conservatives' efforts to deal with ethics
issues. "You see," DeLay explained, conservatives "kick out" lawmakers
with "problems." Yet corruption continues to stain the House and Senate chambers
despite the departures of DeLay, former Rep. Bob
Ney (R-OH), former Rep. Duke
Cunningham (R-CA), and others.
Conservatives' efforts to cut ties with Craig while remaining silent
over Sen. David Vitter's (R-LA) similarly lewd behavior have revealed a glaring "homophobic
hypocrisy" in dealing with improper personal behavior. More importantly,
it has showcased the unwillingness of lawmakers to display a similar desire
to root out the existing corruption. The Progress Report highlights
just a few "problems" that persist:
ALASKA'S WILD CORRUPTION: Sen. Ted
Stevens (R-AK) had his home "raided
by the FBI this summer, and news reports also have linked Rep. Don Young
(R-AK) to the public corruption probe, raising questions about the future of
two men who have served Alaska for more than three decades." Stevens's investigation
involves his efforts to steer
multi-million dollar contracts to an oil company executive who also helped oversee
the remodeling of Stevens's home. Young is also being investigated for his
ties to the oil company, but his troubles extend even further and involve numerous
other earmarking favors he has done for his friends and allies.
LEWIS PROBE STALLED: Rep. Jerry Lewis
(R-CA), the ranking member of the House Appropriations Committee (and former
chairman), is under investigation for earmarking
millions of dollars in public funds for individuals who donated heavily to
his political action committee. In 2006,
Los Angeles federal prosecutors were in the middle of a wide-ranging investigation into
Lewis. Due to a budget
squeeze put on the U.S. Attorneys' offices by Alberto Gonzales, the
federal criminal investigation has stalled
for nearly six months due to a lack of funds, according to former prosecutors. "The
lead prosecutor on the inquiry and other lawyers departed the office, and vacancies
couldn't be filled." Lewis recently announced that he'll
seek a 16th term, putting to rest speculation that he would retire amid the
ongoing probe.
ABRAMOFF PROBE ONGOING: Rep. John Doolittle's
(R-CA) Virginia home was raided this past April by the FBI. Investigators are
seeking information regarding suspicious
amounts of money that he paid his wife through his political action committees. His
wife, Julie Doolittle, and her company received
a subpoena from the grand jury investigating Abramoff. Most recently, Doolittle's "chief
of staff and deputy chief of staff have been subpoenaed
to testify before a grand jury in a federal probe into ties between Doolittle,
his wife and jailed lobbyist Jack Abramoff." Another congressman, Rep. Tom
Feeney (R-FL), was recently
questioned by the FBI "about his dealings with Jack Abramoff as part
of its ongoing investigation into the lobbyist convicted of defrauding clients." Abramoff paid
for Feeney's lavish 2003 trip to Scotland. Ironically, when Doolittle stepped
down from his seat on the appropriations committee due to the Abramoff investigation,
conservatives replaced
him with Feeney.
COLD HARD CASH: In
May 2006, the FBI raided Rep.
William Jefferson's (D-LA) congressional office. In June, federal officials unveiled
a 16-count
indictment against him, involving allegations that Jefferson solicited
bribes. He has pled not guilty, claiming he is "absolutely
innocent." Jefferson stepped
down from his seat on the Small Business Committee and was stripped
of his seat on the Ways and Means Committee in June 2006 due to the federal
investigation. Due to his efforts to fight the indictments, Jefferson has been
unable to serve as an effective representative for a district in dire need of
strong representation, and he "should
consider resigning for the good of his constituents."

IRAQ -- BUSH KNEW BEFORE INVASION THAT SADDAM
HAD NO WMD: Two former CIA officers have confirmed to Salon that President
Bush was told in Sept. 2002 that Saddam Hussein did not possess any weapons
of mass destruction. According to the officer, CIA director George Tenet
provided Bush with top-secret information that "detailed that Saddam may
have wished to have a program, that his engineers had told him they could
build a nuclear weapon within two years if they had fissible material, which
they didn't, and that they had no chemical or biological weapons." Bush reportedly
dismissed the warning immediately. According to one of the officers, "Bush
didn't give a f*ck about the intelligence. He had his mind made up." Tenet
never brought up the information again; in fact, only a few months later
he infamously referred to the case that Saddam possessed weapons of mass
destruction as a "slam
dunk." The intelligence about the lack of weapons of mass destruction
was never provided to Congress before their vote to authorize military operations
in March 2003, and British Prime Minister Tony Blair depended on this faulty
information to make his decision to support the Iraq war. "Blair
was duped," said one of the CIA officers. "He was shown the altered report." Even
though Bush finally publicly admitted in 2004 that "Iraq
did not have the weapons that our intelligence believed were there," he
continued to believe that they were. In his new book on
Bush, Robert Draper writes that the President repeated conviction that Saddam
had weapons of mass destruction "to Andy Card all the way up until
Card's departure in April 2006."
JUSTICE -- SEN. WHITEHOUSE SEEKS TO RESTRICT
EXCESS WHITE HOUSE INTERFERENCE IN DOJ INVESTIGATIONS: In April, during
testimony by outgoing Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse
(D-RI) revealed that during the Bush administration, the number of White House
officials allowed to intervene in pending criminal investigations by the Justice
department increased
by 10,325 percent, from four to 417. In a subsequent hearing in July, Whitehouse
also revealed that Gonzales
had given Vice President Cheney's office increased access. Whitehouse is
now seeking
to limit "the number of people in the White House who can be briefed by Justice
on pending criminal matters." His bill, which is co-sponsored by Senate Judiciary
Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-VT), "states that only certain 'covered
officers' in both the Justice Department and White House may discuss ongoing
criminal or civil investigations carried out by the Justice Department. The
bill also requires the Attorney General and President to notify the Senate and
House Judiciary Committees when new covered officers are designated." The Senate
Judiciary Committee will discuss the bill in a business meeting today.
IRAQ -- UPSET OVER GAO'S FINDINGS ON IRAQ, CONSERVATIVES
ATTACK AGENCY'S QUALIFICATIONS: Now that the Government Accountability
Office (GAO) reported little
to no progress in Iraq and the administration may be cooking
the books on levels of violence, conservatives are desperately trying to
attack the agency's credibility. Yesterday at a House International Relations
Committee hearing,
ranking member Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-FL) complained, "I just feel
uncomfortable listening to a report by the Government Accountability Office about
a war effort." GAO Comptroller General David
Walker explained the work his agency does is based on "looking at hard data,
interviewing qualified individuals, and appropriate parties have an opportunity
to review and comment on our work," he said. "It's my understanding that Secretary
of Defense Gates does not have any military experience either." Ros-Lehtinen
has had no problem citing
the work of the GAO in a letter to Secretary of Homeland Security Michael
Chertoff or enlisting the GAO's resources to
pursue her agenda.
Similarly, Brookings Institution analyst Michael O'Hanlon, a
staunch war supporter, attacked the GAO's work as "flat-out
sloppy." It's only when the right wing doesn't like the agency's conclusions
that it finds fault with the work of the office.
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Al Gore is working on a new environmental book entitled
The Path to Survival, a sequel to An Inconvenient Truth that offers a blueprint
on what can be done to fight global warming. The book will be released
on Earth Day, April 22, 2008.
Intelligence analysts dispute the Bush administration's claims that sectarian
violence has dropped in Iraq, noting the selective way the military
categorizes deaths. "If a bullet
went through the back of the head, it's sectarian," a senior intelligence
official said. "If it went through the front, it's criminal."
Global warming "is already affecting the nation's parks,
forests, marine sanctuaries and monuments" and the federal government needs
to do a "better
job" addressing the issue, according to a new Government Accountability
Office report to be released today.
"[T]he program devised to rebuild Iraq at the provincial level has
gone through three directors in the past four months, and much of the staff
hired to organize the effort in Baghdad has left." Just "29
of the 610 people deployed in Iraq as part of the provincial reconstruction
program have extensive knowledge of Arabic culture, history and language."
"One day after Rep.
John Doolittle's (R-Calif.) top two aides revealed that they had been
subpoenaed to testify before a grand jury" in the Jack Abramoff corruption
probe, "Alisha Perkins, Doolittle's office manager, told the chamber
Wednesday that she too had been called by the U.S. District Court for the
District of Columbia to give testimony."
Identifying 171 "performance
expectations," a new report from the Government Accountability Office
concludes that the "Homeland Security Department has failed to
meet even half its performance expectations in the four years it has been
in existence."
And finally: Move over, Singing
Senators. Seven House members "backed
up gospel singer BeBe Winans in a rendition of 'America the Beautiful'" on
Wednesday during a tribute to music legend Quincy
Jones. One observer reported that Rep. Maxine Waters (D-CA) "ducked into
the event to give Jones a bear hug that seemed to last eons."
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Responding to Sen. Tom Coburn's (R-OK) hold on "a
measure mandating the screening of all veterans for suicide risk," Senate
Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) promised
yesterday that he would bring the bill, known as the Joshua
Omvig Suicide Prevention Act, to the Senate floor for a vote.

NEW
JERSEY: New Jersey police win praise for efforts to eliminate racial
profiling.
LOUISIANA:
New Orleans's first inspector general begins his job with "no car, no staff,
no city office, no city phone" and no clear budget.
FLORIDA:
Largest budget shortfall in two decades likely to mean cuts to health care and
human services.

THINK PROGRESS:
House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-OH) caught shifting his own benchmarks
on escalation.
TAPPED:
The U.S. military's Iraqi civilian casualty count appears to exclude "casualties
caused by U.S. action."
POLITICAL
ANIMAL: The myth of al Qaeda in Iraq.

"If you had asked me two years ago, I would have said three out of four, if you
ask me now, I think it is one out of four."
-- Rep. Chris Shays (R-CT), 8/28/07,
on the "odds" of President Bush's escalation succeeding
VERSUS
"The surge is working. ... It's a huge success!"
-- Shays, 9/4/07
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