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Republican Scandals Put 15 GOP Seats In Jeopardy...

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout: Debate & Discussion' started by mc mark, Nov 2, 2006.

  1. mc mark

    mc mark Member

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    Scandals Alone Could Cost Republicans Their House Majority

    By Jonathan Weisman and Jeffrey H. Birnbaum
    Washington Post Staff Writers
    Thursday, November 2, 2006; A01

    Indictments, investigations and allegations of wrongdoing have helped put at least 15 Republican House seats in jeopardy, enough to swing control to the Democrats on Tuesday even before the larger issues of war, economic unease and President Bush are invoked.

    With just five days left before Election Day, allegations are springing up like brushfires. Four GOP House seats have been tarred by lobbyist Jack Abramoff's influence-peddling scandal. Five have been adversely affected by then-Rep. Mark Foley's unseemly contacts with teenage male House pages. The remaining half a dozen or so could turn on controversies including offshore tax dodging, sexual misconduct and shady land deals.

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/11/01/AR2006110103146_pf.html
     
  2. mc mark

    mc mark Member

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    Ad Challenges Voters To Read List Of GOP Scandals In One Breath...

    <object width="425" height="350"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/S6yeUYBIbGU"></param><param name="wmode" value="transparent"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/S6yeUYBIbGU" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" width="425" height="350"></embed></object>
     
  3. mc mark

    mc mark Member

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    NRCC's Foley "Damage Control"

    Two senior aides to National Republican Campaign Committee Chairman Tom Reynolds participated in “damage control” conference calls concerning correspondence between Congressman Mark Foley and a former congressional page -- two days before the scandal became public, and earlier than previously reported.

    NRCC Communications Director Carl Forti and Reynolds then chief-of-staff Kirk Fordham both took part in the first call the evening of Wednesday, September 27, and one call the next day, Forti and other sources familiar with the call confirmed. Forti's involvement and the NRCC's role in the run-up to the Foley scandal add another link between the disgraced former congressman and Reynolds, who has said he knew only indirectly of questionable emails, and that he reported them to his House superiors. They also reflect another moment at which House GOP leadership was aware of concerns about Foley and pages.

    http://blogs.nydailynews.com/dailypolitics/archives/2006/11/exclusive_nrccs.php
     
  4. mc mark

    mc mark Member

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    Rep. paying ex-mistress about $500K

    By MICHAEL RUBINKAM, Associated Press Writer


    ALLENTOWN, Pa. - A Republican congressman accused of abusing his ex-mistress agreed to pay her about $500,000 in a settlement last year that contained a powerful incentive for her to keep quiet until after Election Day, a person familiar with the terms of the deal told The Associated Press.

    She has received less than half the money so far, and will not get the rest until after the Nov. 7 election, the person said Thursday.

    http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20061102/ap_on_el_ho/congressman_settlement
     
  5. leroy

    leroy Member
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    It just keeps getting better everyday.

    I'm not saying Dems are scandal-free. I know they aren't. It just seems that the republicans are doing all they can to lose Congress and many state races.

    I love what's happening in Kansas, a staunch republican stronghold since the 1930's.

    In Kansas, 9 former Republicans run as Democrats

    MISSION, Kansas (Reuters)- Former Kansas legislator David Adkins may be a self-described "washed-up white male Republican politician," but come election night he and many others in the longtime Republican stronghold state of Kansas are placing their hopes, and votes, on Democrats.

    A mini-rebellion is under way in an American Heartland state so historically unswingable that neither national party typically spends much time or energy stumping for candidates.

    But this year President George W. Bush, the country's leading Republican, is making a last-minute campaign stop in Kansas, where at least nine candidates running on the November 7 ballot are Republicans-turned-Democrats. They include a veteran county prosecutor seeking to unseat the Republican attorney general and a former state Republican Party chairman running as the Democratic candidate for lieutenant governor.

    A cross-section of Democrats, moderate Republicans and independents are backing the party-switchers, saying a Republican obsession with expanded government and deficit spending, along with divisive social issues like abortion and gay marriage, has marred efforts to limit government, boost spending on education and ensure fiscal responsibility.

    "The Republican Party got focused on some issues that really have nothing to do with people's daily lives ... I just could not continue to work with the conservative Republicans that were running the state party," said Mark Parkinson, candidate for lieutenant governor.


    If these nascent Democrats win on election night, will Kansas become a bellwether for shifting sentiments across America and encourage more cross-over candidates and voters in 2008?

    Democrats hoping to seize control of both houses of Congress have been heartened by polls showing widespread voter discontent with the direction of the country under the Bush administration and the Republican-led U.S. Congress.

    "What is playing out here in Kansas is that national discussion about whether the issues of abortion and evolution ... those type of social issues, are really what voters want to define the public square right now," said Bob Beatty, professor of political science at Washburn University in Topeka.

    A SHIFT?

    Republican faithful discount the significance of the shifted loyalties as opportunistic political maneuvering.

    They say the state remains solidly Republican as it has for decades. Since 1939, Kansas has sent only Republicans to the U.S. Senate. Dennis Moore, a lawmaker in the House of Representatives, is the lone Kansas Democrat in Congress.

    "Their premise is flawed," said Kansas Republican Party Executive Director Ron Freeman.

    He predicted Republicans would notch significant victories in Tuesday's midterm elections, including gaining seats in the state legislature where Republicans hold solid majorities.

    To help shore up support for his party, Bush is scheduled to appear at a rally in the state capital Topeka on Sunday. The visit to Kansas, typically considered a GOP safe haven, would follow one by Vice President Dick Cheney in October.

    The division in Kansas has been brewing for at least the last seven years after the state gained international attention for the state board of education's efforts to limit teaching about evolution in public schools. Conservative Christian board members who say evolution conflicts with Biblical values, held a mock trial to debate the validity of evolution last year.

    Another factor driving Republicans away has been what some call "extremist" moves by the Republican Kansas Attorney General Phill Kline to subpoena medical records of women who have had abortions, force healthcare providers to report sexual activities of girls under 16, and encourage the anti-evolution actions of the board of education.

    Kline is locked in a too-close-to-call race with Johnson County District Attorney Paul Morrison, who was recruited to switch parties by Democratic Governor Kathleen Sebelius.

    Morrison and Sebelius were among more than 200 Republicans, Democrats and independents who last month gathered to cheer progress in what they see as a movement toward a political middle ground.

    "This is a real groundswell," said Boo Tyson, a registered Republican and executive director of a 12-year-old nonpartisan organization called Mainstream Coalition.
     
  6. nyquil82

    nyquil82 Member

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    If democrats win, I see a lot of republicans jumping sides. Weak people don't like to be on the losing team, look at lieberman for example.
     
  7. KingCheetah

    KingCheetah Atomic Playboy

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    With all the gay republican sex going around these days i'd say a lot of GOP seats are in jeopardy.
     
  8. mc mark

    mc mark Member

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    [​IMG]
    Nuk-nuk-nuk
     
  9. KingCheetah

    KingCheetah Atomic Playboy

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    One more gay sex scandal and the republicans will have really bottomed out.
     
  10. updawg

    updawg Member

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    the repubs are really taking it in the ass this election
     
  11. vlaurelio

    vlaurelio Member

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    so that's why repubs are so anti gay marriage.. so their partners won't nag them into getting married..
     
  12. Baqui99

    Baqui99 Member

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    Haha, nice! :D
     
  13. mc mark

    mc mark Member

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    Ney finally resigns...

    Rep. Ney of Ohio resigns from Congress

    By DAVID HAMMER, Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON - Rep. Bob Ney of Ohio, who pleaded guilty last month in the Jack Abramoff influence-peddling investigation resigned his seat in Congress on Friday.

    The Ohio Republican, who had been pressed to quit by fellow lawmakers, sent a letter of resignation to House Speaker Dennis Hastert, according to Ney's chief of staff, David Popp.

    "I can confirm the letter has been delivered to the speaker," Popp said in an electronic mail message to The Associated Press. The speaker's office would not confirm whether it had received the letter.

    Ney pleaded guilty Oct. 13 to conspiracy and making false statements, acknowledging taking trips, tickets, meals and campaign donations from disgraced lobbyist Abramoff in return for official actions on behalf of Abramoff clients.

    House Republicans had threatened to expel Ney if he didn't quit by the time lawmakers returned to Washington after Tuesday's elections. House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi said Ney's resignation four days before the elections was late.

    "The Republican leadership has allowed Bob Ney to receive his paycheck and benefits for seven weeks after his admission of guilt to criminal conspiracy charges — it is an embarrassment to this institution and an insult to the American taxpayer," Pelosi said in a statement.

    http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20061103/ap_on_el_ho/ney_resigns
     

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