Pelosi backs Democrat tainted by
scandal for top position
By Rupert Cornwell in Washington
11/16/06 "The
Independent" -- -- Barely a week after
becoming America's first female Speaker-designate, Nancy
Pelosi has put her prestige on the line by backing a
controversial candidate in the battle for the post of House
majority leader in the new Democratic Congress, which
convenes for the first time in January.
The 230-strong incoming Democratic caucus must choose, for
the second-ranking job in the House, between Steny Hoyer,
the outgoing minority whip, and John Murtha, the veteran
Pennsylvania Congressman and Iraq war opponent, who, most
unusually, has had a public endorsement from Ms Pelosi
herself.
In a way, her move makes eminent sense. Mr Murtha is a close
political ally, who backed Ms Pelosi in her 2002 leadership
race with Mr Hoyer. He then became a hero for the left when
he called in 2005 for the early withdrawal of US troops from
Iraq. The demand, by a Congressman known for his strong ties
with the Pentagon, is widely credited with turning the tide
of sentiment here against the war, embarrassing the Bush
administration and helping pave the way for the Democratic
sweep on 7 November.
But there is a major problem: the long-standing odour of
corruption that surrounds Mr Murtha at a time when Ms Pelosi
has vowed to run "the most honest, the most open, the most
ethical Congress in US history". At the midterm elections
voters said that corruption in Washington was, along with
the Iraq crisis, the main thing on their minds.
Mr Murtha, who has represented his Pennsylvania district for
32 years, was embroiled (though not convicted) in the 1980
Abscam scandal, an FBI sting that led to convictions for
bribe-taking against one senator and five congressmen. Last
month, a New York Times article described him as operating
"a political trading post" on Capitol Hill, and a watchdog
group has listed him as among the 20 most corrupt members of
Congress in its 2006 list.
The outcome of the majority leader race is anyone's guess,
with Mr Hoyer claiming that, despite Ms Pelosi's support for
his opponent, he had the votes to win. Either way, she
stands to lose. A Murtha victory could seem to give the lie
to her professed determination to clean up Capitol Hill. And
a Hoyer victory would be seen as a personal defeat that
exposed the limit of her clout.
But the episode has given a glimpse of the Pelosi style,
inspired by the old East Coast machine politics she grew up
with, as the daughter of a long-time mayor of Baltimore,
based on personal loyalty and on favours returned for
favours given. Nor is it the only one.
Ms Pelosi has reportedly decided to block Jane Harman,
another Californian Democrat, from heading the highly
sensitive House Intelligence Committee, where Ms Harman was
senior Democrat while her party was in the minority. The
move is said to reflect personal animosity between the two,
as well as Ms Pelosi's belief that Ms Harman was
insufficiently tough on the Republican administration for
its manipulation of pre-war intelligence.
Unfortunately, the next Democrat in line for the job is
Alcee Hastings, a former federal judge once impeached for
bribery. Mr Hastings is also black, and to pass him over
would risk Ms Pelosi upsetting the influential Democratic
black caucus on Capitol Hill
© 2006 Independent News and
Media Limited
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