|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Scandals, retirements decimate congressional Republicans
By Patrick Martin
8 October 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Some two dozen Republican congressmen and senators have announced
their retirement from office or face well-publicized corruption
probes that could put an end to their political careers, making
it likely that the Democratic Party will increase its margin of
control of both houses of the US Congress in the 2008 elections.
The retirement of six-term senator Pete Domenici of New Mexico,
announced Thursday, means that six of the 22 Republican senators
whose terms expire next year will not seek reelection, leaving
open seats that are far more vulnerable to the Democrats. Besides
Domenici, Chuck Hagel of Nebraska, John Warner of Virginia, Larry
Craig of Idaho and Wayne Allard of Colorado have announced their
retirements. A sixth senator, Craig Thomas of Wyoming, died in
office.
A seventh senator, Ted Stevens of Alaska, the senior Republican
in the upper house, is now viewed as vulnerable to challenge,
or even indictment, as the result of a bribery scandal implicating
a large number of state politicians, including his son, Ben Stevens,
a state senator.
The 75-year-old Domenici cited serious health reasons for his
stepping down from the seat he has held since 1972. Long one of
the most powerful figures in the Senate, as chairman of the Budget
Committee from 1994 to 2002, then chairman of the Energy and Natural
Resources Committee, Domenici has been under investigation by
the Senate Ethics Committee this year over links to the politically
motivated dismissal of the US attorney for Albuquerque, New Mexico.
Still another Republican senator has been caught up in scandal,
ultra-conservative David Vitter of Louisiana, but he does not
face reelection until 2010. While Vitters offense is unlikely
to produce criminal prosecutionhe has admitted patronizing
a call girl operation in Washington DC and is accused of hiring
a prostitute in New Orleans as wellsuch conduct might have
been expected to provoke demands for his resignation from the
Christian fundamentalist right.
No such calls have been issued, however, since the governor
of Louisiana, Kathleen Blanco, is a Democrat, who would select
Vitters replacement. Blanco is not running for reelection
this year, and a Republican is favored to replace her. In that
event, Vitter may well be forced out by his own party, to be replaced
by a likeminded ultra-right politician.
The prospects for 2008
The rate of attrition is extraordinary, given that only one
incumbent Republican senator retired before the 2006 election.
The departure of so many incumbents has worsened the already dim
outlook for the Republican Party in next years congressional
elections.
While the Democrats presently control the upper house by only
a narrow 51-49 margin, Republicans must defend 22 of the 34 seats
on the ballot in 2008, and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell
has already conceded that there is no prospect of the Republican
Party regaining control of the Senate next year.
Six of the 22 Republican-held seats will be open, without an
incumbent, and possibly as many as seven if Stevens decides not
to run. At least a half dozen more among the incumbents could
face significant challenges, including those running in Maine,
New Hampshire, Minnesota and Oregon, states that voted against
Bush in 2004 and where antiwar sentiment prevails. By contrast,
only one Democratic incumbent, Mary Landrieu in Louisiana, has
been seriously targeted by the Republicans.
In the House of Representatives, eight long-serving Republicans
have announced their retirement over the past two months, including
two former members of the leadership: former Speaker of the House
Denis Hastert of Illinois and Deborah L. Pryce of Ohio, former
chairman of the House Republican Caucus. Long-serving Congressman
Paul Gillmor of Ohio died suddenly last month, leaving his seat
open. Another half dozen Republicans are reported to be targets
of a federal investigation for possible ties to Republican lobbyist
Jack Abramoff, who pled guilty to bribing numerous congressmen,
or other corruption scandals.
One of the latest Republicans to announce his retirement, Jerry
Weller of the 11th Congressional District in Illinois, centered
on the industrial city of Joliet, epitomizes the intersection
of corruption and political reaction in American bourgeois politics.
Only 50 years old, Weller clearly did not decide to retire because
of age.
He has been the target of a series of exposés in the
local press about questionable land deals in Central America,
as well as the financial affairs of his wife, Zury Rios de Weller,
daughter of the former Guatemalan military dictator who oversaw
mass killings, General Efrain Rios Montt. The week before announcing
his retirement Weller was subpoenaed to testify as a defense witness
for a military contractor facing charges of bribing former Republican
Congressman Randy Cunningham.
The other retirees include Ray LaHood of Illinois, Charles
Pickering of Mississippi, Jim Ramstad of Minnesota, Terry Everett
of Alabama and Rick Renzi of Arizona, who is currently under investigation
for corrupt practices relating to his wifes business interests.
At least two more Republican congressmen face similar probes:
John Doolittle of California, linked to corruption scandals involving
his wifes fundraising business, Abramoff and former congressman
Cunningham; and Don Young of Alaska, linked to the same bribe-and-favor
scandal as Senator Stevens.
Doolittle was compelled to give up his seat on the powerful
House Appropriations Committee earlier this year after the FBI
raided his home, seeking evidence on the funneling of bribes through
the political consulting firm run by his wife.
Democrats as well as Republicans are caught up in the bribe-taking.
Congressman William Jefferson of Louisiana was indicted earlier
this year on charges of extorting bribes from several US companies
seeking to do business in Africa. Jefferson has been under a cloud
since an FBI raid found $90,000 in shrink-wrapped cash stored
in a freezer in his basementallegedly bribe money to be
delivered by Jefferson to a Nigerian official.
When attorneys for Brent Wilkes, a defense contractor charged
with bribing Congressman Cunningham, issued subpoenas last month,
they included four Democrats: Norman Dicks of Washington, who
sits on the House appropriations defense subcommittee; John Murtha
of Pennsylvania, chairman of that subcommittee; Ike Skelton of
Missouri, chairman of the House Armed Services Committee; and
Sylvestre Reyes of Texas, chairman of the House Intelligence Committee.
Nine Republicans were subpoenaed, more than twice the number
of Democrats, a proportion which reflects not any ethical difference,
but the fact that by far the largest share of the loot went to
the Republicans because they controlled the House from 1994 through
2006 and were in the best position to reward favored business
interests.
The nine include Hastert, Doolittle and Weller; Jerry Lewis,
Darrell Issa and Duncan Hunter, all of California, the last-named
a Republican presidential candidate; Roy Blunt of Missouri, now
minority whip; Peter Hoekstra of Michigan, ranking Republican
on the House Intelligence Committee; and Joe Knollenberg of Michigan.
Those considered most vulnerable to charges in the Cunningham
case are Doolittle, who received $80,000 in campaign contributions
from Wilkes, and Lewis, who chaired the House appropriations defense
subcommittee that steered $37 million to a Wilkes-owned company,
while receiving $60,000 in campaign contributions from the contractor.
In its latest preview of the 2008 elections, Congressional
Quarterly suggested that at least six more Republicans could
retire before the 2008 election campaign gets under way, including
Doolittle, Ralph Regula and David Hobson of Ohio, John McHugh
of New York, Barbara Cubin of Wyoming and C. W. Young of Florida.
By contrast, only two of the 233 members of the Democratic majority
are planning to leave the House, both of them seeking to move
up to the Senate by capturing vulnerable Republican seats.
Behind the Republican disintegration
There are many factors underlying the evident disintegration
of the Republican congressional caucus, including personal problems
such as age and health, demoralization after the loss of control
of both houses last year, and fear that the growing popular hostility
to the war in Iraq will produce an electoral debacle in 2008.
Two factors are particularly significant, however, since they
demonstrate that powerful sections of the financial aristocracy
have decided to make a shift to the Democrats, the other major
bourgeois party, as their preferred instrument of rule.
The first is the role of the state itself in triggering the
shift in the political balance in Congress. Corruption probes,
largely focused on Republicans, played a major role in the loss
of the House in 2006: the bribery conviction and resignation of
Randy Cunningham; the conviction and resignation of Robert Ney
of Ohio, a key figure in the Abramoff scandal; the resignation
of House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, after his indictment on charges
of illegal campaign contributions in Texas; and the resignation
of Mark Foley over charges that he solicited sex with male House
pages and former pages.
Such probes have long been manipulated by the ruling elite
to accomplish changes in its Washington personnel without the
uncertainties of electionsa process which is well under
way this year. Details of the investigations into Senator Stevens
and Senator Craig were leaked to the press by police officials
and the FBI, and the FBI carried out well-publicized raids on
the homes or offices of Senator Stevens and congressmen Doolittle
and Renzi.
Hand-in-hand with these investigations has come a pronounced
shift in corporate fundraising from the Republican to the Democratic
Party. Both the Senate and House Democratic campaign committees
have out-raised their Republican counterparts, an unprecedented
reversal of fortune given the longtime Republican lead in campaign
contributions from business.
The fundraising lead is substantial: for the Senate, the Democratic
committee raised $36.7 million for the first eight months of the
year, compared to $20.5 million for the Republicans, and the Democrats
had a three-to-one advantage in cash on hand, even though the
Republicans must defend 22 seats compared to only 12 for the Democrats.
In nearly every House seat that seems likely to be closely contested
next year, the Democrats have raised more money than ever before
and in most cases more money than their Republican opponents.
The financial advantage reflects not growing popular support
for the Democrats, but a shift in the calculations of the financial
oligarchy. The Democratic Senate Campaign Committee collected
57 percent of its donations in increments of $20,000 or more,
up from 31 percent of contributions four years ago, and substantially
more than its Republican counterpart.
Statistics released in August by the Federal Election Commission
showed that in the first six months of 2007, Democratic Party
committees raised $111.5 million, up 29 percent from the same
period in 2005 and a staggering 98 percent from the first half
of 2003. The figures for the corresponding Republican committees
dropped by one-quarter compared to the first half of 2005.
There are several important political conclusions to be drawn
from these political shifts. First and foremost is the deeply
corroded character of American democracy. While the American people
will cast their votes on November 4, 2008, powerful forces within
the ruling class are moving to dictate the outcome more than a
year beforehand.
While the presidency remains in questionalthough the
Democrats have a considerable lead both in the polls and in fundraisingthe
shape of the next Congress has already been basically decided.
Barring a political upheaval from belowor a major new terror
provocation on the scale of 9/11the Democrats will increase
their margin in the Senate significantly, and make gains in the
House as well.
The shift to the Democrats represents an effort by the ruling
elite to preempt the growing opposition to the war in Iraq, which
brought the Democrats back to power last November, as well as
the mass discontent with stagnant or declining living standards,
deteriorating social conditions, and the impact of the mounting
financial crisis.
The American ruling elite is responding to this deepening political
unrest in two ways: it brings forward the Democratic Party to
present a more caring face to the population and foster
illusions that the existing political structure can respond to
mass discontent; and it builds up the forces of repression in
anticipation of the day when it becomes necessary to confront
the social anger of millions of people directly.
It is noteworthy that the months of July and August, which
saw the congressional Republicans essentially throwing in the
towel on their electoral prospects next year, coincided with a
sharp swing to the right among the congressional Democrats and
the Democratic presidential candidates, particularly on war in
Iraq and the repressive measures labeled as anti-terrorist.
The Democratic Party was acting to reassure the ruling class
that it can be trusted with power and will act responsibly
on these critical issuesi.e., that it will do what is necessary
to defend the interests of American imperialism, both at home
and abroad.
A victory of the Democratic Party in the 2008 elections will
do nothing to advance the interests of working people. It will
only serve to transfer political authority from the Republicans,
now exhausted, demoralized and discredited, to the other political
party of the corporate-financial aristocracy, which has been held
in reserve for precisely this task.
See Also:
Democratic presidential candidates:
US troops could stay in Iraq until 2013
[28 September 2007]
US Democrat Biden
advocates the communal break-up of Iraq
[9 May 2006]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |