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Crib Sheet: Tom DeLay's non-ethics

From attempted bribery to swank luxury vacations, what ethical rules hasn’t the House Majority Leader violated?

Check out our companion piece, Tom DeLay’s Guide to Criminal Justice.

Thursday September 29, 2005

A grand jury in Texas issued a second indictment against Texas Rep. Tom DeLay, the former House Majority Leader. DeLay resigned his post after being indicted by a Texas grand jury on charges of conspiring to violate election laws last week. The new indictment accuses DeLay and two aides of money laundering in a $190,000 transaction that prosecutors describe as a violation of the state’s ban on the use of corporate money in local election campaigns. If convicted of this charge DeLay faces a maximum prison term of five years to life. A jury may ultimately decide DeLay’s fate, but it already is abundantly clear that his actions undermine the integrity of Congress and the concept of good government. Citizens are entitled to leaders who don’t misuse government resources and who are free from financial influence by special interests.

DeLay has a long history of ethical violations, but the actions alleged in the Texas indictment are among the most serious. The indictment accuses DeLay of conspiring with two aides, who already have been charged, to violate a Texas law banning the use of corporate money by candidates for state office. The Texas prosecutor charges that DeLay and his associates carried out the scheme by funneling corporate contributions through the Republican National Committee.

The indictment also charges a who’s who of DeLay cronies, including James W. Ellis, the head of Mr. DeLay’s national political committee, Americans for a Republican Majority (ARMPAC); and John D. Colyandro, the former head of Texans for a Republican Majority (TRMPAC).

DeLay bought the loyalty of other Republican candidates by raising hundreds of millions of dollars in corporate donations for them through ARMPAC. With TRMPAC DeLay plotted a successful Republican takeover of the Texas Legislature. That allowed Republicans to redraw congressional districts in Texas, which they used to create five new Republican-leaning districts, thus solidifying Mr. DeLay’s power in Congress.

Prosecutors accuse DeLay of money laundering in the 2002 Texas election – by violating a state law intended to prevent companies from donating to individual candidates.

In anticipation that this day might come, House Republicans had changed the rule stating that a leader under indictment has to step down. Only after a public outcry did they reverse the change.

With new DeLay ethics abuses uncovered nearly every week, here’s a way to keep track of some of the most egregious:

First, there were the Ethics Committee rebukes:


Then there were the vacations. (This guy must have serious frequent flyer miles.)


But one of the most egregious violations against ethics committed by DeLay was his attack against the House Ethics Committee. Angry after the committee rebuked him three times, DeLay exacted revenge. Thanks to DeLay, ethics oversight for the entire House has been destroyed. The committee is frozen due to a partisan rule change DeLay pushed through earlier this year which would prevent the committee (which is evenly divided between the two parties) from launching any investigations without the support of at least one Republican – a restriction which was specifically designed to protect DeLay. (In the past, investigations were started automatically if the committee couldn’t agree.) Half of the committee refuses to institute the blatantly partisan change and thus the committee remains in a stalemate, deadlocked, unable to investigate anything at all. DeLay also had the three Republican committee members who ruled against him kicked off of the committee. They were replaced with friendlier faces, two of whom even contributed to DeLay’s legal defense fund.

What can you do about it?

Read a more comprehensive list of the other shady DeLay dealings with DeLay’s Dirty Dozen and his distortions regarding the current case at thinkprogress.org.