I fthe politician uses family values as a cudgel to beat the
opposition over the head then it is an issue. Souder ran on his family
values on a regular basis. It how he promoted himself to the
electorate. At the same time he was violating his own principles here.
In contrast Rangel at least was up front with it and didn't try and
make a video extolling the glories of financial ethical behavior while
at the same time holding open his pocket.

Unless you're being willfully blind its utter hypocrisy.Then again if
you're a true believer it doesn't matter, its all a fabrication of the
liberal media, or so some would have us believe.

Here's a bit more detail on what I'm discussing. Its an opinion piece
admittedly, but the data is solid.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/05/18/AR2010051803985.html?hpid%3Dopinionsbox1&sub=AR

Scandals in the House Republican Class of 1994
By Dana Milbank
Wednesday, May 19, 2010

When was it, exactly, that the Republican revolution merged with the
sexual revolution?

With each passing year, the class notes for the famous House
Republicans Class of '94 get more lurid. The latest entry was
submitted Tuesday morning by Rep. Mark Souder (Ind.).

"I sinned against God, my wife and my family by having a mutual
relationship with a part-time member of my staff," he announced in a
resignation statement.

And it wasn't just any part-time staffer, according to sources in
Souder's office. Five months ago, Tracy Jackson was his, er, "co-host"
in a video the pair produced for his congressional Web site. The
topic: abstinence education.

"You were one of the only voices in the room speaking in defense of
abstinence education," Jackson, posing as interviewer, tells her
alleged paramour in the video. "You've been a longtime advocate for
abstinence education."

Souder, bespectacled with a big puff of gray hair and a double chin,
recalled his lonely battle defending abstinence in a hearing room full
of skeptical colleagues. "I should have probably abstained from the
hearing," he said.

Apparently it's not the only thing from which he should have abstained.

In his downfall, Souder appears likely to join classmates Mark Foley
(lewd text messages to House pages), Mark Sanford (hiking the
proverbial Appalachian Trail with his Argentine mistress) and John
Ensign (whose parents paid the family of his ex-mistress $96,000) in
the sex-scandal hall of fame. Another of their classmates, Bob Ney,
did prison time for his role in the Jack Abramoff scandal.

As Eric Massa, John Edwards and Eliot Spitzer can attest, scandal can
visit any party or any political body. But the House Republicans of
'94 stand out: No fewer than 15 of the 73 elected in the landslide
that year have entertained the nation with flaps that include messy
divorces and a suspicious car accident.

In his hasty farewell, Souder took the well-worn path of blaming his
departure on Washington. "In the poisonous environment of Washington,
D.C., any personal failing is seized upon, often twisted, for
political gain," he complained. "I am resigning rather than put my
family through that painful, drawn-out process."

Yet millions of people live in the Washington area, and relatively few
of us have adulterous relationships with married subordinates we have
hired to assist us in broadcasts for Christian media outlets. That,
and not this town's "poisonous environment," is why Souder is
resigning.

Perhaps the problem is that lawmakers are spending too little time in
Washington. In the old days, they moved their families here; now they
jet back and forth and focus on raising campaign money, straining
marriages. That reality, combined with the sense of invincibility many
lawmakers acquire, has ensnared more than a few of Souder's classmates
-- most of whom came to town with a "family values" message.

Some had a colorful record before they arrived. There was, for
example, twice-divorced Bob Barr (Ga.), who at a 1992 charity event
reportedly licked whipped cream from the chests of two women. His
problems with dairy products continued after he left Congress, when he
was interviewed in the film "Borat" and told that the cheese he had
just sampled was made with breast milk.

For others, the trouble began soon after they arrived in Washington in
1995. Reps. Jim Bunn (Ore.), James Longley (Maine) and Jon Christensen
(Neb.) went through public divorce proceedings. Rep. Enid Greene
(Utah) filed for divorce and abandoned reelection plans when her
husband, Joe Waldholtz, disappeared after being accused of
embezzlement. Rep. Joe Scarborough (Fla.), now a TV host, was among
those to follow her to divorce court.

Rep. Steve LaTourette (Ohio) did his colleagues one better. His wife
accused him of having an affair with his chief of staff; the couple
divorced in 2004, and he married the staffer, who had become a
lobbyist.

Several of the lawmakers opened themselves up to charges of hypocrisy
because of their family-values campaign themes. The late congresswoman
Helen Chenoweth (Idaho), who famously warned of "black helicopters,"
ran a TV ad attacking President Bill Clinton for his affair with a
White House intern. A newspaper then forced Chenoweth's admission that
she had, after her divorce, been involved in a longtime affair with a
married man.

A few of the 73 from '94 had problems unrelated to their hormones.
Former congressman J.D. Hayworth, now challenging John McCain in
Arizona's Senate primary, got wrapped up in the Abramoff scandal. He
held fundraisers in sports skyboxes that lobbyist Abramoff billed to
Indian tribes that were his clients; unlike his classmate Ney, he
didn't get into legal trouble. There was also Rep. David Funderburk
(N.C.). He got into a car accident and then claimed that his wife was
driving before he finally accepted legal responsibility.

To the '94 honor roll is now added the name of Souder, who championed
abstinence education while allegedly indulging with a woman on his
payroll. In their video on abstinence, she offered sympathetic
"mm-hmms" as he lamented that efforts "to get kids to abstain from
sex" are so difficult. "Guess what," he told her. "Nothing works very
well."

Doesn't she know it.


On Wed, May 19, 2010 at 11:42 AM, Sam <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Yeah, I don't get the family values thing. What's it have to do with
> getting elected? At least they all step down once exposed. Try to get
> a corrupt dem out Like Rangel out of the ways and means.
>

-- 
Larry C. Lyons
web: http://www.lyonsmorris.com/lyons
LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/larryclyons
--
The real problem is not whether machines think but whether men do.
 - B. F. Skinner -

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|
Order the Adobe Coldfusion Anthology now!
http://www.amazon.com/Adobe-Coldfusion-Anthology-Michael-Dinowitz/dp/1430272155/?tag=houseoffusion
Archive: 
http://www.houseoffusion.com/groups/cf-community/message.cfm/messageid:318939
Subscription: http://www.houseoffusion.com/groups/cf-community/subscribe.cfm
Unsubscribe: http://www.houseoffusion.com/groups/cf-community/unsubscribe.cfm

Reply via email to