In the Beginning, There Was Abramoff

By FRANK RICH
NY Times Op-Ed: October 2, 2005

"Terri Schiavo is not brain-dead; she talks and she laughs, and she
expresses happiness and discomfort. Terri Schiavo is not on life support."
- Tom DeLay, March 20, 2005

IF you believed Tom DeLay then, you no doubt believe now that the deposed
House majority leader is only on "temporary" leave from his powerful perch
in Washington and that he'll soon bounce back, laughing all the way, from a
partisan witch hunt that unjustly requires his brief discomfort in a Texas
courtroom.

Those who still live in the reality-based community, however, may sense
they're watching the beginning of the end of something big. It's not just
Mr. DeLay, a k a the Hammer, who is on life support, but a Washington
establishment whose infatuation with power and money has contaminated nearly
every limb of government and turned off a public that by two to one finds
the country on the wrong track.
But don't take my word for it. And don't listen to the canned talking points
of the Democrats, who are still so busy trying to explain why they were for
the war in Iraq before they were against it that it's hard to trust their
logic on anything else. Listen instead to Andrew Ferguson, of the
conservative Rupert Murdoch magazine, The Weekly Standard. As far back as
last December in a cover article on the sleazy lobbyist Jack Abramoff, Mr.
Ferguson was already declaring "the end of the Republican Revolution."

He painted the big picture of the Abramoff ethos in vibrant strokes: the
ill-gotten Indian gambling moolah snaking through the bank accounts of a
network of DeLay cronies and former aides; the "fact-finding" Congressional
golfing trips to further the cause of sweatshop garment factories in the
Marianas islands; the bogus "think tank" in Rehoboth Beach, Del., where the
two scholars in residence were a yoga instructor and a lifeguard (albeit a
"lifeguard of the year"). Certain names kept recurring in Mr. Ferguson's
epic narrative, most prominently Ralph Reed and Grover Norquist, Republican
money-changers who are as tightly tied to President Bush and Karl Rove as
they are to Mr. Abramoff and Mr. DeLay, if not more so.

The bottom line, Mr. Ferguson wrote, was a culture antithetical to
everything conservatives had stood for in the Gingrich revolution of 1994.
Slaying a corrupt, bloated Democratic establishment was out, gluttony for
the G.O.P. and its fat cats was in. Mr. Abramoff and his gang embodied the
very enemy the "Contract With America" Congress had supposedly come to
Washington to smite: " 'Beltway Bandits,' profiteers who manipulate the
power of big government on behalf of well-heeled people who pay them tons of
money to do so." Those tons of Republican money were deposited in the favors
bank of K Street, where, as The Washington Post reported this year, the
number of lobbyists has more than doubled (to some 35,000) since the Bush
era began in 2000. Conservatives who once aspired to cut government "down to
the size where we can drown it in the bathtub" - as a famous Norquist maxim
had it - merely outsourced government instead to the highest bidder.

Mr. DeLay's latest plight is only a tiny detail within this vast Boschian
canvas of depravity. If this were Watergate - and Watergate itself
increasingly looks like a relatively contained epidemic of corruption - the
Texas grand jury's indictment of the congressman and his associates would be
a sideshow tantamount to the initial 1973 California grand jury indictment
of the Nixon aide John Ehrlichman and his pals in the break-in at Daniel
Ellsberg's psychiatrist's office; Watergate's real legal fireworks were
still in the wings. So forget about all those details down in Texas that
make your teeth hurt; don't bother to learn the difference between Trmpac
and Armpac. Fasten your seat belt instead for the roller coaster of other
revelations and possible indictments that's about to roar through the
Beltway.

The most important plot development of the past two weeks, in fact, has
nothing to do with Mr. DeLay (as far as we know). It was instead the arrest
of the administration's top procurement officer, David Safavian, on charges
of lying and obstructing the investigation of Mr. Abramoff. And what an
investigation it is: The F.B.I., the I.R.S., the Treasury Department and the
Interior Department have all been involved. The popular theory of the case
has it that Mr. Safavian, a former lobbying colleague of both Mr. Abramoff
and Mr. Norquist, is being muscled by the feds to rat on the big guys in
Washington - much as another smaller fish may have helped reel in Mr. DeLay
in Texas.

The DeLay and Abramoff investigations are not to be confused with the many
others percolating in the capital, including, most famously of late, the
Justice Department and S.E.C. inquiries into the pious Bill Frist's divine
stock-sale windfall and the homeland security inspector general's promised
inquiry into possible fraud in the no-bid contracts doled out by FEMA for
Hurricane Katrina. The mother of all investigations, of course, remains the
prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald's pursuit of whoever outed the C.I.A. agent
Valerie Wilson to Robert Novak and whoever may have lied to cover it up. The
denouement is on its way.

But whatever the resolution of any of these individual dramas, they will not
be the end of the story. Like the continuing revelations of detainee abuse
emerging from Afghanistan, Iraq and Guantánamo, this is a crisis in the
governing culture, not the tale of a few bad apples. Every time you turn
over a rock, you find more vermin. We've only just learned from The Los
Angeles Times that Joseph Schmitz, until last month the inspector general in
charge of policing waste, fraud and abuse at the Pentagon, is himself the
focus of a Congressional inquiry. He is accused of blocking the
investigation of another Bush appointee who is suspected of siphoning Iraq
reconstruction contracts to business cronies. At the Justice Department, the
F.B.I. is looking into why a career prosecutor was demoted after he started
probing alleged Abramoff illegality in Guam. According to The Los Angeles
Times, the demoted prosecutor was then replaced by a Rove-approved
Republican pol who just happened to be a cousin of a major target of another
corruption investigation in Guam.


We have to hope that the law will get to the bottom of these cases and start
to connect the recurring dots. But while everyone is innocent until proved
guilty, the overall pattern stinks and has for a long time. It's so filthy
that the Republican caucus couldn't even find someone clean to name as Mr.
DeLay's "temporary" stand-in as House majority leader last week. As The
Washington Post reported in 2003, Roy Blunt, the Missouri congressman who
got the job, was found trying to alter a homeland security bill with a
last-minute provision that would have benefited Philip Morris-brand
cigarettes. Not only had the tobacco giant contributed royally to Mr.
Blunt's various campaign coffers, but both the congressman's girlfriend (now
wife) and his son were Philip Morris lobbyists at the time.
This is the culture that has given us the government we have. It's a
government that has spent more of the taxpayers' money than any since
L.B.J.'s (as calculated by the Cato Institute, a libertarian research
institution), even as it rewards its benefactors with tax breaks and
corporate pork. It's a government so used to lying that Mr. DeLay could say
with a straight face that the cost of Katrina relief could not be offset by
budget cuts because there was no governmental fat left to cut. It's the
government that fostered the wholesale loss of American lives in both Iraq
and on the Gulf Coast by putting cronyism above patriotism.

The courts can punish crooks, but they can't reform democracy from the
ground up, and the voters can't get into the game until 2006. Meanwhile, on
the Republican side, the key players both in the White House and in the
leadership of both houses of Congress are either under investigation or
joined at the hip to Messrs Rove, DeLay, Abramoff, Reed or Norquist. They
seem to be hoping that some magical event - a sudden outbreak of peace and
democracy in Iraq, the capture of Osama bin Laden, a hurricane affording
better presidential photo ops than Rita - will turn things around. Dream on.

The one notable anomaly is John McCain, who retains a genuine hunger for
reform, a rage at the corruption around him and the compelling motive of his
presidential ambitions to push him forward; it's his Indian Affairs
Committee, after all, that exposed the hideous Abramoff cesspool to public
view last year. The Democrats, bereft of leadership and ideas (though not of
their own Beltway bandits), also harbor a number of would-be presidents, but
they are busier positioning themselves politically than they are
articulating actual positions that might indicate what a new governmental
order would look like. While the Republican revolution is dead, it says
everything about the power vacuum left in its wake that Geena Davis's
fictional commander in chief has more traction, as measured in Nielsen
ratings and press, than any of the real-life contenders for that job in D.C.

***

Hi.  I casually opened the article this morning and it brought all else
to a halt.  Read it, please.  -Ed

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Maria Gilardin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Alliance" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Saturday, October 01, 2005 10:26 PM
Subject: [alliance] Sleepwalking to the End of the World


Dear All,
Something strange happened. A long article that I wrote on climate
change has zoomed from obscurity to attention and is now posted on over
20 other sites and referenced many more times. I am very surprised since
that topic is not covered in the mainstream media and even not very
often by us.

Here is the announcement that I sent several days ago that launched the
avalanche - of sorts:

Dissident Voice posted my article on climate change,
Sleepwalking to the End of the World
http://www.dissidentvoice.org/Sept05/Gilardin0921.htm.
It is based on the huge research and interview project I did this summer
for my 6 part radio series on climate change.

Feel free to post it anywhere else and tell your friends. The coverage
of this issue on all US media is in inverse proportion to the amount of
ecological damage this county inflicts. As we are breaking the earth
systems apart we suddenly see clearly how it all once hung together in
an exquisite, complex web
Maria




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