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Sunday, April 24, 2005
WaPo Proves DeLay Trip Paid For By Lobbyists
Tom DeLay might be in some deep trouble now. The Washington Post's R. Jeffrey Smith scores the big scoop on page one of Sunday's paper.
The most recent polling a few months ago showed most Americans didn't know who Tom DeLay even is. With news of his ethical violations reaching local stations, suffice to say most Americans will be ready to see him go in no time. The real question now is whether the Democrats will figure out how to use this for top effect.
The airfare to London and Scotland in 2000 for then-House Majority Whip Tom DeLay (R-Tex.) was charged to an American Express card issued to Jack Abramoff, a Washington lobbyist at the center of a federal criminal and tax probe, according to two sources who know Abramoff's credit card account number and to a copy of a travel invoice displaying that number.Tonight I was watched KCAL news (my first news consumption in a couple of days -- I was in withdrawal). One of the three major stories teased throughout the broadcast was the newly-developing story that there were credit card receipts proving Tom DeLay had received a lobbyist paid trip. If that is big news for local stations -- albeit on a Sunday night -- DeLay is becoming a larger story than I had previously thought.
DeLay's expenses during the same trip for food, phone calls and other items at a golf course hotel in Scotland were billed to a different credit card also used on the trip by a second registered Washington lobbyist, Edwin A. Buckham, according to receipts documenting that portion of the trip.
House ethics rules bar lawmakers from accepting travel and related expenses from registered lobbyists. DeLay, who is now House majority leader, has said that his expenses on this trip were paid by a nonprofit organization and that the financial arrangements for it were proper. He has also said he had no way of knowing that any lobbyist might have financially supported the trip, either directly or through reimbursements to the nonprofit organization.
The documents obtained by The Washington Post, including receipts for his hotel stays in Scotland and London and billings for his golfing during the trip at the famed St. Andrews course in Scotland, substantiate for the first time that some of DeLay's expenses on the trip were billed to charge cards used by the two lobbyists. The invoice for DeLay's plane fare lists the name of what was then Abramoff's lobbying firm, Preston Gates & Ellis.
The most recent polling a few months ago showed most Americans didn't know who Tom DeLay even is. With news of his ethical violations reaching local stations, suffice to say most Americans will be ready to see him go in no time. The real question now is whether the Democrats will figure out how to use this for top effect.
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