Craig Out: Ripple Effect Damages Smith

This morning, Idaho Senator Larry Craig confirmed rumors and announced that he is resigning:

"To Idahoans I represent, to my staff, my Senate colleagues, but most importantly to my wife and my family, I apologize for what I have caused," Craig said. "I am deeply sorry."

Standing with family members and top state GOP officials, the disgraced lawmaker added, "To pursue my legal options as I continue to serve would be an unwanted and unfair distraction of my job and for my Senate colleagues."

This is further damage to a Republican Party that must defend 22 Senate seats next year.  The GOP can no longer take the Idaho seat for granted and must invest precious cash to defend it.  According to the Cook Political Report, this is likely to weaken GOP support for other contested races, including Oregon's--one of the five most vulnerable.

The nonpartisan Cook Political Report on Wednesday rated the Colorado seat being vacated by Sen. Wayne Allard (R) as a tossup, but the state has been trending Democratic. Antiwar sentiments are turning some voters away from the GOP, imperiling the reelection prospects of Sens. Susan Collins (Maine), John E. Sununu (N.H.), Norm Coleman (Minn.) and Gordon Smith (Ore.)....

The Cook Report considers ... the Idaho seat "likely Republican," but if the GOP is forced to spend any money defending [it], it would be siphoning funds from races where the money would be badly needed. As of June 30, the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee had $20.4 million on hand, while the National Republican Senatorial Committee had $5.8 million in its bank account.

Discuss.

  • (Show?)

    From what I've read, Idaho Governor Butch Otter is going to appoint a replacement to serve out the rest of Craig's terms in office. Otter said that the speculation that Craig's replacement would be Lt. Gov Jim Risch was, "dead wrong."

    Whomever take that spot, if they are a current elected official who is giving up an office to serve in the US Senate, I would think would want some guarantee of help come next year when they ran for reelection (I use that terms loosely since they will technically be the incumbent).

    I think this is going to be one of the seats Repubicans have to spend to defend. While my feeling is there is only a 40-50% chance of this being a seat that is won by a Democrat, that is much high then if Craig had not be caught in this scandle and resigned.

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    I wouldn't be surprised to see Otter appoint himself.

  • Max (unverified)
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    Well, this is how the Republicans seem to do things. Do something stupid or illegal; you're gone.

    Contrast that with how Democrats do things:

    William Jefferson (a.k.a., "Freezer"): busted by a "sting" operation, yet still in office.

    Teddy (Swimmer) Kennedy: still in office.

    Barney(Lollipop) Frank: running a prostitution ring out of your home is no big deal; still in office.

    Actually, I can't recall any Democrat being called upon to resign from office for much of any reason at all. I wonder why that is?

    I suspect it's because Democrats really don't have any moral grounding - unless they "catch" a Bob Packwood or some other Republican that they can carp about.

    The singular fact remains that when Republicans find an individual's actions offensive, they take steps to remove him from power. Democrats have never, to the best of my knowledge, ever taken any such steps against one of their own.

  • Zarathustra (unverified)
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    Wow, Max, perhaps you've discovered an actionable, American value, still resident in the Republic! "Hyprocrisy sux". Hopeful, that. If Barney Frank were a member of the John Birch society, do you think he would be in office?

    Of course Kari brings us back to earth...

  • DD877 (unverified)
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    Well Lets Don't forget Sandy Berglar and The Chinese Gentleman Hsu The Difference Is That One side Just quits and The other Side Never Had Sex With That Woman. Neither Side Is Worth A damn as far as I can tell.

  • LT (unverified)
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    "Actually, I can't recall any Democrat being called upon to resign from office for much of any reason at all. I wonder why that is?"

    Anyone remember Jim Wright or Peg Jolin? Did Rostenkowski serve out his term?

  • (Show?)

    ignores the troll

    Kari, that would be a pretty good trick if he could do that.

  • (Show?)

    Jefferson's not convicted; Craig pled guilty. Kennedy hasn't done anything in 40 years, for God's sake. Frank never did any such thing. He was completely cleared of knowledge of it.

    So, what's up with David Vitter? Or is it perhaps that the GOP jettisoned Craig because they knew they'd get another Republican instead of having Vitter replaced by a Democrat?

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    TJ don't feed the trolls, they aren't worth the time it take to respond to their bs.

    Yes, it could be they begged Vitter not to resign because that state (Louisana) has a D governor. The same thing could be true of Senator Johnson's illness, although he has stated he plans to run for relection next year.

    Did anyone notice this comment in the WP article. It gave me a good chuckle:

    "It's always darkest right before you get clobbered over the head with a pipe wrench. But then it actually does get darker," said a GOP pollster who insisted on anonymity in order to speak candidly.

  • mlwilde (unverified)
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    Vitter isn't gone b/c it takes getting caught with a dead girl or a live boy to lose your Senate seat per the old DC saying. Live girls are apparently OK in the GOP, even if you pay for them, apparently.

  • Jon (unverified)
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    Larry Craig's parting statement featured that classic Republican denial of culpability, the Unpology.

    Announcing his September 30th resignation, the Idaho GOP Senator artfully avoided accepting accountability for his men's room escapades. Instead, he offered the appearance of apology only for their aftermath:

    "I apologize for what I have caused. For any public official at this moment in time to be standing with Larry Craig is in itself a humbling experience. I have little control over what people choose to believe."

    Craig's evasion is just the latest example of the Republican art of the unpology. Facing recriminations for ethical failings, racist behavior, sexist statements or outright criminality, this new generation of Republican wrong-doers delivers the facade of apology by uttering obligatory words of remorse devoid of actual regret, contrition - or even an admission of guilt.

    For more details, see: "The Unpology of Larry Craig."

  • (Show?)

    I wouldn't be surprised to see Otter appoint himself.

    A Cheney!

  • (Show?)

    It's not merely that Jefforson's not convicted - the only reason the voters returned him to office is because Republicans voted en masse for him.

    Why? Because his opponent criticized a sheriff for blocking refugees from fleeing across a bridge to higher ground during Hurricane Katrina. (The refugees were black; the other side of the bridge was white neighborhoods.)

    So really, it's not just Republican lawmakers that are corrupt and racist. It's also massive numbers of Republican voters as well.

  • James X. (unverified)
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    The unpology is aka the yua culpa.

    But while it's true the preponderance of misdeeds and corruption is spectacularly tilted toward the GOP right now, we shouldn't blind ourselves from seeing it among ourselves, either, else we only help to foster it. We should be equally condemnatory of dirt wherever it develops.

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    we shouldn't blind ourselves from seeing it among ourselves, either, else we only help to foster it. We should be equally condemnatory of dirt wherever it develops

    I completely agree.

    I would observe, though, that the most durable and embarrassing charges, those involving hypocrisy, are less likely to afflict those who hold more tolerant viewpoints as they relate to human variation and weakness. %^>

  • j_luthergoober (unverified)
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    Nothing better than seeing a Wild West Conservative spewing God and Country family values eat crow. How's it taste Max; want a little cranberry sauce to go with it???

    P.S. The search for Jefferson's evidence was illegal; just like terminating all those Federal DAs without cause...

  • dddave (unverified)
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    "P.S. The search for Jefferson's evidence was illegal; just like terminating all those Federal DAs without cause..."

    Uh, the DA's are appointed and work specifically at the President's request. Period. And by "all" you mean the eight out of 93 da's? You also keep 100 g's in your freezer?

    Your bias has completely blinded you, hell, it's killed you.

    And as far as the hypocrisy of a conservative getting nailed for a morality based charge, I guess we all expected Clinton to boff interns since he nailed everything he could get his hands on, so he was consistent, right? Isn't Craigs sex life his personal business? If you are a consistent democrat it is.

    The guy sounds like a sleaze, but please, again, dems have just as many or more sleazy bastards too, and they DONT resign.

  • LT (unverified)
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    "But while it's true the preponderance of misdeeds and corruption is spectacularly tilted toward the GOP right now, we shouldn't blind ourselves from seeing it among ourselves, either, else we only help to foster it. We should be equally condemnatory of dirt wherever it develops."

    Yes, that is true, as long as there is actual evidence.

    Rumor is one thing, an arrest is something else. I still remember decades ago talking with a friend about a woman I admired whose husband was in politics.

    The woman said "Well, you know, she is his second wife".

    HUH???? I was stunned.

    And then I remembered a story the woman I admired had told one day--about being first married, the small apartment, the cinderblock book cases and other such inexpensive furnishing.

    I asked, "Does that sound like a second marriage to you? Do you really know when and where he was married? Who told you she is his second wife?"

    At that point the friend started to backtrack, "well, someone told me that...."

    If someone says "I've lived near enough to that politician all these years to know enough about him and would never vote for him", any person is entitled to that opinion.

    But to say there is equal sleaze in both parties is slathering on the propaganda a bit thick.

    There are wonderful people in both parties, and there are those who seem to skirt the campaign finance laws and sometimes other lawa as well (like the Congressman who didn't stop for a stop sign and ended up causing a fatal accident).

    If someone makes mistakes on a C&E report, they should be investigated and maybe fined. If someone is stopped for drunk driving, that can be publicized. An arrest and statement to police is fair game with a public figure.

    BUT, I recall an election in a previous decade where an incumbent had been stopped once for DUI but not arrested. The opponent did push-poll phoning which said, "suppose I told you that --- has been arrested for drunk driving 3 times..". Unfortunately for the opponent, one of those calls landed on the phone of a radio commentator who did a commentary the next day on the evils of push-polls and the inaccuracy of the call.

    ddave made the remark "if you are a consistent democrat it is".

    I assume ddave means all who believe in democracy believe sex is a private matter even if there has been an arrest and a recorded conversation with police. If he meant members of a political party, he should have capitalized.

  • (Show?)

    I read that one as well Stephanie.

    However, get this now it looks like Craig may not resign after all: http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2007-09-04-craig-senate-stay_N.htm?csp=34

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