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Speaker Hastert Letter to Leader Pelosi - Nancy now wants more committee staff
Yahoo News ^ | 4/27/05 | House Speaker Dennis Hastert

Posted on 04/27/2005 2:04:29 PM PDT by Libloather

Speaker Hastert Letter to Leader Pelosi
58 minutes ago

To: National Desk

Contact: Ron Bonjean of the Office of House Speaker Dennis Hastert, 202-225-2800

WASHINGTON, April 27 /U.S. Newswire/ -- House Speaker Dennis Hastert (R-IL) today sent the following letter to Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-CA):

April 27, 2005

The Honorable Nancy Pelosi
H-204, The Capitol
Washington, DC 20515

Dear Leader Pelosi:

Thank you for your letter of April 12. I too am troubled that the Standards Committee has been unable to organize.

I am especially troubled that this impasse has been attributed to the adoption by the House of some minor but important changes to the rules which provide all members with basic fairness: the right to counsel of your own choosing; the right to know when you have been charged by the Committee with wrongdoing before you are found guilty and read about it in the newspaper; and the right to a presumption of innocence. These common sense reforms, which the minority made no attempt to change or eliminate in the motion to recommit during the adoption of the rules, have sadly been twisted and distorted and used as political fodder.

Let me once again explain what we did in the rules changes and what we did not do since there seems to be continued confusion.

The requirement that there be bipartisan support to authorize the creation of an investigatory subcommittee has not been changed. For the last several Congresses, the rules have required bipartisan support, either through agreement of the Chairman and Ranking Member or at the full Committee level in order to move to the investigative subcommittee phase. That is the way it was under the old rules, and that is the way it is under the new rules.

Under the old rules, a tie vote in the Committee left the matter in limbo neither moving forward to an investigatory subcommittee nor being dismissed. In this circumstance, the Member subject to the complaint did not know his/her status since there was no official action. The Member could remain in limbo indefinitely; yet as a practical matter, in the court of public opinion, they were "under investigation" because the public knew a complaint had been filed and had heard no other word from the Committee. The new rules do indeed change that limbo status. If there is not a bipartisan vote to go forward, the complaint is dismissed.

You mentioned in your letter that half the Committee could dismiss a complaint "solely by stalling for 45 days." I believe you have been misinformed. Under the committee rules, the minority has access to an extension beyond 45 days. Even more important, whenever the minority chooses to place the matter on the agenda, something the ranking member has an absolute right to do without permission from the majority, the clock stops. Thus an automatic dismissal is not possible unless the minority chooses to let it happen.

What are the other changes the House voted to make to the rules and which you and Mr. Mollahan have proposed to repeal in H.Res. 131? The first was a right to counsel. The right to counsel of one's own choosing is a fundamental right enjoyed by all Americans, and Members should be able to decide who represents them, subject to the normal conflict of interest rules that lawyers are required to follow.

The final change dealt with allowing members to know they were under investigation (thus giving them an opportunity to defend themselves) before public notice is given that they were found guilty. It is a fundamental American value to be able to face your accusers and defend yourself, and yet in H. Res. 131 you propose to repeal this right.

Each of these changes I just described is reasonable and rational. You could have tried to strike them on opening day in your motion to recommit if you found them offensive, but you chose not to. To the extent that there might be any ambiguity or misunderstanding of these rule changes or their intent, the Chairman of the Committee has offered to the Ranking Member guarantees in writing that go to the heart of the concerns.

Mr. Mollohan's refusal to acknowledge that these understandings cure his previously stated concerns leads me to fear that we have reached a point where the fairness or the merits of the rules changes seem not to even be the issue.

I believe that the ethics process should be above partisan politics. Since sincere and repeated offers to address the concerns raised by you and Mr. Mollahan have been rebuffed, I propose that the House return to the ethics rules under which we operated in the last Congress, leaving the unfairness inherent in the old system in place. I do so with the hope that once the committee gets back to its important work that it will find time to revisit these changes and, if it sees fit, make a recommendation to the whole House for further action.

I hope you will support this effort and then urge your members of the Ethics Committee to organize and begin their work without further objections.

Sincerely,

J. Dennis Hastert

Speaker of the House


TOPICS: Extended News; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 109th; cnim; committee; delay; ethics; govwatch; hastert; insisted; leader; letter; nancy; pelosi; speaker; staff; ushouse
Hastert Urges GOP to Scrap Ethics Changes
16 minutes ago
By LARRY MARGASAK, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON - House Speaker Dennis Hastert urged fellow Republicans on Wednesday to abandon new rules that led to an ethics committee shutdown and his members appeared ready to follow him in retreat.

"I'm willing to step back," Hastert said after a closed-door meeting with members of the GOP rank and file. Republicans prepared for a vote as early as Wednesday evening.

The Republican lawmakers have endured weeks of intense Democratic criticism and hometown editorials complaining about GOP rule changes that critics have seen as an attempt to protect Majority Leader Tom DeLay from further investigation.

DeLay was admonished by the committee on three separate matters last year and new questions have been raised about whether a lobbyist paid for some of his foreign travel in violation of the rules.

The ethics rules in effect before the January changes allowed investigations to begin if the committee was evenly divided. The Republican changes provided for an automatic dismissal in case of a tie.

Rep. Joel Hefley, R-Colo., who supported the retreat, said the GOP move "doesn't mean Democrats will stop going after DeLay."

Hefley was dumped by Hastert as chairman of the evenly divided ethics committee after the panel admonished DeLay. He has been one of the few Republicans who opposed the Republican changes from the beginning.

Republican lawmakers, who would not be identified by name because their meeting was closed, said some didn't want to stop the fight, believing the party could still win the political battle to uphold the changes.

Despite the support for Hastert, Republicans have the politically sticky task of explaining their reversal after defending the rules changes for months.

In talking points prepared for the closed GOP meeting, Republican leaders said the GOP stood by the changes but believed it was more important "to have a functioning ethics committee that may be flawed" than a panel that couldn't function. Democrats have kept the committee of five Republicans and five Democrats deadlocked by refusing to provide any votes to start operations.

Rep. Alan Mollohan of West Virginia, the senior Democrat on the committee, said, "To this point the speaker's actions have been positive. The proposal will be considered and evaluated by the bipartisan yardstick."

At the same time, Mollohan and aides to Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi insisted that committee staff must be hired on a bipartisan basis. Republicans early this year unilaterally fired two holdover staff members.

Hastert bristled at talk of Democrats dictating committee staffing. "If they get one thing, they'll want another," he said in a brief interview.

"We raised their staffing. They have the ability to hire more staff," he added, referring to a large increase in the committee's budget.

Pelosi, the Democratic leader, told reporters that Republicans had decided to retreat under pressure. "I think they just took the heat," she said. "I think there has been an editorial in every paper in the country saying this is wrong."

Republicans have denied that the rules changes were designed with DeLay in mind, and Hastert told reporters outside the meeting Wednesday that his intention had been to create a new set of rules that was fair to all lawmakers, regardless of party. Given Democratic criticism, he said, "I'm willing to step back."

"We need to move forward with an ethics process," he added.

Referring to DeLay, Hastert said that one prominent Republican needed a functioning ethics committee because "right now he can't clear his name."

1 posted on 04/27/2005 2:05:33 PM PDT by Libloather
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To: Libloather
"Let me once again explain what we did in the rules changes and what we did not do since there seems to be continued confusion."

Translation:
"If you weren't so stupid, or deliberately obtuse, there'd be no confusion."

2 posted on 04/27/2005 2:08:32 PM PDT by Redbob
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To: Libloather

The dems simply can't take "yes" for an answer on this. No matter what Hasteret gives them, they will ask for more more more until they are asking for new pencil sharpeners. Why? Because the dems know that their own house is filthy. They will look mighty silly being found guilty of ethics violations when they have been the one's complaining.


3 posted on 04/27/2005 2:09:16 PM PDT by FlipWilson
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To: Libloather
Dear Leader Pelosi:


4 posted on 04/27/2005 2:13:55 PM PDT by pabianice
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To: Libloather
"Despite the support for Hastert, Republicans have the politically sticky task of explaining their reversal after defending the rules changes for months."

I think Hastert explained the rules changes quite nicely, and other Pubbies can simply say,
"We had to change the rules back because (a) basic fairness is is antithetical to the Dimocratic Party, and (b) our colleagues from the other side of the aisle were too dense to understand these simple changes.

5 posted on 04/27/2005 2:15:06 PM PDT by Redbob
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To: FlipWilson

The reason is that they have to protect Baghdad Bob


6 posted on 04/27/2005 2:16:17 PM PDT by tom paine 2
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To: Libloather
Here's the letter that Hassert should write

April 27, 2005 The Honorable Nancy Pelosi
H-204, The Capitol
Washington, DC 20515

Dear Leader Pelosi:

Whatever you want babe, we'll agree to, because after all said and done, we're coming after you, Bagdad Bob, and Tubbs with a vengence!

You wanted war and you drew first blood!

Kiss your leadership position goodbye. We will loose a few members, but more than half your party is comprised of crooks!

Enclosed is the same version of this letter composed with crayons and pictures that a moron of your intellect could understand.....well maybe not. Get a Kindergardener to translate!

See ya!

Sincerely,

J. Dennis Hastert
Speaker of the House

7 posted on 04/27/2005 2:33:44 PM PDT by Bommer
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To: Libloather

democrats = the evil party.

republicans = the stupid party.


8 posted on 04/27/2005 4:05:46 PM PDT by ken21 (if you didn't see it on tv, then it didn't happen. /s)
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To: Bommer
I love your letter. I loved Speaker Hastert's letter too and am delighted that it has been made public. Bugsy just got bitch slapped and it doesn't matter how she tries to turn it all around--the advantage is now ours.

Goodbye, Bagdad Jim. Goodbye, Bugsy. Tom DeLay will still be there kicking butt and advancing the American agenda looooonnnng after they're gone and irrelevant. I hope not forgotten because their perfidy and treachery should remain for all to see.

After all the usual cringing and apologizing and caving we've learned to fear from our own, it's exciting and encouraging to see one of our leaders lay it on the line in such a straight forward and in her face manner. He made it very clear she and Mollohan are stupid, dishonest, and destructive. Way to go!

9 posted on 04/27/2005 4:55:46 PM PDT by Sal
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