Posted on 06/27/2007 5:54:21 PM PDT by jazusamo
June 28, 2007 Rep. Mike Doyle (D-Pa.) will recuse himself should the House ethics committee review Rep. John Murthas (D-Pa.) earmark activities.
Doyle, who sits on the panel, said through a spokesman that members of the same delegation rarely participate in an ethics inquiry of each other. There is no indication that such an investigation has been launched, and Doyle would not discuss matters before the committee.
Its common practice for members of the committee who have someone from their home state before them to recuse themselves from taking part in the investigation, Doyle spokesman Matt Dinkel wrote in an e-mail. Mikes objectivity wouldnt ever become an issue should questions about Mr. Murtha or any other Pennsylvania member come before the committee because he would automatically recuse himself.
Dinkel said this was one reason Doyle felt free to vote with Democrats against Rep. Mike Rogerss (R-Mich.) resolution to reprimand Murtha after Rogers accused him of threatening his earmarks in retaliation for trying to kill one of Murthas earmarks. House rules state that lawmakers cannot make spending projects conditional on how another lawmaker decides to vote.
Doyle was the sole member of the ethics committee to vote against the Rogers resolution. His colleagues on the committee both Republican and Democratic voted present. Rep. Stephanie Tubbs Jones (D-Ohio), the chairwoman, did not vote.
Dinkel said Doyle told him the day of the vote that he wanted to register his displeasure at what he saw as political posturing by the Republicans, and he figured he was free to do so because he knew he would recuse himself if the issue came before the ethics committee.
Doyle is a longtime ally of Murtha, the dean of the Pennsylvania delegation. They also share some campaign contributors; many lobbying firms that donate heavily to Murtha and whose clients are recipients of millions of dollars in earmarks from him are also among Doyles top contributors.
Murthas relationship with the two lobbying firms, KSA Consulting and the PMA Group, came into question on Monday following a report about earmarks he obtained for the firms clients.
The story reported that some of these clients had opened small offices in Murthas hometown of Johnstown, Pa., but maintained larger operations outside the state.
Like Murtha, Doyle has tried to spur the economy in his western Pennsylvania district with earmarks to groups that help companies and institutions obtain government contracts although the earmarks are much smaller sums than many of Murthas.
Rep. Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.) has assailed the practice of directing earmarks to organizations to help them or other companies get more federal money. He defines these as federal subsidies for federal contracts.
Using earmarks, Doyle almost single-handedly created the Doyle Center for Manufacturing Technology, which aims to become a bridge between the [Department of Defense], its prime contractors and small businesses, according to its website.
The Doyle Center will revitalize [Pennsylvanias] economy by providing small local manufacturers with the tools they need to participate in military contracts with big defense contractors like Boeing, Lockheed Martin, and Raytheon, Doyle said in a 2003 release.
(The same year, Murtha created the John P. Murtha Institute for Homeland Security at Indiana University of Pennsylvania by directing $20 million its way.)
In the release, Doyle said he obtained a $1.5 million earmark for the Center to examine a defense systems supply chain for ways to improve the development and delivery of the needed parts.
Edwards J. Sheehan Jr., the senior vice president and chief financial officer of Concurrent Technologies Corporation (CTC), is the chairman of the Doyle Centers board of governors. Murtha essentially created CTC, a nonprofit technology innovation center originally based in his district, through earmarks in the late 1980s and has directed millions of earmarks its way in the years since. CTC has paid PMA Group $1.68 million since 1998 for lobbying work on appropriations bills.
The creation of a center that bears Doyles name is another layer to three other nonprofit organizations devoted to a similar mission of helping spur economic development in the area: the Pennsylvania Technology Council, the Pittsburgh Technology Council and Catalyst Connection.
All four groups share the same address and many of the same officers. The Doyle Center handed over a large portion of its earmark money in 2003 and 2004 to Catalyst Connection for research, according to nonprofit tax forms filed with the IRS and made available on guidestar.com. (Tax records for later years were unavailable.) The majority of the other funds that make up the Centers budget for those years was directed to Carnegie Mellon and Duquesne Universities, also for research.
Catalyst Connection received $330,000 from the Doyle Center in 2004, a portion of a larger $1.36 million earmark that made up the Centers entire budget for that year, the tax documents show.
Catalyst Connection and the Pittsburgh Technology Council have hired a Pennsylvania-based lobbying firm, GSP Consulting Corp., to represent them on defense appropriations, according to lobbying disclosure records. Their registered lobbyists include former staffers of several members of the states delegation, including Murtha and Doyle.
Doyles spokesman said his boss is proud of the Doyle Centers work but deferred questions about its relationship to Catalyst Connection and the contract the Center gave the Catalyst Connection to the officers of both groups.
Kevin Lane, a spokesman for the Center, Catalyst Connection and the technology councils, said that while Catalyst Connection is a regional economic development organization, the Center focuses on information technology and software tools for small manufacturers tools that will eventually be available to all manufacturers across the U.S. who desire to participate in the defense supply chain.
The $330,000 worth of research Catalyst Connection provided the Center was extensive, Lane wrote, and focused on determining the needs of small manufacturers, in order to enable them to participate in the supply chains of the U.S. Department of Defense.
That process also involved online surveys, site visits, pilot or demonstration projects and research and evaluation of off-the-shelf software as technology tools needed to participate in supply chains.
Lane stressed that no federal or state funds were used in enlisting the services of GSP Consulting.
It also looks like Doyle has learned well from Murtha though not on such a grand scale.
To be added to the Murtha Watch ping list please notify myself or RedRover.
Interesting article. He’s probably the biggest crook in the Senate, now some of the old timers are gone. But the Ethics Committee will never investigate him. He’s a Democrat.
The bigger shame is the repubs had the house since 94 and what did they do about murthas corruption and they ask why there the minority
I never knew what a Murtha was until he became the voice to the Haditha incident. I only had vague memories of his abscam fun and never put his name to it. But now I do know who he is and spent some money helping his opposition...shame she didn’t win. If there is a God and the Golden Rule is in effect, Murtha will reap the karma he has sowed. I will try hard not to enjoy it too much.
That is a possibility. :-)
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1674796/posts?page=45#45
H. John Heinz III School of Public Policy & Management
Carnegie Mellon University
5000 Forbes Avenue
Pittsburgh, PA 15213-3890
© 2006 Heinz School
That is a possibility. :-)
Some background...
Lycos, like most of the new high tech companies in Pittsburgh is a spinoff from Carnegie Mellon University. It was one of the very first web indexers, if not the first.
Lycos went commercial and moved off the campus. Since the work was done with university resources, the university took some stock.
CMU was always very good at getting DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency) funding.
CMU was one of the universities involved with creating the whole ethos of the internet, an ethos which has survived a growth from 20 machines in 1973 to hundreds of millions today.
CMU has been a central clearing house for computer security for ages; formally so with the founding of CERT (Computer Emergency Response Team) within the freestanding Software Engineering Institute in the 80's, around the time of the Morris Internet Worm. CERT tracks software vulnerability reports and patterns of computer breakins.
CMU and the City of Pittsburgh and I think the University of Pittsburgh jointly developed an industrial park on the Monongahela River where the mile long Johns & Laughlin Steel Mill stood.
Thanks, Cal. I’d forgotten about CMU and that connection from last year.
Hi Jazz!!!!...I still think I didn’t waste my money and time on Diana Irey campagin!!!!!.....
It takes a pretty stinking hypocrite to rip off the defense budget while attacking and insulting the troops, not to speak of the vile part he played in the persecution of the Haditha marines.
Hiya Gitmo! Nor do I, it brought back the spotlight to the corruptness of murtha and it will help rid the Hill of him, IMO.
After being elected in order to do something about Iraq and to stem corruption, the Democratic Congress has shown itself corrupt like its predecessor, and it has also capitulated to the President on Iraq. The recent earmark saga, in which Democrats attempted to adopt rules even more opaque than the Republicans before them, comes together with the indictment of Rep. William Jefferson (D-La.) and an endless stream of new accusations against Rep. Jack Murtha (D-Pa.) for using his position as an appropriations "cardinal" to build a base of political money and power in Pennsylvania.
The line forms behind me.
We'll get this done, later than we thought, but sooner than we now expect.
There's a new guy coming along, when I can share more, I will.
Keep the faith, my brother!
It ain't over yet.
bttt
Doyle is a longtime ally of Murtha, the dean of the Pennsylvania delegation. They also share some campaign contributors; many lobbying firms that donate heavily to Murtha and whose clients are recipients of millions of dollars in earmarks from him are also among Doyles top contributors.
Murthas relationship with the two lobbying firms, KSA Consulting and the PMA Group, came into question on Monday following a report about earmarks he obtained for the firms clients.
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