DeLay Resignation Snarls GOP
The indictment of the house majority leader—and subsequent resignation from his post—comes at a rough time for the Republican Party
By MASSIMO CALABRESI/WASHINGTON
http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,1110948,00.html?cnn=yesPosted Wednesday, Sep. 28, 2005
A Texas grand jury Wednesday indicted Representative Tom DeLay and two associates on charges of conspiracy in a campaign finance scheme. In response, DeLay, who insists he is innocent, has temporarily stepped down from his post as House majority leader.
The indictment comes at a particularly bad moment for the Republican Party. Already on the defensive over soaring gas prices, the war in Iraq and the mishandling of the Hurricane Katrina response, the GOP now faces a national scandal and forced resignation of its House Majority leader, a tough blow for a party feeling deeply insecure about its mid-term election prospects next year. Some House insiders were already urging the National Republican Congressional Committee to approach the mid-term election as if they had between 80-100 seats in play, a sign of just how worried some members are about a pro-Democrat backlash across the country. In that atmosphere, DeLay's indictment foretells a period of internal wrangling among the party leadership in the House that is likely to keep the GOP back on its heels well into the winter.
DeLay is acting as if this is a battle he can still win, declaring his intention to step aside only temporarily in order to exonerate himself. But the timing could hardly be worse for him. A very public rift between DeLay and fiscal hawks led by Indiana Rep. Mike Pence over how to finance Katrina reconstruction had left DeLay's erstwhile conservative base on the Hill angry and rebellious. DeLay had steamrolled Pence over whether to fund reconstruction with cuts, saying there was no more fat to trim in the budget. Pence's allies, seeing him publicly rebuked, are hardly in the mood to rally behind the outgoing Majority leader.
DeLay has always been popular for his care and feeding of the party faithful, but now has three strikes against him—his break with the conservative base over Katrina, the fact that he has had to crack heads on a number of close votes already this session, including CAFTA and now the national attention this will bring at a time when candidates are already looking for cover.