If we decide earmarks are unethical and/or illegal, there's going to be a lot of people in Congress who are implicated. Likewise, if we decide it's illegal to accept campaign contributions from those who have benefited from these earmarks we're going to have to build a new jail or two to hold all those Representatives and Senators.
Except for the attack by the Republican Noise Machine, Mollohan has two issues he needs to address:
1. Did he properly disclose his net worth? If not, why? He needs to fully disclose everything right now, and answer every detail that has come into question.
2. Did he improperly enter into business relationships with those who were beneficiaries of his earmarks?
One thing about this discussion that bothers me is, the repeated reference to him as the ranking member of the House Ethics Committee, which is often followed by lamentation about its partisan gridlock. This implies that Mollohan is somehow at least partially accountable for it. Not true!
After the House Ethics Committee last
admonished The Hamper on three counts in October 2004, the House Republicans
replaced two of their representatives on the committee with party loyalists who had contributed to DeLay's legal defense fund. Most importantly, they changed the committee's rules in order to protect DeLay from further reprisals.
Much to his credit, Mollohan has stood up to DeLay and his cronies, and has refused to go along with Republican efforts to turn the committee into a rubber stamp for themselves. It should come as no surprise that Republicans would vindictively attack him in this manner.