Awesome news, couldn't believe it at first. One by one these lying crooks that were involved in stealing 2000 election from PRESIDENT AL GORE are getting what they deserve. One of these days it will be thief Bush's and Cheney's turn. :clap:
http://www.courant.com/news/nationworld/hc...nes-nationworld DeLay To Quit GOP Power Broker To Resign House Seat Combined Wire Services
April 4 2006
WASHINGTON -- Former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay will announce today that he will resign the seat that he has held in Congress for nearly 11 terms and won't seek re-election, according to a Republican close to DeLay.
The Texan, the primary architect of the Republican majority who has become ensnared by a corruption probe, told House allies Monday night that he will give up his seat rather than face a re-election fight that appears increasingly unwinnable.
DeLay has decided that he will resign from Congress by the end of May, but has not determined an exact date, according to the Republican official. DeLay will also announce that he will move to Virginia to allow Republican officials in Texas to replace him on the November ballot under state law.
The decision came three days after DeLay's former deputy chief of staff, Tony C. Rudy, pleaded guilty to conspiracy and corruption charges, telling federal prosecutors of a criminal enterprise being run out of DeLay's leadership offices. Rudy's plea agreement did not implicate DeLay in any illegal activities, but by placing the influence-buying efforts of disgraced Republican lobbyist Jack Abramoff directly in DeLay's operation, the former aide might have made an already difficult re-election bid all but out of reach.
"This had become a referendum on me," DeLay told Time magazine in an article posted on the magazine's website. "So it's better for me to step aside and let it be a referendum on ideas, Republican values and what's important for this district."
"I'm a realist. I've been around awhile," he added. "I can evaluate political situations." Asked if he had done anything illegal or immoral in office, DeLay replied: "No."
Former aides and sources close to Delay said that his decision was not motivated by Rudy's guilty plea, but by DeLay's concerns that he might lose his suburban Houston seat to his Democratic opponent, former Rep. Nick Lampson, and his belief that another Republican could win instead.
DeLay got a political boost last month when he fended off three challengers to win a Republican primary with 62 percent of the vote.
But recent polls showed an uphill climb against Lampson and another former congressman, Steve Stockman, who had cut his ties to the Republican Party to run as an independent. In early January, a Houston Chronicle poll showed DeLay trailing Lampson, 30 percent to 22 percent, with Stockman taking 11 percent.
A December poll by CNN, USA Today and Gallup also indicated that a credible Democrat could beat DeLay.
DeLay faces a trial later this year on money-laundering charges in Texas that stem from an October 2005 indictment related to corporate contributions to state elections in 2001 and 2002. Since then, two former aides and one of his most prominent contributors have pleaded guilty in a separate federal probe to crimes including conspiracy; wire, tax and mail fraud; and the corruption of public officials.
The picture appeared to darken further last week. DeLay's former chief of staff Edwin A. Buckham, the lawmaker's closest political and spiritual adviser, was described in court documents filed by the Justice Department as someone who collaborated with the others - Abramoff, Rudy and former DeLay aide Michael Scanlon. They arranged payments, trips and favors that the department's investigators charged were part of an illegal conspiracy, according to the documents.
DeLay himself was formally designated as "Representative 2" in the documents, a title that cannot be considered a good omen. The lawmaker designated in the same documents as Representative 1 - Rep. Robert W. Ney, R-Ohio - has been cited by the Justice Department as having received "things of value" for performing official acts.
Ney has not been formally named a target of the probe and denies wrongdoing. DeLay and Buckham also have not been accused of wrongdoing by federal prosecutors, and they have both asserted their innocence.
But some of DeLay's official actions in Congress clearly fall within the scope of the continuing investigation: Last week's guilty plea by Rudy cites as part of the evidence of conspiracy a letter that DeLay wrote on behalf of an Abramoff client and legislation that DeLay supported on behalf of a client of Abramoff's firm.
DeLay has assembled a substantial legal team to fight back, and he has a defense fund that contained more than $600,000 at the end of last year. By withdrawing from his re-election bid, he also is entitled under federal election rules to convert any or all of his remaining campaign funds to his legal expenses
However, Richard Cullen, DeLay's lawyer, said Monday evening that his client's decision to withdraw was "not connected to the criminal investigation."
Cullen said: "This decision was made before the Rudy plea. That didn't enter into it."