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Taking Down Tom DeLay
Published on Thursday, September 29, 2005 by the Madison Capital Times (Wisconsin)
Taking Down Tom DeLay
Editorial
 

Local prosecutors don't usually deal in the affairs of state. It is their job to indict petty crooks and put them behind bars.

But when the affairs of state are corrupted by petty crooks, sometimes only a local prosecutor has the skills - and the sense of duty - that is required to address the crisis.

That explains why Wednesday's criminal conspiracy indictment of House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, the Texas Republican who essentially runs the Congress, came not from Washington but from Austin.

The trail of sleaze left behind as DeLay has traversed the American political landscape over the past two decades grew so long and so foul that it begged questions about whether any legal action would be sufficient to clean up the mess made by the toxic Texan. Unfortunately, the Environmental Protection Agency has no program for cleaning up political Superfund sites like the one created by DeLay and his associates, so the nation's only hope rested with a courageous Texas district attorney and a grand jury that had until this week to decide whether to indict the man who has done far more than George W. Bush or even Dick Cheney to turn Washington into a cesspool and the promise of American democracy into an ugly lie.

DeLay, who had a history of being disarmingly blunt about the pay-to-play commitments he expected from campaign contributors and who secured the congressional majorities needed to deliver for his corporate "partners" by warping the redistricting and electoral processes of his home state and others around the country, turned the Republican Party into what it is today: the most thoroughly corrupted political entity this side of the Standing Committee of the Chinese Communist Party's Politburo.

DeLay, who has now stepped down as majority leader, was so powerful that even Democrats in Washington treated him with kid gloves. They might grumble when he oversaw the redistricting of a half dozen congressional colleagues out of their jobs, or when he warped the rules of the House to hold a trade vote open long enough to "break the arms" that were necessary to "win" it. They might even toss an ethics complaint his way. But, for the most part, they let the Republican representative known as "The Hammer" pound the political process into a shape that served his sordid ambitions.

Though he was not actually the speaker of the House, everyone knew that DeLay ran things.

So it fell to Travis County District Attorney Ronnie Earle to press the case that DeLay and two of his longtime associates - John Colyandro, the former executive director of a Texas political action committee formed by DeLay, and Jim Ellis, who heads DeLay's national political action committee - had engaged in a criminal conspiracy to violate Texas campaign finance rules outlawing corporate contributions.

Earle was the right man to make the case. With almost three decades of experience as the elected district attorney for a county that is the seat of state government in Texas, he has more experience prosecuting political corruption than just about any lawyer in the country.

Now that Earle has secured indictments of DeLay and his associates, however, he will be the target of one of the crudest smear campaigns in American political history - indeed, it has already begun. Republican operatives and their media allies claim the prosecutor is targeting DeLay for partisan reasons, while DeLay claims that "Ronnie Earle is trying to criminalize politics."

Don't believe it. Ronnie Earle is trying to get the criminals out of politics.

© 2005 The Capital Times

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