Dropping the dime on Tom DeLay: Who will do the honors?

Guest Post by Morbo

Scandal-plagued political figures often reach a point where they become liabilities. When this happens, a highly placed party official usually arranges for an underling to send the beleaguered person packing.

Late in 1987, President Ronald Reagan found himself saddled with a Supreme Court nominee, Douglas Ginsburg, who, it turned out, had smoked marijuana back in the 1970s when he was a law professor. For some reason, this was deemed enormously controversial, and a media firestorm erupted.

Ginsburg seemed to think he could ride it out. Reagan had other ideas.

Naturally the president doesn’t drop the axe himself in a case like this. To get rid of Ginsburg, Reagan dispatched Education Secretary William Bennett. Bennett handed Ginsburg a statement, Ginsburg read it before the cameras. End of problem.

A similar moment may be approaching for Tom DeLay. Things just aren’t going his way lately. Damaging credit card receipts (.pdf) have started to surface, and that’s never a good thing. New polls show DeLay with less than 40 percent backing in his district. Members of his own party are getting antsy. Even Bill Frist dissed him during “Justice Sunday.”

If the GOP power structure decides it’s time for DeLay to resign so he can spend more time with his family, the usual mid-level functionary could be sent forth — perhaps a four-term congressman or an undersecretary of something or another.

But let’s face it: Been there, done that! It’s boring and it makes absolutely no statement. This is the GOP’s chance to make dropping the dime on someone an art and not merely a chore. To that end, I’d like to propose that when DeLay’s time comes, a fictional character be drafted to do the deed.

Naturally I have some suggestions:

Character: Captain Ahab

Pros: Relentless drive and single-minded focus on tasks makes him detail oriented and ensures he will get the job done

Cons: Hopelessly insane; prone to be long-winded; has bad haircut and horrifying gleam in his eyes

Character: Frankenstein’s monster (the one from the movies, not the urbane fellow from the novel)

Pros: A commanding presence. Large, square, green head and neck bolts add a certain undeniable gravitas to any situation; he simply cannot be ignored

Cons: Limited language skills could make it difficult for him to get the message across (“Fire bad! Influence peddling too! Urrrrr. Urrrrr!”); meeting with DeLay could be interrupted by angry villagers carrying pitchforks and torches

Character: Cruelly-used governess from Victorian-era novel

Pros: Has excellent diction, poise and grammar skills; plays the harpsichord

Cons: Tragic abuse at the hands of that rake, Lord Cecil Fullerton’s son, Chesterfield Fullerton of Throckmorton Hill, has left her desperate and unable to find time to keep up with the ins and outs of congressional ethics law

Character: Darth Vader (circa Episode IV)

Pros: Might possibly seize DeLay by the throat and lift him up in the air while saying something like, “Your services are no longer required!” I mean, dude, that would be so awesome!

Cons: Unlikely to want to piss off DeLay since they’re both members of the CNP and he’s still hoping for that hosting gig with Fox News Channel

Characters: Scooby Doo and the gang at Mystery, Inc.

Pros: As DeLay is led away, we get the satisfaction of hearing him snap, “I’d have pulled it off too — if it wasn’t for you kids!”

Cons: Like, DeLay could easily distract Scooby and Shaggy with a triple-decker pizza and run off, leading to a wacky chase scene over crudely animated backgrounds. Zoinks!

As always, I’m open to further suggestions.

Colonel Willard.

Pros: Giant screen close-up of murmuring wild-eyed DeLay finally explaining what politics is really about (inquiring minds want to know!)

Cons: “Collateral damage” ibn the city of Washington from “cleansing” post-climactic B-52 raid

  • …your mean old website asks me “What color is an orange,” and naturally I answer “blue” but then it tells me “eff u, comments are close” and I have to “back” and type in the wrong answer “orange,” gee, you’re making a liar out of me. Or either that or you hate the French. Hmmf. “Orange.” Ha!

  • The Vogons, who would regret to inform Tom DeLay–while he’s sitting in his district home office–that a hyper-space bypass must run through Sugar Land.

    Pros: Texas would be destroyed.

    Cons: As would have it, the Earth would be destroyed too.

  • Dave Bowman’s ghost

    Pros: Appears as both a man and a fetus, the latter of which would draw DeLay like a politico moth to a photo-op flame. Also has that haunting “Something Wonderful” line, which would be terribly apt.

    Cons: His heraldic appearance might also portend some great cataclysm which would allow us only two days in which to evacuate the planet.

  • Madame Defarge.

    Pros: Incessant cackling of “Guillotine! Guillotine!” would relay the proper intent with minimum of syntax.

    Cons: Constant clicking of knitting needles might be difficult for the hearing impaired.

  • Oddjob (from ‘Goldfinger’)

    Pros: top hat and pin stripe suit gives him Gilded Era robber baron look – would blend in perfectly at K Street and DeLay fundraisers.

    Cons: He’s Korean so might spark off an international crisis and possible regional nuclear exchange.

  • Tom Hagen (“The Godfather, Part II”). This makes DeLay Frankie Pentangeli.

    Pro: Calm, even-handed, professional

    Tom Hagen: When a plot against the Emperor failed… the plotters were always given a chance… to let their families keep their fortunes. Right?
    Frank Pentangeli: Yeah, but only the rich guys, Tom. The little guys got knocked off and all their estates went to the Emperors. Unless they went home and killed themselves, then nothing happened. And the families… the families were taken care of.
    Tom Hagen: That was a good break. A nice deal.
    Frank Pentangeli: Yeah… They went home… and sat in a hot bath… opened up their veins… and bled to death… and sometimes they had a little party before they did it.

    Con: Very messy to clean up afterwards.

  • Captain Benjamin L. Willard (Apocalypse Now): Who better to liquidate former Col, now Congressman “Kurtz”

  • The hero character from the video game Fable.

    Pro: Has a Physical Sheild that makes him immune to slime. Could tell him to go with a vulgar gesture – like the pelvic grind.

    Con: If the character is at a hundred percent evil, he would probably join forces with Delay.

    W. Kiernan

    What color is orange? It sounds like a koan to me, like “What is the sound of one hand clapping?”

  • Hillary Clinton.

    Pros: HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

    cons: Hubby would show up and make it all about Bill.

  • You read “The Price of Loyalty?”

    Richard Cheney is the “heavy” in Bu$hCo. He makes “the call.”

    But I don’t think DeLay is going to get it.

    May I be wrong.

  • Like, DeLay could … run off, leading to a wacky chase scene over crudely animated backgrounds. Zoinks!

    This is a Con? Man, I’d pay money to see that. Pay per view to pay down the deficit!

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