The one minor flaw in the Mark [tag]Foley[/tag] scandal has been a nagging detail: the [tag]Bush[/tag] [tag]White House[/tag] hasn’t been connected to the mess at all. What fun is that? How can the [tag]Republican[/tag] establishment screw up this badly without any fingerprints from the Bush gang?
We’re in luck. TNR’s Ryan Lizza reports today that the House GOP leadership wasn’t the only one willing to look the other way on Foley’s “problem” to help keep a House seat in Republican hands.
According to TNR’s source, Foley had practically decided to retire from the House in order to cash in as a [tag]lobbyist[/tag] and told friends he was preparing to forgo re-election this year.
But when Foley’s friend saw the Congressman again this spring, something had changed. To the source’s surprise, Foley told him he would indeed be standing for re-election. What happened? [tag]Karl Rove[/tag] intervened.
According to the source, Foley said he was being pressured by “the White House and Rove gang,” who insisted that Foley run. If he didn’t, Foley was told, it might impact his lobbying career.
“He said, ‘The White House made it very clear I have to run,'” explains Foley’s friend, adding that Foley told him that the White House promised that if Foley served for two more years it would “enhance his success” as a lobbyist. “I said, ‘I thought you wanted out of this?’ And he said, ‘I do, but they’re scared of losing the House and the thought of two years of Congressional hearings, so I have two more years of duty.'”
This obviously needs to get fleshed out in more detail, and I haven’t a clue who TNR’s source is or how reliable he/she is, but it’s not exactly hard to believe.
We know, from GOP sources who talked to Bob Novak, that Foley approached NRCC Chairman Tom Reynolds (R-N.Y.) about retirement. Reynolds, after learning about Foley’s incriminating emails, still urged Foley to seek re-election. Indeed, Novak reported this week that Foley wanted to pursue lobbying instead of another term.
Disgraced former Congressman Mark Foley had two excellent job offers in the private sector this year when Rep. Tom Reynolds, National Republican Congressional Committee chairman, talked him into seeking a seventh term.
Although Reynolds says Foley was merely deciding whether to run again, the talk in Republican circles on Capitol Hill was that he was ready to leave Congress. His inappropriate e-mails to a former page were known to the Republican leadership late last year. The 16th Congressional District was considered so safely Republican that any GOP candidate could carry it but now likely will be lost with Foley still on the ballot.
Is it so hard to believe that Reynolds and the NRCC had been ordered by Rove to strong-arm any Republicans considering retirement to forget it? Is it also so hard to believe that the White House would tacitly threaten Foley, telling him it’d “enhance his success” if he waited two years to quit?
At a minimum, it’s an angle that warrants additional scrutiny.