Most legal experts agreed that Sen. Larry Craig (R-Idaho) had little chance of withdrawing his guilty plea to disorderly conduct charges in Minneapolis, but his legal team believed it was worth a try. Today, the judge in the case rejected Craig’s request.
A Minnesota judge has denied Sen. Larry Craig’s request to withdraw his guilty plea to a disorderly conduct charge stemming from his arrest in an airport men’s room sex sting.
Now, as of last week, with a self-imposed Sept. 30 deadline hanging over head, Craig said he would wait for this decision before making a final decision on whether to resign. That was expected to take a couple of weeks, but apparently, the request was so weak, the judge was able to reject the request rather quickly.
So, Craig has no choice but to resign? Not so fast. As of a couple of weeks ago, the senator’s office said a favorable ruling in Minnesota was the only thing that would keep Craig from resigning. Now, the senator may decide that a misdemeanor charge on his record isn’t the end of the world, and he might just stick around anyway.
On MSNBC last week, Craig lawyer Stanley Brand suggested the senator may disregard the outcome of his court request altogether. Chris Matthews asked whether Craig would try to “hang on” until the end of his term. Brand replied, “[I] think that’s conceivable, especially if he gets some type of relief in Minnesota. But I don’t think it depends on that.”
In other words, today is a setback for the Idaho Republican, but it’s likely the story isn’t over yet.
First, Craig and his lawyers could appeal today’s decision. That could drag the process out for quite a while.
Second, Craig may very well announce that if every senator with a misdemeanor conviction on his record had to resign, turnover in the chamber would be pretty high. Indeed, Brand alluded to this on Hardball.
MATTHEWS: Let me ask you about the Ethics Committee. That’s especially for you working within the Congress on ethics matters. Can you win his case in the Ethics Committee, if it comes to that? I know that no senator’s been expelled by the Senate. I — I think you have to go back almost to the Civil War, when they expelled people for joining and taking an oath to the Confederacy.
BRAND: Right.
MATTHEWS: What is the case? Would they…
BRAND: Well, again…
MATTHEWS: What’s the worst the Senate could do to a senator…
BRAND: Again…
MATTHEWS: … if he says, I’m staying?
BRAND: Yes. Again, I mean, I — you know, I—they’re — it’s inconceivable to me that the United States Senate will open the door to bringing cases against senators for misdemeanor, misdemeanors that have nothing to do with the performance of official duties. I know they say they have the right to discipline people for bringing discredit on the Senate. That’s a vague standard. That’s well beyond where we are in 2007. I can’t imagine that 99 other senators want to be judged by that standard.
MATTHEWS: Yes, you wonder about all the traffic violations and other kinds of problems that they would be facing.
Craig seems to be nearing the point in which he tells his colleagues, “If you want me to go, you’re going to have to expel me.” And frankly, everyone knows they don’t have the votes for that. They’ll make him awfully uncomfortable during the Senate Ethics Committee probe, but at this point, I’d almost be surprised if he did step down before the end of his term.
Update: The judge, Hennepin County District Judge Charles Porter, said Craig had entered the guilty plea “accurately, voluntarily and intelligently.” Porter apparently wasn’t impressed with the argument at all, and offered a sharply worded, 27-page order. “The defendant, a career politician with a college education, is of at least above-average intelligence,” Porter wrote. “He knew what he was saying, reading and signing.”