House Democrats fear PMA corruption investigation
Dems fear defections in PMA probe
A trickle of
defections has Democratic House leaders wondering how long they can
hold off calls for an investigation into the PMA Group and its ties to
Pennsylvania Rep. John P. Murtha.
Rep. Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.) got only 17 Democratic votes when he
introduced a privileged resolution in February calling for an ethics
investigation into “the relationship between earmark requests already
made by members and the source and timing of past campaign
contributions.”
But Flake has kept trying — the sixth version of his resolution comes
up for a vote this week — and he’s picked up support from eight
Democrats who voted against his initial resolution.
And that has Democratic leaders worried.
“We are keeping our ear pretty close to the ground on this,” said a senior Democratic aide.
The aide noted that there has been “no groundswell of support” for
Flake’s resolutions — and that Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) remains
dead set against an investigation. Still, he said, House Democrats —
who took power promising to “drain the swamp” in Washington — “may only
be one bad story away from seeing some big break.”
“It’s a very slow trickle at this point, but that could change,” the aide said.
According to press reports, the FBI is investigating whether PMA
founder Paul Magliocchetti, a former Appropriations Committee staffer,
made “straw man” donations on behalf of his employees or other
individuals to members of Congress, which is illegal under federal
election law.
Following an FBI raid in November, the PMA Group dissolved, and Magliocchetti has retired and moved to Florida.
Flake introduced his first PMA resolution as Congress took up the $410
billion omnibus spending bill in February. The 17 Democrats who backed
that initial resolution included a number of recent arrivals who could
face tough reelection fights next year — Reps. Debbie Halvorson of
Illinois, Ann Kirkpatrick of Arizona and Harry Teague of New Mexico.
Four similarly positioned Democrats joined them on the second vote:
Alabama Rep. Bobby Bright, whose conservative district requires him to
vote with the GOP on most controversial measures; Illinois Rep. Bill
Foster, elected last year to the seat vacated in 2007 by former
Republican Speaker Dennis Hastert; and two first-term Democrats who
knocked off incumbent Republicans last fall — Idaho Rep. Walt Minnick
and Florida Rep. Suzanne Kosmas, who made ethics a centerpiece of her
campaign against then-GOP Rep. Tom Feeney.
Foster, a former scientist, read Flake’s initial resolution on the
House floor before the vote and reasoned that it was too vague to
establish a special ethics investigation, his spokeswoman said.
The first resolution failed to mention PMA by name but, rather, laid
out a series of press reports about the firm following the FBI raid of
its offices in November. In that initial resolution, Flake called for
the ethics committee, or an investigative subpanel, to look for any
connections — i.e., campaign contributions or lobbyist ties — between
the recipients of earmarks and the lawmakers who requested them. He
gave the ethics panel two months to complete such a wide-ranging probe.
“[Foster] just thought the first resolution was too broad,” said his spokeswoman, Shannon O’Brien.
Foster backed the second resolution — and each one to follow — because
it narrowed the proposed investigation to PMA and its clients.
Indeed,
the second resolution called on the ethics panel to investigate the
timing of campaign contributions from clients and employees of “the
raided firm” to the lawmakers requesting their projects, singling out
PMA without actually referring to the now-defunct lobbying group by
name.
Indiana Rep. Pete Visclosky, a senior member of the Appropriations
Committee, joined the younger Democratic defectors in round two —
despite the fact that his former chief of staff worked as a lobbyist
with PMA and that the thousands of dollars he’s received in campaign
contributions from PMA employees and clients over the years could make
him a subject of the probe. Visclosky’s office did not return requests
for a comment.
Then, last week, South Dakota Rep. Stephanie Herseth Sandlin and
Indiana Rep. Baron Hill — co-chairmen of the fiscally conservative Blue
Dogs — sided with Flake and other Republicans to call for a vote on the
resolution. Days earlier, Hill had signaled his unease by voting
“present” on another version of Flake’s privileged resolution. They
were joined on this most recent vote by Washington Rep. Adam Smith, who
runs the New Dems’ political action committee.
All eight Democratic offices were asked about their bosses’ change of
heart, but only Foster’s offered an on-the-record explanation for his
votes.
House Democrats built their new majority in large part by running hard
against the “culture of corruption” in Washington. The Flake
resolutions — coupled with revelations about Ways and Means Committee
Chairman Charles B. Rangel (D-N.Y.) — have given Republicans a chance
to regain some footing on the issue.
But the iconoclastic Arizonan — who has battled his own leaders on
earmarks — insists that he’s not driven by hopes of partisan gain. He
says his main goal is to root out corruption in the annual spending
process.
“This is not a partisan issue,” Flake told POLITICO last week, “and I
think most members recognize that on both sides of the aisle.”
Flake, a Republican anti-earmark crusader, promises to keep offering
these resolutions until his colleagues give in. “This is a matter that
has to be dealt with,” Flake said. “And if that means I need to keep
offering it, I will.”
Privately, Democrats say that if Flake were serious about wanting an
ethics committee investigation, he could file an ethics complaint
against Murtha or other members tied to PMA. They note that Flake has
failed to do that so far — and they say it’s because he knows Democrats
could retaliate by filing their own ethics complaints against Reps.
Jerry Lewis (R-Calif.) or Don Young (R-Alaska).













