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Linda Chavez
Linda Chavez
12 Mar 2010
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Troubling Questions for Obama Team

A corruption scandal in President-elect Obama's backyard is the last thing this country needs. But like it or not, that's exactly what we have in the unfolding drama of Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich's arrest earlier this week for trying to sell Barack Obama's Senate seat. The federal prosecutor in the case — Patrick Fitzgerald, the man whose investigation of the Valerie Plame leak case nearly paralyzed the Bush White House for a time — has made it clear that nothing ties Obama directly to the Blagojevich scheme. But the timing of Fitzgerald's announcement raises some serious questions.

Apparently, Fitzgerald knew that Blagojevich was trolling for bidders for the Obama seat in the waning days of the general election. Before the first votes were counted to elect Obama president, Blagojevich was so confident in Obama's victory he was already soliciting bids for the seat. And Fitzgerald already had substantial evidence that Blagojevich was engaged in major corruption before the governor put a "for sale" sign on the Senate seat. So why didn't the federal prosecutor act prior to the election? Had he done so, of course, it could have damaged Obama.

Many would argue that bringing down another Illinois Democrat before the election would have smelled like a dirty trick. The federal prosecutor, after all, was a Republican appointee, and the McCain campaign had already run ads trying to tie Obama to political corruption in Chicago. One of Obama's early financial supporters, land developer Tony Rezko, was convicted on corruption charges earlier this year, and Rezko figures prominently in the Blagojevich scandal. Had Blagojevich been forced to do a perp walk before Election Day, voters might have asked why Obama had endorsed Blagojevich just two years earlier, considering the governor was at that time under investigation for taking bribes. The endorsement would have been yet another example of Obama's bad judgment in his associations from Rezko to the Rev. Wright to Bill Ayers.

But even if Fitzgerald acted fairly and prudently by not moving against Blagojevich in the heat of a political campaign, why did he decide to act this week? His explanation was that he was trying to stop "a political corruption crime spree." Under existing Illinois law, the governor has final authority to appoint someone to fill a vacant U.S.

Senate seat and wiretaps suggest Blagojevich was about to do just that. According to the criminal complaint, Blagojevich had found at least one bidder — identified only as Senate Candidate 5 — who offered to raise the governor $500,000 and another $1 million if he got the appointment. Perhaps Fitzgerald simply wanted to go public before Blagojevich sealed the deal.

But there are other possible explanations. Fitzgerald's hand may have been forced by the Chicago Tribune, which reported Dec. 5 that Blagojevich's phone lines were being tapped. This information signaled everyone — the governor and anyone talking to the governor or his aides — that they could become ensnared in a huge criminal investigation leading to indictments.

President-elect Obama has emphatically denied that he ever talked to Blagojevich about his Senate replacement. And certainly Fitzgerald has done everything he can to confirm that Obama is not implicated in any way. But there are a number of unanswered questions about what contact members of the president-elect's team might have had with the governor or his aides, directly or through intermediaries. A number of aides, including the incoming White House Chief of Staff, Rahm Emmanuel, and former campaign leader David Axelrod, have long-standing ties to Blagojevich. And Axelrod has already had to revise his earlier assertion that Obama had spoken with Blagojevich about candidates to replace him in the Senate.

The president-elect has said "I want to gather all the facts about any staff contact that may have taken place. We'll have those in the next few days and we'll present them."

The president-elect's credibility is on the line. For the good of the country, we must all hope this scandal doesn't infect anyone in the new administration. The best way to ensure that is for the president-elect and his aides to be forthcoming quickly.

Linda Chavez is the author of "An Unlikely Conservative: The Transformation of an Ex-Liberal." To find out more about Linda Chavez, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.



Comments

1 Comments | Post Comment

Ma'am; ... Let me get this right... The corruption scandal is the last thing the country needs???? Then why is it like bait fish to the conservative baracudas??? Crap draws flies, but so does a picnic... What is this crap to you??? Is this some sort of moral triumph??? Is this a chance to run Mr. Obama down because another person commited a crime... I would say it was less than perfect timing, because it was too late for the last election and too early for the next election...Yet, such moral terpitude is always timely, and this is why...People need government to work for them... Very few have government work in such a way for them that they go in with means and come out with money...People like the Clintons who began with shet and end up with millions having no other employment but the government make me sick... It is not generally thought of as corrupt when a representative votes his own self interest... If a poor man trades his vote for a buck he is corrupt, but if a rich man votes to make his whole class richer and himself as well, that is not corrupt... Look at who governs us..It is the rich... Is there a Supreme Court justice not a millionaire??? Would they vote to strip themselves of millions with just taxes??? We all need something from government, and we are not all in a position to take it for ourselves... Can any of us reasonably expect that when our representatives have served their desires that they will then serve our needs??? Because I trust that what I see, others are not blind to; that government and rich people help themselves with government, and they do not help us...Most are not so brazen and stupid as the governor... We should ask how such crooks get elected... Maybe there was no choice... Maybe it was like that funeral where the minister asked if some one could say something nice about the deceased, and some man said that his brother was worse... Maybe the other guy was worse...The fact is, that too often people go to vote, and they shake their heads and they wring their hands, and then they hold their noses and vote with every expectation that it will prove as self injury... We do not have a choice... And so we do not get justice which is the thing we most need from government... We need our basic needs met...We need the defense of govenment from enemies here and abroad... What do we do when government defends our enemies against our attacks??? We all need something from government and my bet is that the something we all need from government is the same for rich and poor alike...We all need justice...Thanks...Sweeney

Comment: #1
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Fri Dec 12, 2008 9:18 PM
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