Democrats Help Create a Corruption Narrative
The investigation into Rep. Charlie Rangel’s alleged financial shenanigans is probably the most touchy question to pose to senior House Democrats and their aides these days. As the New York Times’s Carl Hulse implied over the weekend, if Rangel were not the chairman of the Ways of Means Committee, if he were not a beloved figure among his colleagues, if fears of internal racial politics weren’t in the mix, Rangel would be as good as stripped from his position. (Rangel says he’s innocent and chides journalists who ask him about the investigation.) Rangel is one of several congressional Democrats who could plausibly become significant albatrosses around the neck of House incumbents next year, not the least of which because of his high-status position as the nation’s chief tax writer. Events are conspiring with House Democrats to give Republicans a pretty solid anti-corruption narrative to run on. Of the 15 members of Congress who are under some sort of investigation, according to CREW, 11 are Democrats.
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(Marc Ambinder, “How Democrats May Be Helping Republicans Create a Corruption Narrative,” The Atlantic’s “Politics” blog, 10/05/09)