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Tom DeLay should not be re-elected due to lack of ethics

By: Tim Aylsworth

Issue date: 3/29/05 Section: Opinion
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DeLay insists that the indictments are baseless claims whose roots lie in partisan hatred. He says the Democrats have fabricated facts to bring him down. In response to his allegations, a bipartisan ethics committee was assembled. However, DeLay was still found guilty. Instead of changing his behavior, he accused the ethics committee of being unfair, and he made several attempts to remove their power. He tried to insist that claims against him should come from the GOP.

So why is he still the leader of the Republicans in the House of Representatives? He has raised extraordinary amounts of money for the GOP. He has helped out Republicans all over the board. He tried to aid in redistricting voter precincts to gain more Republican seats. His get-out-the-vote campaign helped swing essential seats in the house. His tenacity has earned him the nickname "The Hammer." DeLay has done a lot for the Republicans. But is he becoming too hot to handle?

Regardless of what he has done for the party, if the allegations against him are true, the Republicans should not support his candidacy. The accusations have come from diverse sources. They have regarded varying parts of DeLay's actions. Even if certain individual claims were only weak strands, they can be wound together to form a strong rope. This rope would be strong enough to form a noose for the political career of DeLay.

The American public said in exit polls that ethics played a large role in the electoral process. Unethical leaders should certainly lose elections. Oddly enough, the information about DeLay came out long before the election. The public had plenty of time to consider what it thought. Either it did not believe that the allegations are true, it never heard of the allegations or it simply did not care.

DeLay is only the tip of the immoral iceberg: from House Majority leaders who illegally raise money to presidents who commit perjury. While punishing DeLay does not solve the problem, his case should help open the eyes of the voters. It is the duty of the voters to ensure that immoral leaders are not re-elected. DeLay's victory held a 14 percent lead over his Democratic competitor. When the public fails to know or care about what is going on in the government, immoral politicians are inevitable.

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