Wednesday, July 30, 2008

The Editors on Ted Stevens on National Review Online



One of Alaska Sen. Ted Stevens's most memorable moments of the last few years came during the Senate fight over the infamous "Bridge to Nowhere." In 2005, when Sen. Tom Coburn introduced a measure that would have redirected the money Stevens had earmarked for the bridge to hurricane-ravaged New Orleans, Stevens gave an apoplectic speech on the Senate floor in which he threatened to resign if the Senate passed the measure. It was the nation's loss that the Senate voted the measure down, simultaneously missing two opportunities. 

Now that a grand jury has indicted Stevens on seven counts of making false statements, it is time for him to make good on his threat. Stevens is of course innocent until proven guilty of the crimes with which he is charged. But even if he committed no crime, the facts that have emerged over the course of the federal investigation into his personal finances are damning enough on their own. The indictment was just the last straw.

I hope the Republican party forces Stevens out, but I'm not so sure he'll cooperate.  The interesting bit will be how forcefully the Democrats act against him.  I suspect they'll want to play it cool to avoid calling attention to William Jefferson and his refrigerator full of cash.

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