The following AP article shows that DeLay is
using the first refuge of a sleazeball -- blame
everyone else, accept no responsibility yourself.
In an appearance on ABC's "This Week" on
Sunday, Santorum said DeLay "has to come forward
and lay out what he did and why he did it and let
the people then judge for themselves. But from
everything I've heard, again, from the comments
and responding to those, is everything he's done
was according to the law."
The officials who described DeLay's brief
remarks noted that the session, a regularly
scheduled weekly lunch, was held under rules of
secrecy. Dan Allen, DeLay's spokesman, declined
comment.
DeLay's case is at the heart of a broader
controversy in the House, where Democrats accuse
Republicans of unilaterally changing ethics
committee rules to prevent any further
investigation of DeLay. Republicans have denied
the allegation.
The panel arranged a meeting for Wednesday, and
Rep. Alan Mollohan of West Virginia, the senior
Democrat, said he would renew a push for a
bipartisan rewrite of the rules that Republicans
put into effect in January on a party-line vote.
Officials in both parties said they knew of no
compromise discussions.
One senior Republican spoke sympathetically of
DeLay after the closed-door meeting.
"I hope he survives, and I hope he will stay in
there and do his job," said Sen. Trent Lott,
R-Miss.
"The power of prayer is the only thing that
will sustain you" in the circumstance DeLay is in,
Lott added, and he spoke disparagingly of any
Republicans who fail to stand by the Texan.
"That's the problem, you know, Republicans eat
their own. ... Democrats stand by their own until
hell freezes over," said Lott, who was ousted as
Senate majority leader two years ago after making
controversial race-based comments at a birthday
party for the late Strom Thurmond.
DeLay was admonished three times last year by
the House ethics committee. Recent articles have
disclosed that his wife and daughter were paid
approximately $500,000 in recent years by
political organizations under his control, and
have raised questions about the financing of three
overseas trips he took.
DeLay has consistently denied any violation of
either law or House rules.
His private remarks to Senate Republicans were
in keeping with the response frequently offered on
his behalf by House Republicans: Blame the
Democrats and occasionally the news media for the
scrutiny he faces. House Republicans intend to
follow the script later in the week, hoping to
showcase passage of bankruptcy legislation and
estate tax repeal as a counterpoint to Democratic
charges that they are merely power-hungry.
Several Republicans stressed that DeLay's
appearance at the senators' lunch was routine,
noting that GOP leaders of one house have begun
attending meetings of the rank and file of the
other house in recent weeks.
His remarks were "very low-key. It wasn't
demanding or threatening or pounding the table,"
Lott said afterward.
END QUOTE