Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.
Saturday, Sept. 21
The Indiana Daily Student

world

Congressional Republicans in trouble

House seizes documents related to Foley messages

WASHINGTON -- The House ethics committee approved four dozen subpoenas for documents and testimony Thursday, launching an investigation of a congressional page sex scandal that has imperiled Republican prospects in next month's elections.\nThe committee's chairman, Rep. Doc Hastings, R-Wash., said a newly formed subcommittee's investigation "will go wherever our evidence leads us."\nAsked if embattled House speaker Dennis Hastert was among those subpoenaed, Hastings would not comment.\n"We are looking at weeks, not months," said the committee's senior Democrat, Rep. Howard Berman of California.\nA House GOP official said Hastert, fighting to save his job, will take responsibility for the unfolding scandal but insist that he will stay on as leader of House Republicans at a news conference scheduled later in Batavia, Ill.\nHastert will ask former FBI director Louis Freeh to also examine the page system and make recommendations on how to improve the program, which is almost as old as the Congress itself. Freeh headed the FBI from 1993 to 2001 during Bill Clinton's presidency.\nHastert also will also ask the Ethics Committee to consider new rules so that anyone making inappropriate contact with pages be disciplined. In the case of staff, they would be fired; lawmakers would be subject to expulsion, the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity so as to not upstage Hastert.\nHastings said the subpoenas cover lawmakers and staff as well as appointed officers of the House.\nHastert praised the ethic committee's actions and said he would instruct his attorney to cooperate with the panel "in getting to the bottom of this."\n"The committee is moving to get control of this situation and find answers to provide all of us peace of mind," he said in a statement.\n"Any person who is found guilty of improper conduct involving sexual contact or communication with a page should immediately resign, be fired or subjected to a vote of expulsion," Hastert said.

Get stories like this in your inbox
Subscribe