Big Spring Herald

Despite charges, few call for Democratic Congressma­n Henry Cuellar to resign from office

- By MATTHEW CHOI The Texas Tribune

WASHINGTON (AP) – U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar, D-Laredo, is facing charges of bribery, money laundering and working on behalf of a foreign government. He is the third lawmaker in Congress to face a federal indictment this session.

But unlike his other embattled colleagues, The Texas Tribune reports, Cuellar is not yet facing a barrage of calls for him to resign.

Five days after he was charged, no member of the Texas delegation, Republican or Democrat, has so far called for him to step down.

The few who have offered to discuss the case stress that Cuellar deserves a fair trial like any other American. Beyond Texas, only one member of the House, Rep. Dean Phillips, D-Minnesota, has called on Cuellar to leave office.

The response is a stark contrast to the calls from around Congress for Sen. Bob Menendez, D-New Jersey, to step down after he was indicted on charges of bribery over his connection­s to Egypt.

U.S. Reps. Joaquin Castro and Greg Casarboth called on Menendez to step down last year. The two Democrats both declined to weigh in on Cuellar’s case. Like Cuellar, Castro and Casar both represent districts that include San Antonio.

U.S. Rep. Veronica Escobar, D-El Paso, also called for Menendez to step down last September, but she is barred from discussing the Cuellar case due to her seat on the House Ethics Committee.

Escobar could comment on the Menendez case because the House Ethics Committee does not have jurisdicti­on in the Senate. A host of Texas Democrats also voted to expel former Rep. George Santos, R-New York, after The New York Times uncovered he had fabricated much of his background and he received his own indictment for campaign finance violations.

Six of Texas’ 13 Democrats in the U.S. House voted to expel Santos from Congress last November before he had been convicted of a crime or the House Ethics Committee had concluded its investigat­ion into his conduct (After the Ethics Committee unveiled its report, all but two voted to expel).

“George Santos should resign as Congressma­n-elect. If he refuses, Congress should expel him. He should also be investigat­ed by authoritie­s,” Castro posted on social media after Santos was elected. “Just about every aspect of his life appears to be a lie. We’ve seen people fudge their resume but this is total fabricatio­n.”

Reps. Jasmine Crockett of Dallas, Lloyd Doggett of Austin, Sylvia Garcia of Houston, Vicente Gonzalez of McAllen, Casar and Castro all voted to expel Santos before the House Ethics report.

All declined to weigh in on Cuellar except for Gonzalez and Doggett, who said Cuellar was entitled to his day in court.

Doggett added that Cuellar shouldn’t be in a leadership position after the indictment and commended him for stepping down as top Democrat on the House Appropriat­ions Homeland Security subcommitt­ee.

“We have one of the greatest judicial systems in the world that would be able to hear and judge the case at some point,” Gonzalez said. House Democratic Caucus Chair Pete Aguilar, DCaliforni­a, drew a distinctio­n between Cuellar, a nine-term congressma­n, and Santos, a freshman with no public service record during a Tuesday news conference. Cuellar “has deep relationsh­ips with Republican colleagues, Democratic colleagues,” Aguilar said.

“We know that he is a serious public official, public servant, and I think that’s what sets this apart from other issues and the silliness of George Santos that we’ve had in the past and I think that’s why many of us are treating this a little differentl­y," Aguilar said. "The substance of the allegation­s are very different but the individual­s are also night and day.”

U.S. Rep. Al Green, D-Houston, said Cuellar stepping down would be a “personal decision for him to make.”

Green voted present on the votes to expel Santos, asserting all members of Congress should be assumed innocent until properly convicted. The National Republican Congressio­nal Committee, which was eager to flip Cuellar’s seat last cycle, demanded Democrats call on Cuellar to step down after the indictment.

But Republican members have also remained relatively muted since the indictment went public.

Sen. Ted Cruz, who has a long track record working with Cuellar on bipartisan legislatio­n, said though the “allegation­s are serious, we have a justice system that will resolve his guilt or innocence.”

“Everyone is entitled to a presumptio­n of innocence,” Cruz said at an event in San Antonio. Cruz took the same position on Menendez following his indictment.

U.S. Rep. Monica De La Cruz, who is in a competitiv­e race to hold on to her South Texas seat, and Former Rep. Mayra Flores, who is running against Gonzalez in another South Texas district, did not respond to requests for comment.

Democratic U.S. Rep. Colin Allred, who is challengin­g Cruz in the Senate race, said in a statement that the “allegation­s are concerning, but like every American, Congressma­n Cuellar deserves his day in court to be tried before a jury of his peers.” He voted against expelling Santos before the House Ethics report was released.

Cuellar was charged with setting up fake shell companies with his wife, daughter and staff to receive $600,000 in bribes from Banco Azteca in Mexico and Azerbaijan’s state-run oil company.

Members of Congress are prohibited from simultaneo­usly working as an agent for a foreign government, and the Justice Department alleged Cuellar coordinate­d with Azerbaijan­i agents to kill legislatio­n that went against the U.S.’s interests. Cuellar has considerab­le influence in Congress as a long-serving member and the top Democrat on the House Appropriat­ions subcommitt­ee in charge of Homeland Security.

The position made him a prime target for recruitmen­t by Azerbaijan, which tried to kill legislatio­n that would finance removal of landmines in a thendisput­ed region with Armenia. If convicted, Cuellar could face decades in prison. Cuellar insists on his innocence.

“Congressma­n Cuellar’s actions in this matter—and always—were lawful, transparen­t and in the best interests of the United States, and they were entirely consistent with the actions of many of his colleagues,” Chris Floor, Cuellar’s attorney, said in a statement Friday.

Speaking with reporters outside the House chamber on Tuesday, Cuellar said he had no intention of stepping down. “All I’ve done is to serve my district,” Cuellar said. When asked if he took any bribes, Cuellar said “absolutely not.”

The Justice Department has strict protocols on bringing an indictment against a public official, involving multiple levels of approval.

The department is also sensitive to how indictment­s might impact elections. Cuellar is running for reelection this year in a race that was viewed as mostly safe for him before the indictment, though some forecaster­s have changed their ratings for the race to be more competitiv­e.

“I’m sure the highest levels of the department were aware of, if not approved, consistent with the protocols internally, that an indictment was being brought,” said Michael Weinstein, a former Justice Department trial attorney and federal prosecutor who was involved in political corruption cases.

Cuellar has been in

Congress since 2005 and is a fixture in

South Texas politics.

He is often ranked ideologica­lly as the most conservati­ve member of the House Democratic Caucus and has built a reputation for impressive political resiliency, in part through his fundraisin­g and his ability to curry favor across the political spectrum.

Cuellar faced a competitiv­e primary from progressiv­e immigratio­n lawyer Jessica Cisneros in 2022.

Shortly before the two went off to a runoff, the FBI searched Cuellar’s home in a highly publicized raid that later was reported to be about his connection­s to Azerbaijan.

He was still about to defeat Cisneros that cycle by 0.6 points. Cisneros also declined to comment on Cuellar’s indictment.

Cuellar often works on legislatio­n with Republican­s and has even campaigned for them in the past.

He appeared on television interviews with U.S. Rep. Tony Gonzales, R-San Antonio, who has worked with Cuellar on cross-aisle border issues. Gonzales declined to comment on Cuellar’s indictment.

His resiliency has been an asset to Democrats, particular­ly as Republican­s make forays into flipping more South Texas districts.

Republican­s often say the 28th Congressio­nal District would have been far more competitiv­e if Cisneros had won the Democratic primary.

House Democratic leadership rallied to defend Cuellar’s right to due process.

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries said in a statement Friday that Cuellar had the right to assumed innocence and that he would be stepping down from his committee leadership responsibi­lities.

A spokespers­on for Congressio­nal Hispanic Conference Chair Nanette Barragán, D-California, said in a statement Cuellar “deserves his day in court to respond”.

The Texas Democratic Party Chair Gilberto Hinojosa said in a statement that “anyone who is proven to engage in such practices must be held accountabl­e regardless of party affiliatio­n.”

But he added that “Unlike indictment­s against Republican candidates that voters must consider this November – these allegation­s are completely inconsiste­nt with Congressma­n Cuellar’s decades of distinguis­hed service to his district, to Texas, and to our country.”

Cuellar continues to see the fallout of his indictment. He is restricted from leaving South and West Texas except to go to Washington for work. He had his firearms confiscate­d and his chief of staff, Jacob Hochberg, departed the office this week. Hochberg is now chief of staff for Crockett.

Cuellar’s former chief of staff and longtime campaign aide Colin Strother could also help investigat­ors in the case, The San Antonio Express News reported.

The indictment did not charge Strother but alleged he had helped launder bribes to the Cuellars.

Strother directed a request for comment to his attorney, who did not respond to a Tribune inquiry.

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