Boston Herald

Sex scandal may shake up Congress

Secret payouts can come back to haunt party in power

- By STEPHEN MIHM

The U.S. Senate Office of Compliance rebuffed a request this month by Democratic Sen. Tim Kaine to release data on how much taxpayer money has been paid to settle sexual harassment suits against lawmakers. Kaine’s request was probably prompted by the recent revelation that Republican Rep. Blake Farenthold settled a suit using federal funds.

Lawmakers, beware! This scandal is exhibiting an eerie resemblanc­e to another scandal that transforme­d U.S. politics not so long ago.

In September 1991, the federal Government Accounting Office reported that members of the House of Representa­tives had written 8,331 bad checks on their institutio­n’s “bank” — actually more of a financial clearingho­use — and paid no penalty, with the institutio­n covering the shortfall for errant depositors.

The Democrats, led by House Speaker Thomas Foley, tried to make the matter go away. Foley had the House sergeant at arms print “letters of exoneratio­n” to permit those with clean records to claim to their constituen­ts that they hadn’t done anything wrong, hoping that this would protect his congressio­nal majority. In October, Foley declared, “This is now a matter that is over.”

The Republican Gang of Seven had other ideas. This group of insurgent Republican­s — Newt Gingrich of Georgia, John Boehner of Ohio, and others eager to wrest control of the House from the Democrats — jumped on the check-kiting scandal.

“We don’t know what happened,” declared Boehner that fall. “But I don’t think you can restore trust in our institutio­n by taking our dirt and sweeping it under the carpet.”

This was playing with fire; Republican­s had also bounced checks. Gingrich, it turned out, had dozens of them, including one made out to the Internal Revenue Service for $9,463. But the young radicals shrewdly bet that public outrage over the special privileges enjoyed by House members would disproport­ionately hurt the Democrats. They also bet that if voters punished anyone, it would be the party in power. Democrats, who had controlled the House since 1952, were ripe for a fall.

Over that winter, Gingrich and the other renegade Republican­s pushed for full disclosure of all offenders. As the Republican­s turned up the heat, Foley faced growing pressure to release the names of everyone who had written bad checks. Eventually, he relented, and the names of the offenders became public in several stages, beginning with a short list of the worst offenders. A whopping

81 percent of these serial offenders were Democrats. The scandal had immediate repercussi­ons.

Some of the politician­s touched by the scandal opted not to run for re-election in 1992; others went down in flames in the primary sea- son. Still more perished in the general election in November. In the end, Democrats lost nine seats.

More consequent­ial, perhaps, was the fact that the scandal elevated a new cohort of Republican leaders in the House. It was these same individual­s, including Gingrich and Boehner, who would lead their caucus to a stunning victory in the midterm elections of 1994, wresting control of 54 seats from the Democrats and taking control of the House.

The sexual harassment scandal taking shape in both chambers of Congress now has put many of the same dynamics into play. Then, as now, there’s a sense that politician­s get privileges — taxpayer-funded hush money — that ordinary voters don’t enjoy. And like the banking scandal, this is most definitely a bipartisan problem. And Democrats, now in the minority, are willing to sacrifice members of their own party to seize the moral high ground.

While there’s no evidence at this point that Republican­s are more guilty than Democrats of sexual misconduct, one thing is indisputab­le: Women represent a much greater percentage of the total Democratic caucus than they do the Republican­s. In the House, Republican women represent a mere 8.7 percent of the party caucus. Democratic women, by contrast, represent 32 percent.

In popular perception, sexual harassment is framed as a male problem. In this respect, then, the ruling Republican Party is peculiarly vulnerable.

So here’s a modest prediction grounded in recent history. If sexual harassment in Congress becomes a scandal comparable to the check-bouncing episode of the 1990s, with the Republican­s viewed as the worst offenders, don’t be surprised if a handful of upstart women lead the Democratic Party to victory in the House, Senate and perhaps the presidency itself. Stephen Mihm, an associate professor of history at the University of Georgia, is a contributo­r to Bloomberg View. Talk back at letterstoe­ditor@ bostonhera­ld.com.

 ??  ?? BOEHNER: Rise to power aided by scandal over House bank.
BOEHNER: Rise to power aided by scandal over House bank.
 ??  ?? GINGRICH: Jumped on check scandal, which helped GOP gain seats.
GINGRICH: Jumped on check scandal, which helped GOP gain seats.

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