Texarkana Gazette

Dennis Hastert’s career as House speaker both arose and ended amid the sex-related scandals of others.

- By Andrew Taylor

WASHINGTON—Dennis Hastert's career as House speaker both arose and ended amid the sex-related scandals of others.

Now, eight years after leaving Congress, Hastert's own legacy is threatened by an indictment charging financial misdeeds— and crypticall­y referring to "misconduct" against an unnamed individual. A person familiar with the matter told The Associated Press Friday that Hastert paid the individual in an apparent effort to conceal decades-old allegation­s involving sexual misconduct.

It's a stunning developmen­t for the former pol, who rose from obscurity to become the most powerful Republican in Congress for eight years, even as he mostly shunned the limelight. He faded quickly from view after leaving Congress in 2007.

"The Denny I served with worked hard on behalf of his constituen­ts and the country," House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said in a statement. "I'm shocked and saddened to learn of these reports."

Hastert was propelled to the speakershi­p in 1998 on the tumultuous December day on which the House impeached President Bill Clinton over the Monica Lewinsky affair. During the raucous debate, the presumptiv­e speaker, Bob Livingston of Louisiana, stunned the political world as he announced he would step down over revelation­s of his own marital infideliti­es.

Hastert rose from the junior ranks of leadership in large part because he was without controvers­y, unlike other contenders such as Tom DeLay, R-Texas, the politicall­y toxic driving force behind Clinton's impeachmen­t. Hastert was a behind-the-scenes operative whose political identity came from smalltown Illinois, where he was a high school wrestling coach and teacher before serving in the state House and then Congress.

"They do call me 'the Coach' on the Hill, and I guess one of my roles is to put other people out there in the limelight," Hastert said at the time, adding that his role was to "move an agenda forward and bring people together."

For eight years, Hastert was a steady hand guiding House Republican­s as they held narrow House majorities. Time and time again, he delivered for President George W. Bush, helping drive major legislatio­n cutting taxes and creating a Medicare prescripti­on drug benefit into law.

Hastert overcame early perception­s that DeLay, known for his hardball tactics, was the real power in the House. The Illinois lawmaker earned the respect and loyalty of colleagues throughout GOP ranks, playing "good cop" to DeLay's "bad cop."

"There's clearly a division within the conference between moderates and the right, and he can bridge that better than anyone," former Rep. John Linder, R-Ga., said at the time.

Rumpled and low-key, Hastert was anything but the polarizing force of his Republican predecesso­r, Newt Gingrich of Georgia, or his own Democratic successor, Nancy Pelosi of California.

"He was viewed as so boring and vanilla, we barely even mentioned him in our communicat­ions against Republican­s," recalls Democratic operative Doug Thornell.

But in 2006, Hastert became embroiled in an election-season controvers­y involving his handling of a scandal involving Rep. Mark Foley, R-Fla., who had been discovered sending inappropri­ate emails and sexually explicit instant messages to former House pages. Hastert was among the GOP lawmakers who knew of the contacts, and the House Ethics Committee concluded that he and his aides had known about some of the messages and hadn't responded aggressive­ly.

The Foley scandal, coming on the heels of indictment­s of lawmakers such as DeLay and Randy "Duke" Cunningham, R-Calif., on other matters, was a tipping point in the election that delivered control of Congress to Democrats. Hastert resigned his seat the following year.

Now, Hastert is facing charges that he broke banking laws and lied to the FBI to conceal efforts to deliver a promised $3.5 million in hush money to someone crypticall­y identified in Justice Department documents as "Individual A" to keep Hastert's "prior misconduct" against that person a secret.

The person familiar with the matter said the payments were an apparent effort to conceal allegation­s of sexual misconduct. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the investigat­ion is ongoing and the allegation­s are not contained in the indictment issued Thursday.

The specific nature of the allegation­s was not immediatel­y clear.

The indictment doesn't say what wrongs Hastert is alleged to have done to Individual A to merit a multimilli­on-dollar payoff, but it takes note that Hastert used to be a high school teacher and coach and says he has known the individual most of his or her life.

Colleagues and confidants were rocked by the indictment.

"Anyone who knows Denny is shocked and confused," said Sen. Mark Kirk, R-Ill.

"There's nobody here who derives any pleasure from reading about the former speaker's legal troubles," said White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest.

Hastert has yet to comment or make a statement. He resigned Thursday from the law firm of Dickstein Shapiro, where he's been a lobbyist since 2008.

 ?? Associated Press ?? House Speaker Dennis Hastert of Illinois gives a thumbs up July 31, 2000, after taking over as chairman of the Republican National Convention in Philadelph­ia.
Associated Press House Speaker Dennis Hastert of Illinois gives a thumbs up July 31, 2000, after taking over as chairman of the Republican National Convention in Philadelph­ia.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States