MORE ON THE HARRY REID SCANDALs:
On Sunday we editorialized on the Senate minority leader’s smarmy Las Vegas land deal in which he pocketed a cool $1.1 million for the sale of property he hadn’t personally owned for years. Mr. Reid will be “amending” his financial disclosure forms, don’t you know.
Now comes word that Mr. Reid illegally has been using campaign money to mete out Christmas bonuses for staffers at his tony Ritz-Carlton condo. He calls it a “clerical error,” don’t you know.
These aren’t the first ethics questions for Harry Reid, always quick out of the starting blocks to offer sound bites about the Republicans’ “culture of corruption.” The Los Angeles Times and New York Post have reported on another questionable Nevada land deal.
Plus, these thoughts from Investor’s Business Daily:
We never cease to be amazed at the double standard applied to the morals and ethics of Democrats and Republicans in Congress. We’ve already commented on how Republican Mark Foley was forced to resign for sending lewd e-mails to congressional pages, while Democrat Gerry Studds received mere censure and standing ovations after actually having sex with one, being allowed to serve until he decided to retire.
But the case of Senate Minority Leader Reid is a double standard on steroids. The latest episode is his request to file an “amended” ethics statement after the Associated Press revealed he made $1.1 million on a $400,000 investment on property he hadn’t owned for three years; it was the subject of an earlier editorial on these pages. . . .
OK, fine. But why the double standard and the hypocrisy? Is anybody investigating Harry Reid?
We remember the feeding frenzy over former House Speaker Newt Gingrich’s alleged violation of federal tax law in using tax-exempt funds to fund his allegedly political college course, “Renewing American Civilization.”
After a 3 1/2-year ordeal, and a $300,000 fine paid to the House Ethics Committee, the IRS finally ruled that the sponsoring organization, the Progress and Freedom Foundation, “did not serve the private interests of Mr. Gingrich” and was both apolitical and completely legal.
Which is more than you can say about Reid’s shenanigans. Gingrich wasn’t offered a “do-over” or the opportunity to amend anything. In his case, it was sentence first, trial later. But then, unlike Reid, he was both innocent and a Republican.
There does seem to be a double standard here.