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Republicans Try to Maintain Control of US Congress
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http://enews.voanews.com/t?r=279&c=657366&l=1009&ctl=14655B1:A6F02AD83191E1609A6BF300A51D89029574F7DCC14957C0 Several issues
expected to be key in influencing how people vote in next month's
elections Several issues are expected to be key in influencing how
people vote in next month's U.S. congressional elections, from public
perceptions about President Bush's handling of the war in Iraq, [and]
the state of the U.S. economy, to concerns about the issue of
misconduct by lawmakers. VOA's Dan Robinson reports on the latest
developments in investigations involving members of Congress.

The latest polls contain numbers that many political analysts say do
not bode well for Republican party members trying to maintain their
majorities in the House and Senate.

On Iraq, a CNN poll says 51 percent of those surveyed say Democrats in
Congress would do a better job of handling the Iraq situation, versus
34 percent for Republicans.







Rep. Mark Foley (file photo)Republicans also face depressing figures
when it comes to perceptions of their performance on Capitol Hill,
further underscored in polling questions about the scandal involving
former Republican lawmaker Mark Foley.

The Foley matter involves allegations about the former lawmaker's
sexually explicit Internet messages, and other questionable behavior,
with young congressional pages.

The larger issue for Democrats is what Republicans knew about Foley's
activities, when they knew it, and what they did about it - and
whether key leaders or staff attempted a cover-up.

All this week, a special House [of Representatives] ethics committee
meeting in a basement room of the U.S. Capitol has interviewed members
of Congress, and current and former staffers, while a separate federal
probe continues.

Republican Congressman John Shimkus was among those meeting the
inquiry panel on Friday.

"[The committee is trying to find out] who knew what, when and where
and we answered their questions honestly and forthrightly," he said.

House Republican Leader John Boehner and others are expected to go
before the panel next week.







Dennis Hastert (file photo)House Speaker Dennis Hastert, has resisted
calls for his resignation over the Foley controversy, but questions
remain about the actions he or staff members took to deal with the
situation.

But Hastert remains under pressure because of testimony by Kirk
Fordham, a congressional aide who resigned recently, that he told
senior Hastert staff members several years ago about Foley's behavior
- and some other contradictory accounts.

On Thursday, President Bush made a personal appearance with Hastert in
Chicago.

"I am proud to be standing with the current Speaker of the House, who
is going to be the future Speaker of the House," the president said.

Where the Foley scandal will rank in voter's minds when they go to the
polls on November 7 cannot be predicted.

But a USA Today/Gallup poll showed those believing Republicans sought
to cover-up the Foley problems for political reasons outnumbering
those who didn't by 54 to 34 percent, with several polls showing
Americans believe Hastert should step down.

Adding to the Republicans' woes, Republican Congressman Bob Ney
formally entered a guilty plea Friday to criminal conspiracy charges
in connection with the influence-peddling scandal involving former
Washington lobbyist Jack Abramoff.

While he is the first lawmaker to confess to criminal charges in
relation to that scandal, the Abramoff matter earlier led to guilty
pleas by two former aides to ex-Republican Majority Leader, Tom DeLay,
and the conviction of a former White House official, David Safavian.

House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi said the Ney matter demonstrated
the need for a change in Congress.

Asked if Ney's admission of guilt underscored ethical problems of
Republicans, White House spokesman Tony Snow had this response.

"It's important that everybody be policed, Democrats or Republicans,"
he said. "If you have got money in your freezer, or skeletons in your
closet, you better make sure that you're taking care of what's going
on. I think it is incumbent on everybody to behave in a model way."

Snow's reference was to a Democratic House lawmaker, William
Jefferson, who has denied bribery allegations after he was found with
$90,000 in his home freezer, although he has not been formally charged
as part of a federal corruption probe.

The Jefferson matter has received substantially less media attention
in the weeks leading to the November election, despite Republican
attempts to highlight it as a double standard in the congressional
ethics debate.