DeLay Steps Away From Spotlight
Amid Scandal, Former House Majority Leader Drops Re-election Bid
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DeLay Steps Away
Former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay announced that he is resigning from Congress. Gloria Borger reports on the fallout from DeLay's downfall.
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DeLay On His Resignation
CBS News RAW: In an interview with KTRK, former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay speaks about why he plans to resign his seat in Congress and what his future plans are.
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DeLay Calls It Quits
Amid a corruption scandal and a criminal indictment, former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay announced that will resign from Congress in mid-June. Claudia Coffey reports.
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Former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay announces his intention to resign, April 4, 2006. (CBS)
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Former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
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DeLay's Dilemma
Here's a look at the career and the woes of the former House majority leader.
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Although the announcement shocked many, it wasn't a surprise that DeLay's political future was in limbo, because his reputation in Washington had been seriously tarnished — among both Democrats and Republicans, CBS News correspondent Gloria Borger reports.
Republicans have come to understand that DeLay is a liability. He's under indictment in Texas for money laundering — and two of his former staffers have pleaded guilty in the Jack Abramoff congressional bribery scandal. But DeLay repeatedly has said he has "no fear" of any investigation.
DeLay said he is resigning because voters of his congressional district "deserve a campaign about the vital national issues that they care most about and that affect their lives every day, and not a campaign focused solely as a referendum on me."
For one of the few times during DeLay's 21 years in Congress, Republicans have reason to worry that they could lose his seat in November's election. DeLay said his love of and loyalty to the party played a role in his decision. He said by staying in it could let Democrats "steal this seat with a negative campaign." A former Democratic congressman is running for DeLay's seat.
Legal experts say the Justice department is circling him. Borger reports that the growing tide of GOP discussions of DeLay's political future might mostly be a money game. Republican House leaders had been discussing Delay's future with him for months.
"We would have spent five or more millions of dollars defending this seat," said Vin Weber, a Republican lobbyist who served with DeLay.
DeLay's surprise decision came less than a month after he won his party's primary election.
He has been known for his fundraising prowess and a bare-knuckled political style that earned him the nickname "The Hammer," reports CBS News correspondent Bob Fuss. He was a key force in advancing the conservative agenda of President George W. Bush, a fellow Texan.
Mr. Bush, who has been generally supportive of DeLay during his career implosion that led to Tuesday's action, wished DeLay well and said the congressman had made a difficult decision. Mr. Bush predicted, however, that DeLay's problems will not harm the party.
"My own judgment is that our party will continue to succeed, because we are the party of ideas," Bush told reporters at the White House.
It was unclear whether the DeLay situation would further weaken Bush. Public approval of the president, who is constitutionally forbidden to run for a third term, already is near the nadir of his five years in office.
Polls have shown his popularity fading principally because of the slogging pace of the Iraq war and reconstruction; the mishandling of relief for victims of catastrophic hurricanes last year; a furor over the unannounced decision to turn over significant management of major U.S. seaports; and other perceived episodes of political and managerial mistakes.
DeLay called Mr. Bush on Monday, and the two talked while the president flew on Air Force One back to Washington from an appearance in Ohio, White House press secretary Scott McClellan said Tuesday.
"The president thanked him for his service and all that he accomplished and wished him all the best," McClellan said. "Congressman DeLay has been a good ally."
The latest jolt in DeLay's career culminated a slide from the peak of power that began 1 1/2 years ago when the House of Representatives Ethics Committee admonished him for three incidents of misuse of his office as majority leader.
Slowly at first, the succeeding months drew the scent of scandal ever closer to DeLay. Finally, in January, he gave up his determination to reclaim his job as majority leader, the second-ranking House official, and members rejected DeLay's hand-picked successor.
As Borger reports, the former House majority leader's resignation could make the Hill a very different place.
©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.


