February 11, 2009 5:56 PM

Foley's Folly Opens Door For Democrats

(CBS/AP)  Considered a long shot just two days ago to unseat a prominent House Republican, Democrat Tim Mahoney on Saturday began to talk about the scandal surrounding Rep. Mark Foley that may propel him to Congress.

Foley resigned Friday after revelations that he exchanged raunchy electronic messages with a teenage boy, a former congressional page, sending the Florida GOP scrambling for a replacement candidate less than six weeks before the election.

Mahoney on Saturday criticized Republican leaders for not fully investigating Foley when e-mails to the 16-year-old page were brought to their attention about a year ago. Pages are high school students who attend classes under congressional supervision and work as messengers.

"It looks to me that it was more important to hold onto a seat and to hold onto power than to take care of our children," Mahoney said. "I think that's wrong. I think that's what's wrong with Washington."

The office of the Speaker of the House said Saturday that it had become aware of the e-mails between Foley and the page in the fall of 2005 – but no one in the Speaker's office knew the exact content of the messages.

According to a statement for Dennis Hastert's office, Rep. Rodney Alexander's Chief of Staff first raised the issue of Foley's actions and was referred to the Clerk of the House.

"The Clerk asked to see the text of the email," Hastert's statement reads. "Congressman Alexander's office declined citing the fact that the family wished to maintain as much privacy as possible and simply wanted the contact to stop. The Clerk asked if the email exchange was of a sexual nature and was assured it was not."

Read the statement from Dennis Hastert's office

Read Rep. Foley's E-mail Exchange (from the Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington)
Mahoney, a millionaire financial services executive who switched parties last year before entering the race, campaigned Saturday with Sen. John Kerry.

The Massachusetts senator was in the state to raise money for Democratic congressional candidates and party gubernatorial nominee Jim Davis. About Foley, he said, "It speaks for itself. Every parent in America is disgusted and disturbed by it."

Foley, R-Fla., who is single, apologized Friday for letting down his family and constituents. Hours after his resignation, Foley's former colleagues engineered a vote to let the House ethics committee decide whether an investigation is needed.

In Florida, Democrats found themselves suddenly competitive in a district where Foley, 52, had been considered a sure thing.

His resignation further complicates the political landscape for Republicans, who are fighting to retain control of Congress. Democrats need to win a net of 15 Republican seats to regain the power they lost in 1994.

Florida Republican officials on Saturday were still discussing the procedure to replace Foley as a candidate in the South Florida district, which President Bush won with 55 percent of the vote in 2004 and is now in play for November.

Though Florida ballots have already been printed with Foley's name and cannot be changed, any votes for Foley will count toward the party's choice.

State Rep. Joe Negron has been mentioned as a possible candidate. He would enter the race with several hundred thousand dollars left over from an attorney general campaign that he ended to avoid a primary with former U.S. Rep. Bill McCollum.

"Tim Mahoney is spending his afternoon hanging out with John Kerry in Palm Beach County, and I think most voters in District 16 don't want a John Kerry Democrat representing them in Congress," Negron said. He said he has received the backing of many of state Republicans.

Foley, who represented an area around Palm Beach County and was chairman of the Missing and Exploited Children's Caucus, had introduced legislation in July to protect children from exploitation by adults over the Internet. He also sponsored other legislation designed to protect minors from abuse and neglect.

Foley e-mailed the page in August 2005. The boy was 16 at the time. Foley asked him how he was doing after Hurricane Katrina and what he wanted for his birthday. The congressman also asked the boy to send a photo of himself, according to excerpts of the e-mails that were originally released by ABC News.

ABC News reported Friday that Foley also engaged in a series of sexually explicit instant messages with current and former pages, all male.

© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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by rhondaanne-2009 October 1, 2006 7:03 PM EDT
Can someone please enlighten me as to when law enforcement would get involved? An ethics committee investigation? That hardly sounds sufficient. He sounds like a pedophile, and I seriously doubt if this is an isolated incident. Do they not have enough info to get a search warrant for his computer? The guy is probably trolling MySpace for young boys. Does anyone know the procedure here?
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by bluestardad October 1, 2006 6:21 PM EDT
Congressional Righteousness
A grave injustice is upon us and so to a double standard, that the very Republican led Congress, who was shouting from their righteous podiums for accountability of the Catholic Church Leadership for not reporting suspected pedophiles within the ranks of the church clergy, has now been responsible for covering for a member of Congress who is and has been openly soliciting underage Congressional Page Boys for over a year. This blatant betrayal of public trust by those entrusted to make the very Laws of the Land can not be permitted to go unanswered, must immediately be investigated, and those responsible for the cover up and the crime held accountable to the American People.

Michael C. Boetjer
Captain U. S. Army
Double Blue Star Father
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by diamtool October 1, 2006 3:32 AM EDT
i started off this morning thinking: those slimy bunch of right wing hypocites! but someone pointed out that these are just basically really sanctimonious people, and sanctimonious people just naturally gravitate to the right wing because it suits their nature, the illusion of moral superiority appeals to them. They are at least as morally challenged as normal folks, (or more so, apparently,) but they feel that by spouting intolerance and putting on airs of moral certitude they can maintain their righteous facade. Don't worry, this guy will be sobbing like Jimmy Swaggart or Jim Bakker before the week is out, and the right wingers will point fingers at anyone and everyone but their pompous selves and try to change the subject. It's not "Morning in America" anymore. It's mourning for America.
God Bless our Troops
God forgive George Bush
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by smartfixrman October 1, 2006 2:05 AM EDT
I commented a little yesterday, but would like to add a few more. I too am apalled at the people who knew about this for a year before they said anything. Makes you wonder if they ever would have, if it had not come to the publics attention. What really disgusts me, is that Foley was allowed to continue acting like he was trying to protect children, while he was secretly trying to seduce them. Now the Republicans are wondering about wether to start an investigation? The only reason they are delaying, is because so many of them helped cover this up, that they know they will face harsh criticism for it, as they should. Also once again it will be our tax dollars paying for this investigation. I hope all responsible for this cover up pay deeply.
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by spydr131 October 1, 2006 1:49 AM EDT
Nothing "raunchy" or sexual in the emails to this page I think. Still, this kid was smart enough to decided he was not comfortable with them. What I am sure Foley was really afraid of is the other messages that are coming out, like "do I make you *****". The Republicans should have figured something had happened, since the parents did not want further contact by Foley with their son, and just let it go instead. I am NOT cutting the Democrats any slack however. You know they had to know also, that is the way politics is played nowdays, and they just laid in wait at the kids' expense. They had already, in a past election, tried to make Foley out as a homosexual. (Isn't it nice how Democrats are fine with *** but, when it serves their political purposes, they use it against people. Remember the hairdresser ads that knocked out another Republican.) So, what we have here, in my view, is the Republicans turning a semi blind eye since they needed him and the Democrats laying in wait to get him with their "Ethics" CORE attack dog. Don't tell me they didn't BOTH know and both let the pages have this guy around for their own ends. A POX on both political parties, no wonder none of us like politician.
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by scottjtepper October 1, 2006 1:22 AM EDT
Rep. Hastert - You are one brave Republican for protecting this paedophile in order to perserve your majority in the House! But then, when it was exposed, you showed even greater moral courage by calling the behavior disgusting and by blasting it. That's what we need more of in Congress. Men of principle like the Repblican leadership. WHen one of their own is outed as a paedophile, and they can no longer keep it secret, they respond the way would expect true Americans to so!

I salute the entire Republican leadership for yet another act of enormous moral courage.
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by staff2--2008 October 1, 2006 1:16 AM EDT
somethings always smell...me thinks it's the republicans...what a bunch of two faced $#%$%...lets get these guys out of office...
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by newsjeff-2009 October 1, 2006 1:15 AM EDT
This ties in with what I have said many times before. It amazes me with all the problems in the country today, our GOP controlled congress and senate have all this idle free time to do things that have nothing to do with running the country or offering solutions to the many problems our country is facing now. Of course the GOP as a whole wants us voters to think everything is going fine in America and republicans should keep control of the house and senate. I am sure if the democrats win in November, one thing that will happen is when 2008 arrives the GOP party will try to find every problem going on in America so they can blame the democrats for it,like the Clintons were supposed to prevent the Sept.11,2001 tragedy even though Clinton wasn't even the president at the time.
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by webdepot October 1, 2006 1:14 AM EDT
this quote is from the article:
"Though Florida ballots have already been printed with Foley's name and cannot be changed, any votes for Foley will count toward the party's choice."
Since when.?? in Florida do they vote for a party or a person.?? Why should a vote cast for Foley be counted toward whatever schmuck is chosen to run in his place.??
That just doesn't sit well with me as being a legal thing to do.. Florida is more messed up than just hanging chads..
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by webdepot October 1, 2006 1:08 AM EDT
I am incensed.... the Republican leadership knew about this a year ago and did nothing??? sweep it under the rug.?? What kind of so-called men are these jerks that claim "family values" as their exclusive domain..
Sacrificing our men and women in an illegal war wasn't enough??? now we find they are willing to sacrifice children to the perverts among them.. as long as they remain in power... just how many of these "revelations" have the Republicans been hiding from the public??
I am so freakin disgusted with the Republican party that I will probably never vote for another Republican as long as I live... voting for a communist would be better.
GOP used to mean Grand Old Party... obviously today's meaning is Greying Old Perverts..
I think the ethics committee needs to be investigated first.... since they obviously dropped the ball on "one of their own"... which is probably no surprise to anyone... Republicans are as crooked as the day is long..
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