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Lobbyist Linked To Lawmaker Trips

At least two aides to House Majority Leader Tom DeLay and two Democratic congressmen received travel expenses initially paid by lobbyist Jack Abramoff on his credit card or by his firm, internal records of the lobbying firm show.

Longtime House ethics rules that applied to the 1996 and 1997 trips to the Northern Mariana Islands, a U.S. territory, have strictly prohibited lawmakers and their staffs from accepting any congressional trips from lobbyists or their firms.

DeLay's office and one of the lawmakers, Congressman James Clyburn said they had no knowledge that Abramoff or his firm paid the expenses. The office of Congressman Bennie Thompson did not return several calls seeking comment.

Abramoff's lobbying is under criminal investigation.

Meanwhile, a new poll shows sagging support for DeLay in his home district in Texas. The majority leader has been at the center of a political storm over alleged ethics violations.

According to a poll by KPRC-TV in Houston, 51 percent of voters in DeLay's 22nd congressional district disapprove of the job he's doing, while 42 percent approve.

Asked whether DeLay should remain or resign as House majority leader, or completely resign from Congress, 39 percent said he should keep his leadership post, 21 percent said he should resign as leader and 36 percent said he should quit Congress entirely.

The poll of 548 registered voters, conducted for KPRC by SurveyUSA, had a margin of error of 4.3 percent

According to documents obtained by The Associated Press, Abramoff pressed his clients, the Northern Marianas government, to reimburse him for the travel because of concerns the payments might draw scrutiny from the House committee that investigates lawmakers' conduct.

"I ... expect to receive a call tomorrow or Tuesday from the House ethics committee, asking for an update as to the reimbursement situation and, possibly, our outstanding bill. They are watching the trips very closely," Abramoff wrote a Marianas official in December 1996.

Abramoff and his employer at the time, the Preston Gates law and lobbying firm, represented the Pacific island government. One priority was to persuade Congress to block efforts by then-President Bill Clinton's administration to regulate alleged "sweatshop" garment factories. The rules never were enacted.

The records state Preston Gates paid hotel and airfare for Thompson and Clyburn for travel to the island in January 1997. The two lawmakers filed reports to Congress saying a private, nonprofit group, not Abramoff's firm, paid the travel.

Clyburn said in an interview he had never heard of Abramoff at the time, and provided a copy of letter showing he was invited by the nonprofit foundation. "That's all I know about it," he said.
The Preston Gates billing documents also included a hotel bill for DeLay's chief of staff in 1996, Ed Buckham, and travel upgrades for Buckham and another DeLay aide at the time, Tony Rudy. DeLay was then the third-ranking House Republican.

The documents show Abramoff used his credit card to pay at least some congressional travel to the islands, and then sent urgent e-mails because the territorial government was slow in paying, leaving the travelers possibly in violation of House rules.

"Per instructions from Preston, we have been using Jack Abramoff's credit card for past tickets," a travel agent e-mailed the island government on Dec. 11, 1996, regarding airfare. "I have been asked to contact you regarding direct payment . . . for future tickets."

DeLay spokesman Dan Allen said his office believes the trip expenses for the two aides were paid by the government of the Northern Marianas, not Abramoff.

"Under House ethics rules, House employees may accept travel paid for by a governmental entity with no restrictions on the staff's ability to accept travel by such a governmental entity — whether in terms of trip duration, accompanying individuals or otherwise," Allen said.

An Abramoff spokesman, Andrew Blum, said Monday, "The tradition of lobbyists traveling with members of Congress to visit various jurisdictions so that they could learn about issues that impact the Congress and government policy is well known. Mr. Abramoff once again is being singled for actions that are commonplace in Washington, D.C., and are totally proper."

Questions also have been raised about whether DeLay's airfare to London and Scotland in 2000 was charged to an Abramoff credit card, and whether other expenses on the same trip were billed to a credit card used by Buckham, who had become a lobbyist by that time.

Jan Baran, a Washington lawyer who specializes in ethics rules and campaign finance, said lawmakers and their aides probably would avoid any findings of wrongdoing by demonstrating they had no knowledge of the lobbyist payments.

"If a member generally doesn't know what's going on, it's hard to see how the member would be held to violate ethics rules," he said.

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