Jim Nicholson

The Secretary of Veterans’ Affairs has resigned his post effective October 1, 2007. Read more here.

A post by Peter Slutsky

While We Wait For Libby Sentencing…

Democratic strategist James Carville has had some long-standing problems with the blogosphere. I have never attacked him to date and I have even defended some of his comments and actions to my friends and colleagues. However, I was just reading through the sentencing letters sent on Scooter Libby’s behalf to Judge Reggie Walton and I’m pretty appalled to see one of the letters is sent by Carville and his wife, Mary Matalin.

James Carville is not an elected official and he is free to support anyone who he would like, but Libby is a convicted criminal and he should not have the support of Democrats who are working to clean up government and hold Bush and Cheney accountable for their illegal and unethical activity in regards to Valerie Plame and the Iraq War.

This just shows that when you live in Washington, D.C. for too long, you forget who you are and you lose touch with reality. Sure, Libby might be a nice guy, but he was convicted of a crime and he deserves to pay his debt to society.

The bottom line is that James Carville should not be lending his support to a criminal. Oh, and Rep. William Jefferson should resign immediately!

A post by Peter Slutsky

Later On Wolfy…

Shananana shananana hey hey hey goodbye.

Wolfowitz

NPR has more.

ABC News

is reporting that World Bank President Paul Wolfowitz will resign his post on June 30, 2007.

A post by Peter Slutsky

CNN Answers My Prayers

Ummmmm…someone at CNN is not going to be employed on Monday. If only this mistake were true. Happy Friday, y’all.

Bush Resigns

The Politico

newspaper in Washington, D.C. is reporting that “Republican officials operating at the behest of the White House have begun seeking a possible successor to Attorney General Alberto Gonzales.”

“Time For Rumsfeld To Go”

is the title of a rare joint editorial that will run in the Army Times, the Air Force Times, and the Navy Times on Monday. This is very bad news for the President and Secretary Rumsfeld. You can read the editorial at Daily Kos.

A post by Peter Slutsky

Denny Must Go

Denny Hastert

House Speaker Dennis Hastert (R-IL) is in big trouble. He’s desperately back pedaling, trying to find excuses, but at the end of the day, Hastert cares more about politics than he does this great nation.

Hastert is part of a major Congressional cover up - an organized campaign to protect a known pedophile in the GOP ranks.

A message to Dennis Hastert: resign your post, Mr. Speaker. You are the leader of a party that has lost touch with American values and you must go.

Even the uber-conservative Washington Times agrees.

Time to go, Denny. Sorry, but you brought it on yourself.

British Prime Minister

Tony Blair announced today that he will resign his post sometime in the next twelve months. The New York Times reports, “The announcement comes a day after an extraordinary procession of eight junior aides resigned to protest Mr. Blair’s refusal to set a date to leave office soon.”

A post by Matthew Slutsky

Another GOP Loser Gone!

Bob Ney
Rep. Bob Ney (R-OH), a powerful and VERY crooked Congressman, who is waiting any day to be indicted by the Department of Justice has just announced that he will NOT seek re-election in the fall. Rep. Ney is being out-fundraised and out-campaigned by Democrat Zack Space and the heat of this campaign and the pressure of the law has finally caught up with him.

From the Associated Press:

U.S. Rep. Bob Ney, dogged by an influence peddling probe in Washington, will not seek re-election, state Sen. Joy Padgett said early Monday.

Ney called Padgett on Saturday and asked the fellow Republican to run in his place, saying that defending himself has been a strain on his family, she said.

“It’s a very sad time,” Padgett said of Ney’s decision, first reported by the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review on its Web site.

She said Ney told her, “that there’s only so much he can take. He said, ‘I have to do this.’”

Padgett told The Associated Press she would run for Ney’s seat.

Calls to Ney’s office and staff were not immediately returned. He has not been charged and has denied wrongdoing.

Padgett said Ney told her he intends to serve the remainder of his term.

The six-term congressman from Heath in central Ohio had insisted he would not resign even if indicted over his dealings with now-convicted lobbyist Jack Abramoff. In his first primary test in a decade, Ney won 68 percent of the vote May 2 against a little-known opponent.

However, he faced a tough challenge in November from Democrat Zack Space, who had made the Justice Department’s investigation into Ney a focus of his campaign.

For the first three months of 2006, Ney’s campaign spent more than it raised, a deficit he blamed on mounting legal costs. In the past three months, it was unusually intense campaigning in his expansive rural district that caused the incumbent to spend $52,675 more than donors gave him, he said.

“I’m embattled and attacked; I understand that,” Ney told The AP last month after Space raised about $190,000 more than Ney for the quarter.

Ney, 52, told the Tribune-Review that his family had not asked him to drop out, but he wanted to spare them anyway.