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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Rangel faces ethics action

House panel investigating lawmaker

Rep. Charlie Rangel, D-N.Y., answers questions from the media Thursday.  (Associated Press)
Lisa Mascaro Tribune Washington bureau

WASHINGTON – Democratic Rep. Charles B. Rangel, once among the most powerful members of Congress, will face a hearing on charges of violating House ethics rules after a panel of his peers formally accused him of wrongdoing Thursday.

For two years, House ethics investigators pored over records of the New York congressman’s travel and record-keeping in response to complaints about his corporate-paid trips, his use of several rent-stabilized apartments and other allegations.

Rangel, 80, could face reprimand, censure or expulsion if the House Ethics Committee determines he violated rules. Any such sanction would be subject to a vote of the full House.

Not since 2002, when Congress was investigating Democrat James Traficant of Ohio, has the secretive Ethics Committee convened such a proceeding. Rangel, who has been in Congress for 40 years, is expected to mount a vigorous defense.

“For over two years I’ve been asking them to look at this and to throw out what I believe has no substance,” Rangel told reporters at the Capitol on Thursday. “I don’t have any fear at all, politically or personally, what they come up with.”

The committee appointed a panel to hear his case and said those members would hold a public meeting on Thursday. At some point, the adjudicatory panel will hold hearings that could last several days as lawmakers decide whether ethics investigators have proven their case. No formal charges have been made public.

Rangel requested the Ethics Committee investigation in July 2008 after published reports concerning his corporate-paid trips to the Caribbean, his use of several rent-stabilized apartments in a luxury Harlem building and private fundraising activities that used his office stationery.

The ethics proceeding is being convened in the midst of a Democratic fight to retain control of the House in this fall’s midterm elections, and Thursday’s announcement carried potent political overtones. Republicans pounced on the investigation, signaling it would become part of their election-year message.

Democrats won control of the chamber in 2006 in part because of voter disapproval of Republican ethics scandals, including an investigation of House Republican leader Rep. Tom DeLay of Texas.

Democrats promised a new approach and implemented stricter ethics rules.

Rep. John Boehner of Ohio, now the Republican leader, said Thursday that the ethics panel’s action “is a sad reminder of Speaker (Nancy) Pelosi’s most glaring broken promise: to ‘drain the swamp’ in Washington.”

In his long career, Rangel rose to one of the most influential positions in Congress: chairman of the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee. Amid the lengthy investigation, Rangel grudgingly relinquished that seat in March.