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Rangel: 'Don't leave me swinging in the wind


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Townhall:

A combative Rep. Charles Rangel told the House on Tuesday he's not resigning despite 13 charges of wrongdoing and demanded the ethics committee not leave him "swinging in the wind."

Rangel, who is 80, spoke without notes in an extraordinary, often emotional 37-minute speech that defied his lawyers' advice to keep quiet about his case.

The New York Democrat and 40-year House veteran had a sharp message in dismissing fellow Democrats who, worried about election losses, want him to quit: "If I can't get my dignity back here, then fire your best shot in getting rid of me through expulsion."

Expulsion is the harshest penalty that can result from an ethics case. It would be highly unlikely in Rangel's case because the former chairman of the tax-writing Ways and Means Committee is not accused of corruption.

Rangel, who said he has lost much sleep during the two-year investigation, was interrupted by applause twice _ including when he said: "I am not going away. I am here." A few Republicans clapped, but most support came from Democrats.

The Democrat from Harlem acknowledged that he made mistakes, especially in belatedly reporting hundreds of thousands of dollars in assets and income, but he insisted he was not corrupt. While the ethics committee charged him with doing legislative favors _ for donors he solicited to a Charles Rangel college center _ Rangel said he was only guilty of "grabbing the wrong stationery." He referred to solicitations he sent on his official letterhead.

Several Republican lawmakers embraced Rangel's call for swifter handling of ethics cases.

"Two years is longer than a normal criminal case usually takes," said Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif. He said charges against Rangel should have been brought much earlier.

Rep. Tom Cole, R-Okla., said Rangel drove home the point that lawmakers deserve "a fair process" when ethics allegations arise.
"I'm not asking for leniency. I'm asking for exposure of the facts," Rangel said in demanding that the ethics panel expedite the hearing of his case.

Rangel noted the committee is scheduled to convene Sept. 13, the day before his primary election, but that the main part of his ethics trial would not come until later in the fall.

"Don't leave me swinging in the wind until November," he demanded.

Rangel, known for his friendly, backslapping demeanor but also his toughness on legislative issues, said he had his own interpretation of President Barack Obama's remarks in a CBS interview on July 30. The president said: "He's somebody who's at the end of his career. I'm sure that what he wants is to be able to end his career with dignity. And my hope is that it happens."snip
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