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<div><tt>Dan Popkey of the Idaho Statesman nails it.</tt></div>
<div><tt><br></tt></div>
<div><tt>m.</tt></div>
<div><tt>****</tt></div>
<div><tt><font color="#000000">Popkey: Craig hopes to redeem himself
for future lucrative job as lobbyist</font></tt></div>
<div><tt><font color="#000000"><br></font></tt></div>
<div><tt><font color="#000000"> - Idaho Statesman<br>
Edition Date: 10/17/07<br>
<br>
There is a model for the rehabilitation of a disgraced senator, and
Sen. Larry Craig knows it well.<br>
<br>
Craig sat on the Ethics Committee that recommended the expulsion of
his friend Sen. Bob Packwood, R-Ore. After the committee's unanimous
vote in September 1995, Packwood resigned, ending a fight that lasted
almost three years.<br>
<br>
But 12 months later, Packwood hung up his shingle. By 1999, his
company was billing more than $1.5 million a year to lobby Congress
alone. His clients have included Northwest Airlines, Marriott, the
AFL-CIO, and energy, finance, trucking, telecommunications and health
care industries.<br>
<br>
Craig appears to be engineering a campaign to reconstruct his image
and make him employable. He's following the lead of Packwood and a
second man humiliated by sexual misconduct, Bill Clinton. Craig
advocated Clinton's removal from office, only to see him become an
asset to his wife's presidential ambition.<br>
<br>
Redemption is possible, and it begins with a good PR campaign. Craig's
appearances on NBC's "Matt Lauer Reports" and on KTVB on
Tuesday are one aspect of the plan. A second is Craig's appeal of a
ruling denying his motion to withdraw his guilty plea for disorderly
conduct. The third is Craig's reversal of his "intent" to
resign, which keeps him near friends likely to hire him when he
retires in January 2009.<br>
<br>
Craig has reason to believe he can recover and make a nice living.
Craig's offense involved an allegation of soliciting gay sex in an
airport men's room. The images are off-putting and have prompted a
frenzy of jokes as Craig's "wide stance" excuse has become
legend. Both Packwood and Craig were parodied on Saturday Night Live,
sure proof of public disgrace.<br>
<br>
But what Packwood did was more aggressive, egregious and disgusting
than Craig's conduct.<br>
<br>
The Ethics Committee found Packwood engaged in a pattern of sexual
misconduct from 1969 to 1990, which included unwanted advances on 18
women, including Senate and campaign staff, an elevator operator, a
restaurant hostess and a hotel clerk. The committee found Packwood
fondled, kissed, pulled hair and forced his tongue into women's
mouths.<br>
<br>
As ugly as all that, Craig didn't sever his friendship. On the day
Craig voted to recommend expulsion for Packwood, the pair hugged.
Craig then began sobbing, before entering the Senate cloakroom with
his hands over his face.<br>
<br>
Now, Craig can take heart in Packwood's recovery. I spoke with
Packwood this week, but he declined comment.<br>
<br>
Among his first big clients was Northwest Airlines, which hired
Packwood in 1997 to press for changes in a trade agreement to permit
more landings at Japanese airports.<br>
<br>
Elliott Seiden was Northwest's vice president for government affairs
and worked with Packwood for two years.<br>
<br>
"He was just terrific," Seiden told me. "I never
detected a hint of lack of interest in how Sen. Packwood was
presenting our issue because of the circumstances of his leaving the
Senate. Everyone with whom he spoke knew he was an expert on trade. So
why would you discount his views because of something that happened in
his personal life?"<br>
<br>
Packwood's expertise was built over 27 years in the Senate, with two
stints as chairman of the Finance Committee. He was a major author of
the Tax Reform Act of 1986, which made him attractive to many
clients.<br>
<br>
Seiden is now a consultant in Virginia. He said Northwest was mindful
of Packwood's personal troubles, but any doubts were trumped by his
skills. "The view at Northwest was he's a highly respected man in
his field. Americans are fair people and forgiving people."<br>
<br>
The American Public Power Association took a similar view. The APPA
represents community-owned electric utilities serving over 44 million
people. In 1999, there was a threat to the tax-exempt status of bonds
issued to finance transmission facilities. APPA hired Packwood, who
had been an ally in Congress and knew the Tax Code.</font></tt></div>
<div><tt><font color="#000000"><br>
"He understood our issue and had a record of success with other
clients," said Alan Richardson, then and now CEO of APPA.<br>
<br>
Richardson also knows Craig, whose marketable expertise is in energy
and natural resources, including agriculture, forestry, mining, oil
and gas and nuclear power. "There have been fewer than 2,000 U.S.
senators since the founding of our republic," said Richardson.
"It's a pretty exclusive club and anyone who leaves continues to
be a member."<br>
<br>
Asked to assess Craig's job prospects, Richardson said, "I don't
know, but I think it's probably more time heals all wounds. Larry
still does have some friends."<br>
<br>
Craig is not a wealthy man. He needs his $165,200 Senate salary to pay
the bills. He can count on a pension of about $100,000 annually, but
he knows the potential to make far more.<br>
<br>
I spoke with Craig about money on Aug. 9, the day after his guilty
plea was entered but 18 days before it became public. Craig told me he
hadn't decided whether to seek a fourth term in 2008, but acknowledged
he could make upwards of $600,000 a year as a lobbyist.<br>
<br>
"You step out of the House or Senate, if you have seniority,
you've developed areas of expertise," Craig said. "Quite a
bit can be made, there's no doubt about that, whether you're
representing Idaho interests or national interests."<br>
<br>
So if you're wondering why Craig broke his vow to quit and prolongs
the agony on local and national TV, wonder no more. He's doing it for
himself.</font></tt><br>
<tt><font color="#000000"></font></tt></div>
<div><tt><font color="#000000">Dan Popkey: 377-6438</font></tt></div>
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