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There's nothing new about political scandals in the capital city, of course. Marion Barry drew national attention when, as mayor, he was caught on video smoking crack cocaine in 1990. He served six months in prison for cocaine possession. Barry staged a comeback, winning a fourth and final term as mayor, when Congress seized control of city government following years of poor fiscal stewardship. Barry returned to the council in 2004 and has kept his seat despite a 2006 conviction for failing to file tax returns for several years, as well as an arrest for allegedly stalking a former girlfriend. The charges were dropped but drew attention to a $15,000 city contract he had steered to the woman. Barry and Gray have known each other for three decades and worked together frequently. And Barry said recently he considered himself a mentor of sorts to Brown. Now Brown and Thomas are gone, and the investigation of city leaders continues. The allegations come at a delicate time for the city, as district advocates have been lobbying Congress for more autonomy on fiscal affairs. Although district residents were given the freedom to elect a mayor and city council in 1973, Congress has the final say over the district's budget and laws. Efforts to expand voting rights for the D.C. delegate to Congress, Eleanor Holmes Norton, have been bottled up in Congress since Republicans took control of the House of Representatives in 2011. Nick Jeffress, the executive director of the D.C. Republican Committee, said the scandals should make voters think extra hard about electing honest leaders who will have the clout and respect to push the statehood cause. "We need to have that at the forefront of our minds -- who are we electing and what sort of baggage might they bring," Jeffress said. "We need to focus on electing councilmembers who in turn will be able to lobby, hopefully with greater results, to Congress."
But Aquiline said she wasn't convinced the scandals would harm the movement. "My personal hope would be that it would actually work in the opposite fashion," Aquiline said. "I actually think you would have more well-qualified citizens for such a position if we believed that our voice had any power." Council members will meet next week to select an interim chair from among four at-large members. Cheh said the city government is still functioning and officials will work to win back trust. But, she noted, "This is a stain on the government."
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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