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Pennsylvania Democratic Rep. John Murtha Dead at 77

 
 
djjd62
 
Reply Mon 8 Feb, 2010 01:54 pm
Rep. Murtha Dead at 77
By Chad Pergram - FOXNews.com
Pennsylvania Democratic Rep. John Murtha, the first veteran of the Vietnam war and one of the most powerful lawmakers in Congress, died Wednesday morning at Virginia Hospital Center in Arlington, VA, after complications from gallbladder surgery. Murtha was 77.
 
djjd62
 
  1  
Reply Mon 8 Feb, 2010 02:07 pm
http://media.npr.org/assets/news/2010/02/08/murtha_reporter.jpg?t=1265659237&s=2

U.S. Rep. John Murtha, an influential critic of the Iraq War whose congressional career was shadowed by questions about his ethics, died Monday. He was 77.

The Pennsylvania Democrat had been suffering complications from gallbladder surgery. He died at Virginia Hospital Center in Arlington, Va., spokesman Matthew Mazonkey said.

In 1974 Murtha, then an officer in the Marine Reserves, became the first Vietnam War combat veteran elected to Congress. One of Congress' most hawkish Democrats, he wielded considerable clout for two decades as the ranking Democrat on the House subcommittee that oversees Pentagon spending.

Murtha voted in 2002 to authorize President George W. Bush to use military force in Iraq, but Murtha's growing frustration over the administration's handling of the war prompted him in November 2005 to call for an immediate withdrawal of U.S. troops.

"The war in Iraq is not going as advertised. It is a flawed policy wrapped in illusion," he said.

Murtha's opposition to the Iraq war rattled Washington, where the tall, gruff-mannered congressman enjoyed bipartisan respect for his work on military issues. On Capitol Hill, Murtha was seen as speaking for those in uniform when it came to military matters.

Born June 17, 1932, John Patrick Murtha delivered newspapers and worked at a gas station before graduating from Ramsay High School in Mount Pleasant.

Military service was in Murtha's blood. He said his great-grandfather served in the Civil War, his father and three uncles in World War II, and his brothers in the Marine Corps.

He left Washington and Jefferson College in 1952 to join the Marines, where he rose through the ranks to become a drill instructor at Parris Island, S.C., and later served in the 2nd Marine Division.

Murtha moved back to Johnstown and remained with the Marine Reserves until he volunteered to go to Vietnam. He served as an intelligence officer there from 1966 to 1967 and received a Bronze Star and two Purple Hearts.

After his discharge from the Marines, Murtha ran a small business in Johnstown. He went to the University of Pittsburgh on the GI Bill of rights, graduating in 1962 with a degree in economics.

He served in the Pennsylvania House in Harrisburg from 1969 until he was elected to Congress in a special election in 1974. In 1990, he retired from the Marine Reserves as a colonel.

"Ever since I was a young boy, I had two goals in life " I wanted to be a colonel in the Marine Corps and a member of Congress," Murtha wrote in his 2004 book, "From Vietnam to 9/11."

Murtha's criticism of the Iraq war intensified in 2006, when he accused Marines of murdering Iraqi civilians "in cold blood" at Haditha, Iraq, after one Marine died and two were wounded by a roadside bomb.

Critics said Murtha unfairly held the Marines responsible before an investigation was concluded and fueled enemy retaliation. He said the war couldn't be won militarily and such incidents dimmed the prospect for a political solution.

"This is the kind of war you have to win the hearts and minds of the people," Murtha said. "And we're set back every time something like this happens."

In 2008, the Republican Party used Murtha's words against him in TV ads aired less than a month before the election. The ads cited his criticism of the Haditha incident as well as his comment about "racist" voting tendencies of many western Pennsylvania residents. Still, Murtha handily won his 18th full term.

Murtha was a perennial target of critics of so-called pay-to-play politics. He routinely drew the attention of ethical watchdogs with off-the-floor activities from his entanglement in the Abscam corruption probe three decades ago to the more recent scrutiny of the connection between special-interest spending known as earmarks and the raising of cash for campaigns.

Murtha defended the practice of earmarking. The money, he said, benefited his constituents.

Murtha became chairman of the House Appropriations defense subcommittee in 1989. The same year Paul Magliocchetti, a former subcommittee staffer, left Capitol Hill to found the now-defunct PMA Group. The lobbying firm, which specialized in obtaining earmarks for defense contractors, was one Murtha's biggest sources of campaign cash.

In 2007 and 2008, Murtha and two fellow Democrats on the subcommittee directed $137 million to defense contractors who were paying PMA to get them government business. Between 1989 and 2009, Murtha collected more than $2.3 million in campaign contributions from PMA's lobbyists and corporate clients, according to the Center for Responsive Politics, which tracks political money.

Shortly after the 2008 election, the FBI raided PMA's offices as part of an ongoing criminal investigation. In a separate development in January 2009, FBI agents raided the offices of a defense contractor from Murtha's district - Windber-based Kuchera Defense Systems Inc. - that had received millions of dollars in earmarks sponsored by Murtha while contributing tens of thousands to his campaigns.

A year later, Kuchera was suspended from bidding on government contracts because of allegations that it paid more than $200,000 in kickbacks to another defense contractor.

Around the same time, the House ethics committee was investigating the link between PMA-related campaign contributions and earmarks, but it had not named a subcommittee to look into possible violations by individual lawmakers.

Murtha's critics recall the Abscam corruption probe, in which the FBI caught him on videotape in a 1980 sting operation turning down a $50,000 bribe offer while holding out the possibility that he might take money in the future.

"We do business for a while, maybe I'll be interested and maybe I won't," Murtha said on the tape.

Six congressmen and one senator were convicted in that case. Murtha was not charged, but the government named him as an unindicted co-conspirator and he testified against two other congressmen.

Murtha's district encompasses all or parts of nine counties in southwestern Pennsylvania and embodies the region's stereotypes of coal mines, steel mills and blue-collar values.

Constituents credited Murtha with bringing jobs and health care to the region, delivering hundreds of millions of dollars for local industry, hospitals and tourism. Critics derisively nicknamed Murtha the "king of pork" and said he used his position on the defense subcommittee to win favors.

Murtha often delivered Democratic votes to Republican leaders in exchange for the funding of pet projects. He wasn't shy about such deals, once saying that "dealmaking is what Congress is all about."

In 2006, when the Democrats captured control of the House for the first time in 12 years, Rep. Nancy Pelosi endorsed Murtha to become majority leader. Pelosi, D-Calif., went on to be elected as the first female House speaker, but caucus members picked Rep. Steny Hoyer, D-Md., as their leader.

farmerman
 
  2  
Reply Mon 8 Feb, 2010 04:03 pm
@djjd62,
RIP John. No matter what, he was about the only member of Congress who, after supporting the war in Iraq, went over and saw for himself what a fuster cluck it was, and the bases for its inception were at least, crooked. Its interesting the reasons for starting the war, had, in all cases, left us with the fastest and highest rise in oil prices in history. And we said that GW Bush was stupid.
0 Replies
 
Cycloptichorn
 
  1  
Reply Mon 8 Feb, 2010 04:08 pm
Damn, those Democrats will do ANYTHING to avoid an ethics investigation!

/okie

Cycloptichorn
0 Replies
 
joefromchicago
 
  6  
Reply Mon 8 Feb, 2010 05:02 pm
Alas, old Porky McKickback is dead. Well, at least he came around to the right position on the Iraq War, albeit after he voted in favor of the invasion. But better late than never: after all, some people who voted in favor of the war still haven't been able to bring themselves to admit, as Murtha did, that it was a mistake.
0 Replies
 
BigTexN
 
  -3  
Reply Mon 8 Feb, 2010 05:45 pm
May a group of Marines carry his coffin and toss it into a hole for the worms.

The upside is this opens up another seat for the Republicans!
farmerman
 
  1  
Reply Mon 8 Feb, 2010 07:48 pm
@BigTexN,
Youre an asshole, anybody remind you of that lately?
0 Replies
 
Gargamel
 
  3  
Reply Mon 8 Feb, 2010 08:21 pm
@BigTexN,
BigTexN wrote:

May a group of Marines carry his coffin and toss it into a hole for the worms.

The upside is this opens up another seat for the Republicans!


Sadly it has no impact on your inability to properly remove excrement from between your asscheeks post-defecation. I'm really sorry about that.

What you need are incentives. So how about this: do it right next time and I'll give you a Snickers!
0 Replies
 
Finn dAbuzz
 
  1  
Reply Tue 9 Feb, 2010 06:15 pm
It would have been far far better if he had simply retired (may he rest in peace), but I am glad he no longer wields any power at all. As a US representative he was a crooked asshole.

There's about as much sense in glorifying everyone who has served in the military as there in demonizing them all.

From what I know about him he had personal courage and a keen sense of civic duty in his younger days and this speaks well of him in his life.

His political career did not.
Merry Andrew
 
  1  
Reply Tue 9 Feb, 2010 07:42 pm
From what I know about the political career of Rep. Murtha, for once I have to agree with Finn. (I promise not to make a habit of that.)
0 Replies
 
farmerman
 
  1  
Reply Tue 9 Feb, 2010 09:18 pm
@Finn dAbuzz,
Everybody remembers him from Abscam. However, if anyone recalls, MURTHA turned down any bribes even though they were jiggered higher and higher by the sting oprators. He came out tarnished just because they targeted him. AS far as pork, Im sorry, he doesnt come anywhere close to the famous Senators and Reps of the wonderful flyover states.
Finn dAbuzz
 
  1  
Reply Fri 12 Feb, 2010 11:35 am
@farmerman,
farmerman wrote:

Everybody remembers him from Abscam. However, if anyone recalls, MURTHA turned down any bribes even though they were jiggered higher and higher by the sting oprators. He came out tarnished just because they targeted him. AS far as pork, Im sorry, he doesnt come anywhere close to the famous Senators and Reps of the wonderful flyover states.


Quote:
In 2006, after Democrats won control of the House, many members were aghast that Speaker Nancy Pelosi pushed Murtha for Majority Leader. He lost to Steny Hoyer after good government groups tied him to a bipartisan culture of corruption in the House.


Quote:
Murtha was named an unindicted co-conspirator in Abscam, an FBI sting operation in which agents offered members of Congress bribes. A tape showed Murtha describing "the secret" of how a public official can take a bribe and get away with it. He told the undercover agents he was turning them down for now: "You know, you made an offer. . . . After we've done some business, well, then I might change my mind." E. Barrett Prettyman Jr., the special prosecutor appointed by House Ethics Committee, was building a complaint against Murtha; he was also probing links between Abscam and O'Neill's office.


Quote:
"Before Prettyman could fully deploy his investigators to move on the Murtha case, he was informed that the committee had concluded there was no justification for an investigation."

Mr. Prettyman was furious, resigning his post the same afternoon the committee voted to clear Mr. Murtha.


http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703382904575059351052263666.html?mod=djemEditorialPage_h
0 Replies
 
 

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