Linda Chavez, writing at Contentions,
recalls:
What a
difference eight years make. Some may recall that my
nomination as Secretary of Labor in 2001 was derailed when the
press learned that I had taken an illegal alien into my home a
decade earlier. I was accused of everything from hiring
an illegal “nanny” (she wasn’t an employee she actually worked
for someone else and my kids were in high school at the time)
to practicing slavery or indentured servitude.
Reporters camped out on my front lawn, and the issue was the
top item on both network and cable news for days. I decided I
was becoming a distraction, so I withdrew, holding a press
conference with a half dozen other individuals — most of them
immigrants to whom I had given financial assistance or taken
into my home over the years. (The most accurate news story on the controversy didn’t appear until
weeks after I withdrew.)
Geithner’s treatment suggests that Republicans want no part of
the search-and-destroy tactics that Democrats practiced eight
years ago. That is a good thing, by and large. But
it remains to be seen, even with the press playing down
Geithner’s tax problems and many Republicans ready to forgive
him, whether the American public will look as lightly
upon someone who failed to pay more than $43,000 in taxes owed,
a sum equal to more than the average American’s yearly wage.
sidnee| 12.12.09 @ 11:42AM
jack wills
ugg new arrivals