Richard Cohen of the Washington Post argues that Rep.
Charles Rangel has morphed into the man he defeated in
1970: the flamboyantly corrupt Adam Clayton Powell.
Writes Cohen:
Rangel is now the chairman of the House Ways and Means
Committee and a man of immense importance in Washington.
Nonetheless, he has been busy of late revising and amending the
record, backing and filling, using buckets of Wite-Out as he
discovers or remembers properties he has owned in New York, New
Jersey, Florida, the Dominican Republic and God only knows
where else -- and has forgotten or neglected to fully report on
the required forms, not to mention the income from them. Oops!
Rangel recently even discovered
bank accounts that no one in the world, apparently including
him, knew he had. One was with the Congressional Federal Credit
Union; another was with Merrill Lynch -- each valued between
$250,000 and $500,000. He somehow neglected to mention these
accounts on his congressional disclosure forms, which means, if
you can believe it, that when he signed the forms, he did not
notice that maybe $1 million was missing. Someone ought to
check the lighting in his office.
The dim bulb could also have accounted for why Rangel did not
notice that he was
soliciting contributions for the curiously named Charles B.
Rangel Center for Public Service on the congressional
letterhead of the very same Charles B. Rangel. It may also
account for why he failed to report dividend income from
various investments in addition to what he made by selling a
townhouse in Harlem. The place went for $410,000 in 2004, and
had been rented -- or not -- to various people, who paid rent
or didn't -- since Rangel reported no income for years at a
time. This is what he did, too, with the rent
he earned on his Dominican Republic villa. Again, nada.
There is something wrong with Charlie Rangel. Either he did not
notice that he was worth about twice as much as he said he was
-- which is downright worrisome in a congressional leader -- or
he thinks that he's above the law, which is downright worrisome
in a congressional leader.
So much for change and openness on Capitol Hill in the new era.