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Craig resigns over airport bathroom sex sting


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Craig leaves with no one defending him
Sept. 2: Democratic strategist James Carville talks to NBC's Tim Russert of "Meet the Press" about the larger implications of the scandal that forced Sen. Craig to resign.

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Sen. Craig's police audio released
Aug. 30: The Minneapolis Airport police release the audio of the interview with Larry Craig after the senator was arrested for alleged lewd conduct in a public restrooms. Listen to the entire interview.

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Long the subject of rumors
Craig has faced rumors about his sexuality since the 1980s. He has called assertions that he has engaged in gay sex ridiculous.

“I am not gay. I never have been gay,” Craig said defiantly after a news conference Tuesday. He said he had kept the incident from aides, friends and family and pleaded guilty “in hopes of making it go away.”

Other lawmakers embroiled in sex scandals also have resigned from Congress, albeit usually at the end of scenarios that took longer to play out than the one that claimed Craig.

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Former Rep. Mark Foley, R-Fla., quit last fall over sexually explicit Internet communications with male pages who had worked on Capitol Hill.

Sen. Bob Packwood, R-Ore., resigned in 1995 amid allegations he had made unwanted sexual advances to 17 female employees and colleagues and altered his personal diaries to obstruct an ethics investigation.

Legacy forever tainted?
On Saturday, Craig said he would pursue legal options to clear his name. Spokesman Dan Whiting said that included retaining Martin, a criminal lawyer, and Washington lawyer Stan Brand to represent Craig before the Senate ethics committee.

“It is my hope he will be remembered not for this, but for his three decades of dedicated public service,” McConnell said. McConnell had been one of Craig’s harshest critics, calling his actions “unforgivable.”

Some Idaho residents who attended Craig’s public resignation said it felt like a “political funeral.”

Bayard Gregory, from Boise, said Craig should have been more forthright after his arrest.

“It’s a horribly embarrassing experience to go through,” Gregory said. “But if it were me, and I had done nothing wrong, I wouldn’t have pleaded guilty.”

Craig spokesman Sidney Smith said he did not know whether Craig would return to Washington on Tuesday, the start of the post-Labor Day congressional session.

“We haven’t decided that yet, whether he’s going to return or not,” Smith said.

A conservative force
Craig represented Idaho in Congress for more than a quarter-century, including 17 years in the Senate. He was up for re-election next year.

Republicans, worried about the scandal’s effect on next year’s election, suffered a further setback Friday when veteran Republican Sen. John Warner of Virginia announced he will retire rather than seek a sixth term. Democrats captured Virginia’s other Senate seat from the GOP in the 2006 election.

Craig opposes gay marriage and has a strong record against gay rights. He was a leading voice in the Senate on gun issues and Western lands. Craig chaired the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee and was a senior member of the Appropriations Committee, where he was adept at securing federal money for Idaho projects.

A fiscal and social conservative, Craig sometimes broke with his party, notably on immigration, where he pushed changes that many in his party said offered “amnesty” to illegal immigrants. Much of the impetus behind Craig’s push to ease bureaucratic hurdles to immigrant farm workers stemmed from his background as a rancher and the state’s large rural, farming community.

© 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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