NY-26: Reynolds Chief Of Staff Resigns Over Role In Foleygate
ABC News is reporting that Kirk Fordham, the chief of staff to NRCC chief Tom Reynolds and longtime aide to Mark Foley, has just resigned. Update: ABC says he was actually fired. More after the jump.
From ABC's The Blotter:
The chief of staff for Republican Congressman Tom Reynolds, Kirk Fordham, was reportedly fired today for his role in the handling of the congressional page scandal, according to Republican sources on Capitol Hill.Fordham, a former chief of staff for Congressman Mark Foley, reportedly urged Republican leaders not to raise questionable Foley e-mails with the full Congressional Page Board, made up of two Republicans and a Democrat.
"He begged them not to tell the page board," said one of the Republican sources.
People familiar with Fordham's side of the story, however, said Fordham was being used as a scapegoat by Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert.
They said Fordham had repeatedly warned Hastert's staff about Foley's "problem" with pages, but little was done.
The complaint about Foley was brought to the chairman of the page board, Congressman John Shimkus (R-IL), last spring, and he then consulted with the Clerk of the House of Representatives, Jeff Trandahl.
At Fordham's urging, according to the sources, the matter was not given to the full board, and instead Congressman Foley was privately approached and told to stop all contact with the page he had been e-mailing.
"This is something we should have been aware of, and we weren't, and I'm very unhappy about that," said Congresswoman Shelley Moore Capito (R-WV), who also serves on the page board.
The Democrat on the page board, Congressman Dale Kildee (D-MI), said it was "unprecedented" to have handled the matter without informing the board members.
Fordham was also instrumental in orchestrating Foley's abrupt resignation last week hours after ABC News confronted the congressman with sexually explicit instant messages allegedly sent to pages.
Fordham offered ABC News a deal if it would not publish the content of the instant messages.
"He said we could have the exclusive on the resignation if we did not run direct quotes from the instant messages," said Maddy Sauer, the ABC News producer who dealt with Fordham.
ABC News refused to make any such deal.
Capitol Hill sources say Fordham's firing is being demanded by Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert, whose job is on the line because of his handling of the page scandal.















I'm surprised it took so long to nail a scapegoat? I'd have though that Hastert and Reynolds would have gotten a cover together in the "just-in-case" arena months ago. Anyway, at least now Fordham will tell the whole story to us.
Whatever happened to Ms. Bush campaigning with Reynolds?
October 4, 2006 2:22 PM | Reply | Permalink
They are going to start low, with the minimum effort needed, to see if it stops the growing scandal. Last to go will be Hastert, but it'll be awhile until we get to him.
Now that ABC has broken the story after several papers had passed, I find my resolution to boycott ABC over their 9/11 mockumentary to be wavering a bit.
October 4, 2006 2:32 PM | Reply | Permalink
This sorta strips the sheen off Queen Bush's visit. This scandal scored two front page leads in the Buffalo News today. So now Reynolds will get another two tomorrow - Laura and will he survive this. There is nothing that Fordham can say that will rescue Hastert and Reynolds. Think of the range of possibilities that would have occurred after the revelations of Foley's "overly-friendly" e-mails. If he advised them to support Foley, and they listened - BAD. If he advised them to not support Foley and they didn't listen - BAD. If he says that he was not consulted, even though he was widely recognized in DC to know Foley better than anyone else in the Capital - BAD. From my perspective, dumping Fordham solves nothing positive for Reynolds and Hastert. It just keeps the news cycle hot enough to feed the Sunday talk shows with further negative exposure.
October 4, 2006 2:34 PM | Reply | Permalink