Even by the standards of modern congressional scandals, Rep. Duncan Hunter’s (R-Calif.) case is a doozy. As regular readers know, California Republican’s multi-count criminal indictment accused him, of among other things, stealing campaign funds for personal use and clumsily trying to cover it up. As part of the case, prosecutors also alleged Hunter illegally used contributions to help finance extramarital affairs, including some with lobbyists.
After repeatedly insisting he’s innocent, and blaming a political “witch hunt” for his predicament, the congressman pleaded guilty this week to conspiracy to misuse campaign funds. He’s scheduled to be sentenced in March, and he faces up to five years in prison.
Though resignation seems like the obvious next step for Hunter, the GOP lawmaker, at least for now, seems intent on sticking around. In fact, the day after pleading guilty, the congressman was back on the House floor, casting votes as if he were a member in good standing. Roll Call reported yesterday that some of his colleagues reminded Hunter that he’s not, in fact, a member in good standing: he’s been stripped of his committee assignments and the Ethics panel wants him to stop voting on legislation.
The House Ethics Committee notified Rep. Duncan Hunter that his recent guilty plea means he should no longer cast votes in the House. The instruction is not mandatory, but the panel threatened action against him if he continues to vote. […]
The Thursday letter from House Ethics specifies that Hunter “should refrain from voting on any question at a meeting of the House,” until or unless a court reinstates the presumption of his innocence. It says he could resume voting if reelected to the House despite the guilty plea.
I won’t pretend to know what the California congressman intends to do next, though one of the Republicans who hopes to succeed Hunter on Capitol Hill yesterday raised a provocative possibility: what if Donald Trump intervenes on Hunter’s behalf?
The San Diego Union-Tribune reported this week that former Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.), who retired from Congress last year but now hopes to make a comeback in a different congressional district, “talked seriously” about the idea of presidential clemency for Hunter.









