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GOP colleagues welcome Vitter’s return to Senate |
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By Elana Schor
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Posted: 07/18/07 08:09 PM [ET] |
Republican colleagues welcomed Sen. David Vitter back to Washington yesterday after the Louisianan spent a tense week avoiding the flap over his ties to the escort service of the so-called “D.C. Madam.”
Vitter made brief remarks to GOP conference members about his admission of contacts with the alleged prostitution network during yesterday’s policy lunch, according to sources. Few Republicans would discuss the nature of Vitter’s comments, but most opened their arms to him.
“I think everybody seemed glad to have him back at work,” Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.) said.
“People were supportive,” Sen. John Thune (R-S.D.) said. “They realize that he’s worked through this [during] this past week, that he’s ready to move forward.”
Vitter attended a Commerce Committee panel’s hearing on rural aviation, later appearing with Sen. Tom Coburn (R-Okla.) close by his side. Coburn later dismissed talk of his helping to shield Vitter from ever-present TV cameras, saying the two had been talking healthcare policy.
Democrats largely have steered clear of the scandal, but even Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) was drawn into yesterday’s debate over Vitter’s behavior. Reid told reporters he would not press Vitter to address the issue further, but called for “a full airing” of whether the Republican broke any laws.
“There are a lot of accusations about prostitutes here in Washington, prostitutes in Louisiana. I don’t know if that’s breaking the law or not,” Reid said.
Vitter has denied charges that he patronized several brothels in his home state. Asked about the potential for Ethics Committee action against Vitter, Reid noted that a complaint must be filed before any inquiry begins in that panel, “so we’ll wait and see what happens there.”
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