Only weeks ago, GOP campaign officials were breathing smoke and fire. According to Rep. Thomas M. Reynolds, R-N. Y., the chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee, hapless Democrats had no idea what they were up against. Relentlessly negative TV commercials funded by the party’s $ 50 million war chest were about to bury Democratic candidates under an avalanche of charges dug up by so-called opposition research—unpaid student loans, late tax payments, embarrassing lawsuits, etc. “We haven’t even begun to unload this freight train,” Reynolds boasted to The New York Times. Asked why the party that currently controls the White House and both houses of Congress wasn’t stressing positive themes in its TV ads, he burst out laughing. “If they moved things to the extent that negative ads move things,” he said, “there would be more of them.” A few days later, Reynolds himself got run over by an off-schedule freight train in the form of the nastiest Washington sex scandal in decades. It’s doubtful he’s laughing now. Reynolds, see, is the guy who says he and Rep. John Boehner, ROhio, warned House Speaker Dennis Hastert last spring about Rep. Mark Foley’s “overly friendly” e-mails to 16-yearold congressional pages.
The speaker recalls no such meeting.
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