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  • Hastert to Step Down Soon, Sources Say

    Washington Post, DC
    Oct 19 2007


    Hastert to Step Down Soon, Sources Say

    By Elizabeth Williamson
    Washington Post Staff Writer
    Friday, October 19, 2007; Page A19

    Former House speaker J. Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.) plans to resign
    before the end of the year, Republican sources said yesterday.

    "It's pretty much a certainty that he is expected to step down before
    the end of the year," said a House GOP leadership aide. Hastert
    previously announced he will not seek reelection next year.

    Hastert's office would not confirm his departure. "He has
    consistently said that he would continue to serve as long as he is
    effective, and that is still the case today," said spokesman Brad
    Hahn. "There are different discussions taking place, but no decisions
    have been made."

    Hastert is in his 11th term and served as speaker from 1999 until
    Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) succeeded him this year. He was the
    longest-serving Republican speaker and had the second-longest
    continuous term in the post overall, longer than anyone since Thomas
    P. "Tip" O'Neill (D-Mass.).

    Gov. Rod Blagojevich (D) will schedule a special election for early
    next year. Hastert's departure will create an opening on the Energy
    and Commerce Committee.

    Hastert, a former high school teacher and wrestling coach, was born
    in Aurora, Ill., and has spent his life in his district, where
    Chicago's exurbs sprawl into the remaining farmland of downstate
    Illinois. He became speaker two months after the November 1998
    elections, succeeding Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.). He was known as "the
    accidental speaker," because he was selected after Gingrich's
    putative successor, Bob Livingston, resigned, and because he never
    intended to push for the job. But at the behest of Gingrich, Hastert
    announced his candidacy and was chosen in the course of a day.

    Over time, the low-key Hastert built a reputation as a
    consensus-builder and a smart tactician. One of his strategic
    maneuvers came in 2000, when he canceled a House vote on a
    controversial resolution that labeled as genocide the mass killings
    of Armenians by Ottoman Turks beginning in 1915. Hastert's move came
    at the urging of President Bill Clinton, who feared that the
    resolution would damage U.S.-Turkey relations. This week, those same
    concerns appear to have doomed a successor to that resolution.
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