The Editorially Independent Voice of The University of Akron

The Buchtelite

The Editorially Independent Voice of The University of Akron

The Buchtelite

The Editorially Independent Voice of The University of Akron

The Buchtelite

POLITICAL DEBATE

“Guilty or not, Craig should resign. Senator Larry Craig resigned last week. His resignation comes amid the controversy of his June arrest on charges of lewd and disorderly conduct in the men’s room of a Minneapolis airport. He reportedly stared at a plain-clothes police officer through the door of the officer’s stall and then entered the adjacent stall.”

Guilty or not, Craig should resign.

Senator Larry Craig resigned last week. His resignation comes amid the controversy of his June arrest on charges of lewd and disorderly conduct in the men’s room of a Minneapolis airport.

He reportedly stared at a plain-clothes police officer through the door of the officer’s stall and then entered the adjacent stall.

Story continues below advertisement

There he allegedly solicited the officer by tapping his feet, placing his hand under the dividing wall and making physical contact with him.

Yet, Craig claims that he did nothing wrong and that he is not gay.

Sounds very similar to another politician who famously said, I am not a crook.

Now, weeks after entering a guilty plea, Craig says pleading guilty was a mistake.

Seems like he wasn’t planning on the media finding out about his little fiasco. He said he was trying to deal with the matter quickly and expeditiously.

Once the media found out, the story changed. But if Craig didn’t do anything wrong, why did he resign? As a politician in the public eye, why would you plead guilty if you were, in fact, innocent? Craig not only looks like an aspiring john, but also a liar.

Now he is trying to withdraw his guilty plea, and is reconsidering his resignation, set to go into effect on Sept. 30.

Craig has stated that he will withdraw his resignation and return to the Senate if he can get the case in Minneapolis dismissed.

If not, he will resign from the Senate as he publicly announced last week.

An elected official who makes a public resignation should not be able to withdraw that resignation. A case should not be dismissed simply because the defendant is a senator.

There must be some reason he resigned, just like there must have been some reason for his guilty plea.

Even if the case gets dismissed, the resignation should stand.

It’s unfortunate, however, that the citizens of Idaho have to wait until the end of the month for his resignation to come into effect.

Leave a Comment
Donate to The Buchtelite
$250
$500
Contributed
Our Goal

Your donation will support the student journalists of The University of Akron. Your contribution will allow us to keep printing our magazine edition, purchase equipment and cover our annual website hosting costs.

More to Discover
Donate to The Buchtelite
$250
$500
Contributed
Our Goal

Comments (0)

All comments that are well-informed, civil and relevant to the story are welcome. To leave a comment, please provide your name and email address. The Editorial Board reserves to right to remove any comment that is submitted under false pretenses or includes personal attacks, libel, hate speech, profanity, spam or inaccurate/misleading information. All comments are screened and are generally approved unless they are found to be found in violation of these standards. Readers who notice comments that appear to violate these standards are encouraged to contact the Online Editor at [email protected].
All The Buchtelite Picks Reader Picks Sort: Newest

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *