Get ready for the GOP spin, how Boehner signals some sort of
clean break from the past:
The victory for Mr. Boehner signaled that many House Republicans are uneasy about the lobbying scandals that threaten to tar some of their party colleagues and wanted far more change than Mr. Blunt seemed to promise.
The reality is that Boehner was THE K-Street candidate:
Boehner can rely on K Street Cabinet
By Jonathan E. Kaplan
Rep. John Boehner (R-Ohio), a likely candidate for a position in the House Republican leadership if former Majority Leader Tom DeLay (R-Texas) does not return, has assembled a loyal and effective network of lobbyists.
Boehner formed his alliances on K Street when he served as chairman of the GOP conference from 1995 to 1998, when his portfolio included working with lobbyists on K Street.
"He was a policy traffic cop for the business community," one of Boehner's allies said. "When [former Rep. J.C.] Watts [Okla.] won [the election for conference chairman], DeLay, in the whip position, vacuumed in the policy and business outreach. He added staff and translated business outreach into votes, which is something [Missouri Rep.] Roy [Blunt] is doing now."
Many GOP sources say Boehner would receive strong support from his so-called K Street Cabinet if he decides to run for another leadership post. He is considered a strong contender to become majority leader or speaker if DeLay, who is under indictment on charges of conspiracy and money laundering in Texas, does not return to his post or if Speaker Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.) retires in 2008.
Boehner wasn't change. If the House GOP caucus wanted change, they would've gone with John Shadegg who was, by relative House GOP standards, clean. Instead they went with someone who could continue to deliver the goods from and to the K-Street cabal.