SMRs and AMRs

Friday, October 31, 2008

Stevens Says He ‘Was Not Convicted of Anything’

By Kathleen Hunter, CQ Staff

The political and legal fallout from Sen. Ted Stevens ’ conviction earlier this week of seven corruption-related felonies is continuing to build as the Senate’s longest-serving Republican presses ahead with his bid for a seventh full term.

In a debate against Anchorage Mayor Mark Begich, Stevens once again struck a defiant pose, proclaiming he had “not been convicted of anything” because he was appealing the guilty verdict a Washington jury returned Oct. 27, and again casting himself as the victim of “the worst case of misconduct by the prosecutors that is known.”

When asked what he would say to Republican presidential nominee John McCain , Stevens’ Senate colleague, and his running mate Alaska Governor Sarah Palin , who touched off a flurry of calls for Stevens’ resignation, Stevens suggested the comments from his Republican colleagues were politically motivated.

“I would tell them that I understand that they make statements during the heat of a campaign and probably they’ve been a little bit misinformed by their staff. But I wouldn’t hold it against them,” Stevens said during the Thursday night debate. “I understand what they’re doing; they’re trying to get elected.”

A Washington jury convicted Stevens of seven counts of making false statements on his Senate financial disclosure forms. CQ Politics rates the race as “Leans Democrat.”

(More here.)

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