Larry Craig, From Pop-Culture to Holiday Icon
Last week, his name became a verb in the pop-culture lexicon when actor William Shatner was "Larry Craiged" on ABC's Boston Legal show. This week, Sen. Larry Craig (R-Idaho), aka The Senator Who Won't Leave, is the subject of a lobbying firm's holiday card.
This year's card from the bipartisan Federal Strategy Group founded by Jason Roe and Mike McKay - "Decking The Halls of Power Since 1999" - features two men in Washington power suits passing a giant candy cane under a men's bathroom stall, undoubtedly the international symbol for "Ho Ho Ho."

The photo featured on Federal Strategy Group's holiday card.
The card began arriving today in Capitol Hill offices. It was quickly downloaded into a PDF format and is now going "viral" on the email circuit.
As for Craig, he'll still be a senator come the new year. He has decided to complete his entire term, which ends in January 2009. Of course, if he wants to completely renege on his pledge to leave the Senate, which he made in the wake of his arrest and guilty plea in connection with a men's bathroom sex sting, he has a few months to make up his mind: until late March, the deadline for filing re-election papers with the Idaho secretary of state.
By Mary Ann Akers |
December 11, 2007; 2:15 PM ET
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Posted by: DAVID A BELANGER | December 11, 2007 5:04 PM
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Posted by: votenic | December 11, 2007 5:16 PM
The Singing Senators: Will they be getting back together for their first reunion since, since 2007? In June 2007, Singing Senators Ashcroft, Craig, and Lott gave their first priceless performance in more than six years. Pork producers cheered as pork prices soared to new highs. Singing Senator Larry Craig was subsequently voted into the Idaho Hall of Fame. Priceless. But like Led Zeppelin fans camped out for the big reunion, pork recipients are awaiting the grand reunion at the Republican National Convention where Republicans will converge on Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport to practice their love with men from all across this country.
Posted by: Singing Senator | December 11, 2007 5:26 PM
The man has no shame. Shatner, I mean.
Posted by: SoonerThought.blogspot.com | December 11, 2007 5:40 PM
Someone REALLY sent that as a holiday card?! That is sheer genius.
Posted by: Anonymous | December 11, 2007 5:58 PM
Wow! For a minute there I thought that was a picture of the Official 2007 White House Christmas card! But then ... disappointment set in ...
Posted by: Crazy8 | December 11, 2007 6:00 PM
can we see william jefferson's kwanzaa card next?
Posted by: Anonymous | January 4, 2008 6:48 PM
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Victim: Gang-Rape Cover-Up by U.S. CONGRESS AND CHENEY'S Halliburton/KBR
HOW ABOUT DOING THE RIGHT THING ABOUT THIS STORY. AND GET IT INTO ALL NEWS.
KBR Told Victim She Could Lose Her Job If She Sought Help After Being Raped, She Says
A Houston, Texas woman says she was gang-raped by Halliburton/KBR coworkers in Baghdad, and the company and the U.S. government are covering up the incident.
Jamie Leigh Jones, now 22, says that after she was raped by multiple men at a KBR camp in the Green Zone, the company put her under guard in a shipping container with a bed and warned her that if she left Iraq for medical treatment, she'd be out of a job.
"Don't plan on working back in Iraq. There won't be a position here, and there won't be a position in Houston," Jones says she was told.
In a lawsuit filed in federal court against Halliburton and its then-subsidiary KBR, Jones says she was held in the shipping container for at least 24 hours without food or water by KBR, which posted armed security guards outside her door, who would not let her leave.
"It felt like prison," says Jones, who told her story to ABC News as part of an upcoming "20/20" investigation. "I was upset; I was curled up in a ball on the bed; I just could not believe what had happened."
Finally, Jones says, she convinced a sympathetic guard to loan her a cell phone so she could call her father in Texas.
"I said, 'Dad, I've been raped. I don't know what to do. I'm in this container, and I'm not able to leave,'" she said. Her father called their congressman, Rep. Ted Poe, R-Texas.
"We contacted the State Department first," Poe told ABCNews.com, "and told them of the urgency of rescuing an American citizen" -- from her American employer.
Poe says his office contacted the State Department, which quickly dispatched agents from the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad to Jones' camp, where they rescued her from the container.
According to her lawsuit, Jones was raped by "several attackers who first drugged her, then repeatedly raped and injured her, both physically and emotionally."
Jones told ABCNews.com that an examination by Army doctors showed she had been raped "both ******lly and anally," but that the rape kit disappeared after it was handed over to KBR security officers.
A spokesperson for the State Department's Bureau of Diplomatic Security told ABCNews.com he could not comment on the matter.
Over two years later, the Justice Department has brought no criminal charges in the matter. In fact, ABC News could not confirm any federal agency was investigating the case.
Legal experts say Jones' alleged assailants will likely never face a judge and jury, due to an enormous loophole that has effectively left contractors in Iraq beyond the reach of United States law.
"It's very troubling," said Dean John Hutson of the Franklin Pierce Law Center. "The way the law presently stands, I would say that they don't have, at least in the criminal system, the opportunity for justice."
Congressman Poe says neither the departments of State nor Justice will give him answers on the status of the Jones investigation.
Asked what reasons the departments gave for the apparent slowness of the probes, Poe sounded frustrated.
"There are several, I think, their excuses, why the perpetrators haven't been prosecuted," Poe told ABC News. "But I think it is the responsibility of our government, the Justice Department and the State Department, when crimes occur against American citizens overseas in Iraq, contractors that are paid by the American public, that we pursue the criminal cases as best as we possibly can and that people are prosecuted."
Since no criminal charges have been filed, the only other option, according to Hutson, is the civil system, which is the approach that Jones is trying now. But Jones' former employer doesn't want this case to see the inside of a civil courtroom.
KBR has moved for Jones' claim to be heard in private arbitration, instead of a public courtroom. It says her employment contract requires it.
In arbitration, there is no public record nor transcript of the proceedings, meaning that Jones' claims would not be heard before a judge and jury. Rather, a private arbitrator would decide Jones' case. In recent testimony before Congress, employment lawyer Cathy Ventrell-Monsees said that Halliburton won more than 80 percent of arbitration proceedings brought against it.
In his interview with ABC News, Rep. Poe said he sided with Jones.
"Air things out in a public forum of a courtroom," said Rep. Poe. "That's why we have courts in the United States."
In her lawsuit, Jones' lawyer, Todd Kelly, says KBR and Halliburton created a "boys will be boys" atmosphere at the company barracks which put her and other female employees at great risk.
"I think that men who are there believe that they live without laws," said Kelly. "The last thing she should have expected was for her own people to turn on her."
Halliburton, which has since divested itself of KBR, says it "is improperly named" in the suit.
In a statement, KBR said it was "instructed to cease" its own investigation by U.S. government authorities "because they were assuming sole responsibility for the criminal investigations."
"The safety and security of all employees remains KBR's top priority," it said in a statement. "Our commitment in this regard is unwavering."
Since the attacks, Jones has started a nonprofit foundation called the Jamie Leigh Foundation, which is dedicated to helping victims who were raped or sexually assaulted overseas while working for government contractors or other corporations.
"I want other women to know that it's not their fault," said Jones. "They can go against corporations that have treated them this way." Jones said that any proceeds from the civil suit will go to her foundation.
"There needs to be a voice out there that really pushed for change," she said. "I'd like to be that voice."