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UPDATE: SEN. LARRY CRAIG TO RESIGN ON SATURDAY,
SEP. 1 SAY GOP OFFICIALS -- Craig found almost
no support
among Republicans in his home state or on
Capital Hill.

For background on the Larry Craig bathroom
bust, with backlinks...click here...
http://www.vawatchdog.org/07/
nf07/nfAUG07/nf083107-4.htm
For more on Sen. Larry Craig, use the VA
Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org
/sessearch.php?q=larry
+craig&op=ph
Story here...
http://ap.google.com/article/
ALeqM5jZ67G5uYS42r10d3J0CMgb8kRJXg
Story below:
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GOP Officials: Craig to Resign Saturday
By JOHN MILLER and MATTHEW DALY
BOISE, Idaho (AP) — Idaho Republican Sen. Larry Craig will resign from
the Senate amid a furor over his arrest and guilty plea in a police sex
sting in an airport men's room, Republican officials said Friday.
Craig will announce at a news conference in Boise Saturday morning that
he will resign effective Sept. 30, four state GOP officials said,
speaking on condition of anonymity.
The announcement follows by just five days the disclosure that he had
pleaded guilty Aug. 1 to a reduced misdemeanor charge arising out of his
arrest June 11 at the Minneapolis airport.
The three-term Republican senator had maintained that he did nothing
wrong except for making the guilty plea without consulting a lawyer. But
he found almost no support among Republicans in his home state or
Washington.
Idaho Gov. C.L. "Butch" Otter appeared Friday to have already settled on
a successor: Lt. Gov. Jim Risch, according to several Republicans
familiar with internal deliberations.
Craig's spokesman, Dan Whiting, had said earlier that the senator would
announce his career plans Saturday. The spokesman would not say whether
Craig intended to resign.
Craig has been out of public view since Tuesday, when he declared
defiantly at a Boise news conference: "I am not gay. I have never been
gay." But Republican sources in Idaho said he spent Friday making calls
to top party officials, including the governor, gauging their support.
There has been virtually none publicly.
Asked Friday at the White House if the senator should resign, President
Bush said nothing and walked off stage.
Republican officeholders and party leaders maintained a steady drumbeat
of actions and words aimed at persuading Craig to vacate his Senate
seat.
GOP lawmakers, hoping to get the embarrassment to the party behind them
quickly, stripped Craig of leadership posts on Wednesday, one day after
they called for an investigation of Craig's actions by the Senate Ethics
Committee. Craig complied with the request.
With his wife, Suzanne, at his side, he said he had kept the incident
from aides, friends and family and later pleaded guilty "in hopes of
making it go away."
Craig, 62, has represented Idaho in Congress for more than a
quarter-century and was up for re-election next year.
Republican officeholders and party leaders wanted Craig to give up his
seat in the Senate as soon as possible. Their preference, according to
several officials, was for a successor to be selected and ready to take
the oath of office when the Senate returns from its summer vacation next
week.
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell called Craig's conduct
"unforgivable" and acknowledged that many in the rank and file thought
Craig should resign.
Republicans, worried about the scandal's effect on next year's election,
suffered a further setback Friday when veteran Virginia Sen. John Warner
announced he will retire rather than seek a sixth term. Democrats
captured Virginia's other Senate seat from the GOP in the 2006 election
and have sought to line up former Gov. Mark Warner to run if the seat
became open.
The contest for control of the next Senate was already tilted against
Republicans, who must defend 22 of 34 seats on the ballot next year,
before the Craig scandal and Warner's announcement.
With a GOP candidate other than Craig, Republicans would stand a much
better chance of keeping his Idaho seat in 2008.
Idaho is one of the nation's most reliably Republican states. The GOP
controls the statehouse and all four seats in Congress, and Bush carried
the state in 2004 with 68 percent of the vote.
Risch, the lieutenant governor, served for seven months as governor last
year after former Gov. Dirk Kempthorne was named interior secretary.
Risch had said earlier he was interested in Craig's Senate seat if Craig
did not seek re-election in 2008.
Rep. Mike Simpson, R-Idaho, also had been mentioned as a possible
replacement for Craig, but the officials, speaking on condition of
anonymity because Craig has not resigned, said Otter would choose Risch.
"We've made no promises or guarantees to anyone," said Otter spokesman
Jon Hanian. "We don't have a successor to name yet. We're not going to
deal in hypotheticals."
Craig served in the House before winning his first Senate term in 1990
and compiled a strongly conservative voting record.
On Thursday, the Minneapolis airport authorities released a tape
recording of Craig's interrogation minutes after he encountered a
plainclothes officer in an adjacent stall in an airport restroom.
Craig and airport police Sgt. Dave Karsnia disagreed about virtually
everything that had occurred — including whether there was a piece of
paper on the floor of the stall and the meaning of the senator's hand
gestures.
Craig denied that he had used foot and hand gestures to signal interest
in a sexual encounter.
"I'm not gay. I don't do these kinds of things," Craig told the officer.
"You shouldn't be out to entrap people."
Karsnia accused Craig of lying and grew exasperated with his denials.
"Embarrassing, embarrassing. No wonder why we're going down the tubes,"
Karsnia said.
Daly reported from Washington. Associated Press writers Todd Dvorak in
Boise and David Espo and Liz Sidoti in Washington contributed to this
report.
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Larry Scott --