Much of the political focus of the Eric Massa resignation has centered on whether, how and to what degree the former congressman was bullied by the White House or his colleagues in Congress to vote for healthcare reform or other measures. With his ambiguous and sometimes contradictory assertions, Massa surely has tried to make arm-twisting--and in the case of White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel, naked shower finger-pointing--the central issue. Perhaps Massa was just trying to capitalize upon the recent chatter about whether Emanuel is too rough or not rough enough to be President Obama's chief of staff. (This essay by Mark Schmitt of the American Prospect's provides a good summary of that debate.) But if there was cause to do any bullying of Massa it was not because of his voting patterns but because of the potential harm he might do in exacerbating the Democrats' mounting electoral problems this fall.
Indeed, when the assorted and sordid allegations about Massa groping or acting in sexually inappropriate ways with staffers began to come to light, one couldn't help but recall Republican Rep. Mark Foley's September 2006 resignation. To be sure, there are fundamental differences between the details of Massa and Foley incidents, as Time's Jay Newton-Small and others have correctly noted. But now there is another key distinction, one of great political-electoral import as the November midterms approach: The Massa story-bomb exploded in March, not September.

