The internal report probes contacts between Obama's transition team and the office of Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich, who is facing corruption charges. Its release was delayed a week at the request of prosecutors.
The report is now set for public airing on Tuesday, though Obama, who is in Hawaii on vacation, isn't expected to make on-camera comments on the scandal, following his previous calls for the governor to step down.
The president-elect said last week the review would show that no one from his staff had "inappropriate" dealings with Blagojevich.
Media reports suggested Monday that the probe would personally clear Obama's incoming White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel of any wrongdoing in contacts with the governor's staff.
Blagojevich last week vowed to fight to clear his name and brushed aside calls for him to resign over a scandal that has focused attention on Illinois politics, where Obama made his name.
"I am not going to quit a job the people hired me to do because of false accusations and a political lynch mob," Blagojevich said.
Federal prosecutors accuse the Democratic governor of engaging in "a political corruption crime spree" they say was exposed by wiretaps of the governor's home phone and bugs at his campaign office.
A 76-page FBI affidavit accuses the governor of a staggering pattern of corruption, including refusing to free up funds for a children's hospital until he received a $50,000 campaign contribution and trying to get editors who were critical of his administration fired from the Chicago Tribune.
His lawyers dismissed partial transcripts of his conversations about how he could trade Obama's Senate seat for a cabinet post, ambassadorship or high-paying job as "jabbering" that didn't go anywhere.
A battle is also being fought over whether a special election should be called to fill the seat Obama won in 2004 and relinquished after winning the Nov. 4 presidential election.
Blagojevich's lawyers have said he doesn't intend to exercise his right to appoint a successor.
The scandal has been an unwelcome distraction for Obama as he prepares to take office on Jan. 20.
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Publié le 22 Décembre 2008 Copyright © 2008 Dowjones





