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Originally published Friday, November 19, 2010 at 5:21 PM

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Congress rookies vie for office space

Rep.-elect Bob Gibbs was trying to get this straight: There's a public women's bathroom in the middle of a congressman's office suite? And in the building...

The Associated Press

The day in D.C.

Aid to farmers: The Senate approved by voice vote Friday almost $4.6 billion to settle long-standing claims brought by American Indians and black farmers against the government. The money has been held up for months as Democrats and Republicans squabbled over how to pay for it. The bill was sent to the House.

Animal cruelty: Videos appealing to a sexual fetish by showing women killing small animals would be banned under legislation that cleared the Senate on Friday and is heading to President Obama for his signature. The voice vote followed a House vote Monday to ban the so-called crush videos. Congress banned such videos in 1999, but the Supreme Court this year struck down the law, saying it was too broadly written and violated free-speech protections.

Waters' trial: The House ethics committee on Friday indefinitely put off a trial on misconduct charges against Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif., saying it found new documents connected to charges that she improperly tried to help a bank in which her husband owned stock. She had been set to go on trial Nov. 29. She has vigorously fought the charges.

Ensign affair: The Federal Election Commission dismissed a complaint against Sen. John Ensign, R-Nev., over a $96,000 payment his parents made to his former mistress and her family. Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, a watchdog group, said Friday that the commission had dismissed its complaint against Ensign, his parents, his campaign and his political-action committee over the money paid to Cynthia Hampton, with whom Ensign had an affair.

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WASHINGTON — Rep.-elect Bob Gibbs was trying to get this straight: There's a public women's bathroom in the middle of a congressman's office suite? And in the building next door, not one but two House aides have made their work space in an unused elevator shaft?

A glittering week being wined, dined and oriented by the most powerful people in Washington gave way Friday to the exercise in humility that is the freshman office lottery. The most senior lawmakers get the best real estate on Capitol Hill. The freshmen get what's left: the worst office space in Congress.

At the outset, most professed not to care what their new work spaces looked like, or how far they were from the floor of the House.

But an hour into wandering the dark hallways of the Cannon and Longworth office buildings, Gibbs, an Ohio Republican, had acquired some standards.

What about 128 Cannon, the one that bookends the ladies' room?

"That's out," Gibbs said.

He could afford to be a little choosy. Earlier Friday, Gibbs drew No. 10 in the lottery, which means he would be the 10th incoming lawmaker of 85 to pick his office.

The lawmaker who could be the most discriminating was Rep.-elect Corey Gardner, R-Colo., who drew first place in the office-picking line. Surrounded by cameras and well-wishers at the selection meeting, Gardner rose and picked 213 Cannon, a 997-square-foot space.

And the guy who got the office nobody wanted? That would be Rep.-elect Robert Hurt, R-Va., No. 85 of 85. His home base henceforth will be Longworth 1516, an 842-square-foot space wedged next to a stairwell and a bathroom on the farthest side of the building.

Contested races and offices for the five newly elected lawmakers who had served in Congress previously were not included in the lottery.

Hurt shouldn't worry too much, said one veteran.

"They spend very little time actually in the office," said Rep. Gary Peters, D-Mich., who two years ago traded an 1,800-square-foot office as the director of his state's lottery for an office the same size as Hurt's. Peters' office, though, was a three-minute walk from the House floor, considerably shorter than Hurt's commute. And Peters is moving upstairs next year to more spacious digs.

Whatever the criteria, freshmen and their aides huddled over office-building maps, lists and notes. Many crossed paths as they toured the available spaces, most still inhabited by their current occupants.

At the entrance to some, the wide and enthusiastic grins the freshmen had sported all week faltered.

There were boxes, little light and a guarded sadness among the employees in the Longworth office of Rep. Kendrick Meek, the Florida Democrat who ran for Senate and lost to Republican tea-party favorite Marco Rubio.

Elsewhere in the building, Gibbs shuddered a bit at a sign that read, "The Shaft," posted on the entrance to, well, an unused elevator shaft that serves as office space for two aides to the Republican Study Committee. Gibbs said he had seen a chief of staff's office that was even smaller.

Most of the suites available to freshmen were standard three-room affairs of roughly 800 to 1,047 square feet: reception, the lawmaker's office and a separate space for about a half-dozen employees. In some, the reception room was bifurcated by a temporary wall erected to give senior aides their own space.

"Can I move that?" Gibbs asked, pointing to one such wall.

You can do anything you want, replied an employee who declined to be named. You're a member of Congress, the aide pointed out.

Not yet. Hence the intense office-selection process Friday in an empty committee room. Lawmakers-to-be with ID tags hanging from their necks waited with their lists and their maps. Some guarded their choices from the views of other members.

Cameras hovered nearby.

After about 15 minutes and the nine colleagues ahead of him, Gibbs' number came up. He chose Cannon 329, a 1,001-square-foot office around the corner from the Capitol.

Nearby, Rep.-elect Martha Roby, R-Ala., and No. 24 in the lottery, let out a groan and crossed Cannon 329 off her list.

It had been her first choice.

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