Okay, I'm bad, if you can trust me at all I think this is a good explanation why.
http://www.physicsclassroom.com/mmedia/estatics/esn.cfm wrote:
Once charge within the electroscope has been polarized (i.e., separated into opposite types), the bottom of the electroscope is touched by a finger. Being repelled by the negatively charged balloon, electrons from the electroscope exit and enter into the ground. Once more, this process is driven by the principle that like charges repel. The electrons, having a mutual repulsion for one another and for the negatively charged balloon, choose to exit the electroscope and enter into the larger region. By doing so, the electrons are able to distance themselves and so minimize the repulsive interactions. It is at this point in the induction process that the electroscope acquires an overall charge. Since electrons have left the electroscope, the overall charge on it is positive. In general, the induction process will always place a charge on the object which is the opposite type of charge possessed by the object used to charge it.
The resistance between electrons moving across inductors is so low it is nothing compared.
That wiki link is right for the wrong reasons. The charge being in the leaves has nothing to do with it, the point is the overall charge in the electroscope wants to be opposite the charge in the rod.
Again, sorry I messed this one up pretty bad.
Makes me sad considering I raped this shit two years ago.
edit: Make sure you understand grounding though. That part I didn't mess up the explanation of - ground is neutral and can be a sink or a source. The charge doesn't leave because it is attracted to the ground, it leaves because it is repelled from the charged rod.