Self-cleaning swamp
It’s a useful symbol, if nothing else – the surprise vote by House Republicans to kill the independent ethics office that oversees…Congress. No stinkin’ ethics for them! It’s helpful of them to make it so very clear.
The surprising vote came on the eve of the start of a new session of Congress, where emboldened Republicans are ready to push an ambitious agenda on everything from health care to infrastructure, issues that will be the subject of intense lobbying from corporate interests. The House Republicans’ move would take away both power and independence from an investigative body, and give lawmakers more control over internal inquiries.
It also came on the eve of a historic shift in power in Washington, where Republicans control both houses of Congress and where a wealthy businessman with myriad potential conflicts of interest is preparing to move into the White House.
We have an openly pro-corruption government. Cool.
In place of the office, Republicans would create a new Office of Congressional Complaint Review that would report to the House Ethics Committee, which has been accused of ignoring credible allegations of wrongdoing by lawmakers.
See, the thing about the Office of Congressional Ethics is that it was independent – it wasn’t an insider office. The House Ethics Committee is an insider office. Congress wants to go back to policing its own self, with all the obvious conflicts of interest that entails. The fox voted to restore supervision of the chicken house to the fox.
“Poor way to begin draining the swamp,” Tom Fitton, president of the conservative group Judicial Watch, said on Twitter. He added, “Swamp wins with help of @SpeakerRyan, @RepGoodlatte.”
Mr. Goodlatte defended the action in a statement on Monday evening, saying it would strengthen ethics oversight in the House while also giving lawmakers better protections against what some of them have called overzealous efforts by the Office of Congressional Ethics.
Well yes, naturally, letting Congress oversee its own ethics would naturally give members of Congress “better protections” – with the result that they could get away with more corruption.
Representative Nancy Pelosi of California, the House minority leader, joined others who had worked to create the office in expressing outrage at the move and the secretive way it was orchestrated.
“Republicans claim they want to ‘drain the swamp,’ but the night before the new Congress gets sworn in, the House G.O.P. has eliminated the only independent ethics oversight of their actions,” Ms. Pelosi said in a statement on Monday night. “Evidently, ethics are the first casualty of the new Republican Congress.”
Let’s have more and better corruption.
The body was created after a string of serious ethical issues starting a decade ago, including bribery allegations against Representatives Duke Cunningham, Republican of California; William J. Jefferson, Democrat of Louisiana; and Bob Ney, Republican of Ohio. All three were ultimately convicted and served time in jail.
The Office of Congressional Ethics, which is overseen by a six-member outside board, does not have subpoena power. But it has its own staff of investigators who spend weeks conducting confidential interviews and collecting documents based on complaints they receive from the public, or news media reports, before issuing findings that detail any possible violation of federal rules or laws. The board then votes on whether to refer the matter to the full House Ethics Committee, which conducts its own review.
But the House Ethics Committee, even if it dismisses the potential ethics violation as unfounded, is required to release the Office of Congressional Ethics report detailing the alleged wrongdoing, creating a deterrent to such questionable behavior by lawmakers.
Under the new arrangement, the Office of Congressional Complaint Review could not take anonymous complaints, and all of its investigations would be overseen by the House Ethics Committee itself, which is made up of lawmakers who answer to their own party.
The Office of Congressional Complaint Review would also have special rules to “better safeguard the exercise of due process rights of both subject and witness,” Mr. Goodlatte said. The provision most likely reflects complaints by certain lawmakers that the ethics office’s staff investigations were at times too aggressive, an allegation that watchdog groups dismissed as evidence that lawmakers were just trying to protect themselves.
The whole system is already notoriously corrupt, because bribery in the form of campaign donations is entrenched. Investigations should be aggressive.
By moving all of the authority to the House Ethics Committee, several ethics lawyers said, the House risks becoming far too protective of members accused of wrongdoing.
Bryson Morgan, who worked as an investigative lawyer at the Office of Congressional Ethics from 2013 until 2015, said that under his interpretation of the new rules, members of the House committee could move to stop an inquiry even before it was completed.
“This is huge,” said Mr. Morgan, who now defends lawmakers targeted in ethics investigations. “It effectively allows the committee to shut down any independent investigation into member misconduct. Historically, the ethics committee has failed to investigate member misconduct.”
It could also mean aggressive pursuit of members of the minority party, without any checks on that by an independent body who might happen to…ooops…accidentally clear them of trumped up allegations meant to embarrass and disempower those who dissent from the dominant narrative.
When are we finally going to get to the point where these things are so blatant that people will stop parroting the ridiculous platitude that should have been obviously false to them years ago: “They all want what’s best for the country, they just disagree on what that is”. No. These people want what’s best for themselves.
Our own state Senator ran for Senate because of a fear that under the Obama administration, the public grazing fees might be increased a bit, thereby reducing by small amounts the piles of money she had raked in at taxpayer expense. Her opponent called her out on this…and got mocked. She only wants what’s best….
It’s a terrible thing to wish for, because it means a lot of collateral damage to innocent people for at least the next two years, but: I want Trump & Co to be so cynically, obviously, corrupt and incompetent that even the most die-hard supporter (you know: those poor rural white guys who lost their jobs to China, that apparently the Dems were ignoring) has to admit they’ve been duped, big-time, and throw the bastards out next chance they get.
(And to demonstrate good faith: if, by some miracle, TrumpCo turn out to do a decent job of making life better for Americans of all stripes, and without fucking up the rest of the world, then I would be very happy to admit I’m wrong. But I think I’m pretty safe from having to eat that particular humble pie).
The most effective way to drain a swamp is to sweep it under the rug: alligators, crocodiles, snake oil salesmen and all.
All you have to find is a big enough rug: then anything is possible.
Steve W:
Trump is hardly the first politician to win office by promising the undeliverable. His problem is that he has promised an American government attack on American business’ own trade with China. This will mean that the American worker will still be free to sign up for a US-built car, like say a Lincoln Continental or a Cadillac, but will have to pay more for a Chinese-made toaster, tool-kit, or whatever.
Simple, really.