AUSTIN, Texas — Cynics are fond of meditating on
the evil done in the
name of reform. I'm a great believer in perpetual
reform myself, on the
theory that political systems, like houses, are
always in want of some
fixing. However, I have seen some pluperfect
doozies passed off as
reform in recent years, starting with "Social Security
reform."
Conservatives used to oppose reform on principle,
correctly regarding
it as a vile plot by goo-goo good government forces
to snatch away
their perks. This once led to a colorful scene in the
Texas legislature in
which the letters R*E*F*O*R*M appeared on the
rear ends of six female
members of a baton drill team, who turned and
perched their derrieres
pertly on the brass rail of the House gallery.
Reform follows scandal as night the day, except in
these sorry times
when it appears we may not get a nickel's worth of
reform out of the
entire Jack Abramoff saga. Sickening. A real waste
of a splendid scandal.
When else do politicians ever get around to fixing
huge ethical holes
in the roof except when they're caught red-
handed? Do not let this mess
go to waste! Call now, and demand reform!
Sheesh. Tom DeLay gets indicted, and all the
Republicans can think of
is a $20 gift ban. Forget the people talking about
"lobby reform." The
lobby does not need to be reformed, the Congress
needs to be reformed.
This is about congressional corruption, and it is not
limited to the
surface stuff like taking free meals, hotels and trips.
This is about
corruption that bites deep into the process of
making laws in the public
interest. The root of the rot is money (surprise!),
and the only way to
get control of the money is through public
campaign financing.
As long as the special interests pay to elect the
pols, we will have
government of the special interests, by the special
interests and for
the special interests. Pols will always dance with
them what brung them.
We have to fix the system so that when they are
elected, they got no
one to dance with but us, the people — we don't
want them owing anyone
but the public. So the most useful reform bill is
being offered by Rep.
David Obey, D-Wis., and Rep. Barney Frank, D-
Mass. — public campaign
financing. We, the citizens, put up the money to
elect the pols. This
bill won't cost us money, the savings will be
staggering.
We're also looking for a way to control the system
of earmarks, which
has gotten completely out of hand. "The rush to
revise ethics laws in
the wake of the Jack Abramoff political corruption
scandal has turned
into more of a saunter," reports The Washington
Post. The Republicans
keep dicking around with the gift ban idea
(opposed by those stalwarts who
claim "you couldn't accept a t-shirt from your local
high school"). But
the best anti-reformer is Rep. John Boehner, R-
Ohio, the new House
majority leader, elected as a "reformer" (puh-
leeze), a man after Tom
DeLay's heart. Boehner argues that gift and travel
bans would amount to
members of Congress being "treated like children."
(Actually, children are
seldom offered golfing vacations.)
The lobbyists, of course, have pulled together to
work against efforts
to control them. Fish gotta swim, birds gotta fly.
Tom Susman, chair of
the ethics committee of the American League of
Lobbyists (it is a
concept), is reported in Legal Times as saying a
gift ban would lead to
"unnecessarily awkward dividing lines between
lobbyists and members." God
forbid.
The House Democratic leadership has proposed
reinforcing a gift and
travel ban with an attempt to control earmarks by
prohibiting "dead of
night" provisions — inserting language into a law
without a chance for
review. Members would be given 24 hours to read
bills (which they don't,
but their staffs can).
The cosmetic fixes — gift ban, travel ban,
disclosure and slowing the
revolving door between staff, Congress and the
lobby — cannot stop the
effects of the K Street Project. That's the cozy
arrangement whereby
lobbyists are Republican activists and Republican
activists are
lobbyists, and they underwrite campaigns in return
for special privileges under
the law — tax exemptions, regulatory relief, tariff
dispositions, etc.
One of the most dangerous things about this
whole corrupt system is
that people who are given special privileges
inevitably come to regard
them not as special but as natural and right, and
will fight furiously if
you try to take them away.
It is this endless series of earmarks — special little
set-asides for
one special interest, one home district after another
— that is behind
the hemorrhaging in the federal budget. Those
who remember when
conservatives called for fiscal restraint may get
sour amusement from the
situation. But what is truly not funny is the pathetic
spectacle of the
United States of America, a nation with the greatest
political legacy the
world has ever known, letting itself be gnawed to
death by the greed in
a corrupt system that can be so easily fixed.
© Copyright 2006 Creators Syndicate
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