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Thursday, March 17, 2011

Anniston Star Editorial--Corrupting a Good Law Playing Politics With Ethics


Kudos to Bob Davis and the staff for a great editorial about the issue of editing the language of the passed-in-a-real-big-hurry ethics laws last December. Do what you want elected officials and lobbyists--just don't do it "corruptly." Now honestly folks, do they really know any other way?

We don't always agree with the Star Editorial Board, but on this issue we salute them for a stellar editorial. Even if we don't not agree that any of the ethics laws are "good." They are better than what we had, but there's serious loopholes in them that will only get worse if Sumner and the gang start whipping out the edit pencils.

"Corruptly" is the word du jour and apparently it means different things to different people. What it means to us, along with this editing and rewriting, is that somebody(s) are up to no good. Lobbyists would be our first suspects. Financial gain by dubious politicians runs a close second.

The Ethics Commission acts on less than 5% of cases that come before it and as we have written before, with this do nothing commission serving as the gatekeepers on investigations and ethics violations, Corruption, Inc. will have no stern enforcers.

So none of it means really anything if enforcement is lacking. Not only is it lacking, it's practically non-existent according to the the EC's own records. Expect business as usual in the good ol' boy system of Alabama politics that thrives on "corruptly."

From the editorial:
What none of these men are doing is defining what type of gift-giving would be viewed as corrupt. How does the state compare one encounter between legislator and lobbyist with another? Does the state have a magic “intent meter” that it can use to gauge whether a lobbyist’s gift-giving is harmless or politically unlawful?

Or, as Jacksonville State University political science professor Lawson Veasey told The Star, “I think there’s … an implicit level of good ol’ boy politics in Alabama that basically overwhelms everything else.”

As anyone who understands the inner workings of Montgomery knows, it’s not as simple as using common sense and sound judgment. Political spin can attempt to make a covert, influence-peddling meeting between lawmakers and lobbyists seem as innocuous as a Wednesday night Bible study.

Adding the word “corruptly” to the law’s language may create more problems than it solves — for the ethics commission and for the state’s majority party.

The "new day republicans" are expecting a pass on this from the voters, and their base probably will give them one, but many others are paying close attention to what Sumner and the good ol' boys in the legislature are doing. And we don't think it's likely the 'get away' will be as 'clean' as they are hoping for.
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9 comments:

  1. Everyone in the circle of Goat Hill knows what this is about--lobbyists don't want to be curtailed and the dubious politicians you define 100% accurately, all want it just as it was--fast, loose and profitable.
    This is laughable to the insiders, but most people don't see it for what it really is.
    Many a blind eye in the Alabama citizenry.

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  2. Come on now boys, how stupid do you really think we are?
    Your desires for revisions are quite transparent...

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  3. I'm still struggling with the use of "legislator" and "ethics" in the same sentence.
    Apples to rotten tomatoes.

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  4. If governor in my mind Hubbard is involved in it you can bet it has no good written all over it.
    As for Sumner, that's a bag of poke salad that has long outlived his freshness date.
    Come to think of it, that applies to the entire ethics commission as useless as they have been.
    Noxious weeds every last one of them.

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  5. Sumner never met a corrupter he didn't give a pass, or at least the ones he was TOLD to give a pass to.
    My struggle is using "Alabama" and "ethics" in the same universe personally.

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  6. Meet the new boss, Same as the old boss.
    Give what you want as long as you don't do it corruptly? And the legislators get gifts because of their what, personalities?
    What kind of wordplay nonsense is this? Some perverted form of Scrabble?

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  7. If the Ethics Commission is not smart enough to read and comprehend the bills as written, it is because:
    They're not very smart
    The bills are poorly written
    Or
    All of the above?
    This does not bode well for the next four years.

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  8. I know a few people who went through the new mandated ethics training. They laughed about it and didn't think it was serious at all.
    That's telling.
    So is this stpidity disguised a do good.
    "Well, let's go on and rewrite some of this because it really isn't clear...hey that's a good word word-- corruptly, makes it sound official or sumthin' or another."
    "Man alive, these lobbyists are chewing us a new one, we gotta fix this for 'em."

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  9. “It’s actually the Ethics Commission’s bill. I’m handling it for them,” Marsh said, when asked about the legislation. “They told me that language needed to be cleared up because basically it left it to where a legislator in their opinion could be…not abiding by the law if they had a cup of coffee with a lobbyist and talked about legislation.”

    Sure they did Marshmallow. And you and Hubcap were ready at drop to step on in and help weren't you? Since you're so civic minded and all.

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