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Ethics Probe Of 33 Lawmakers A Yawner

The Washington Post breathlessly tells us today that 33 lawmakers are being investigated for questionable conduct that includes defense lobbying and corporate influence peddling.

Granted, this is a legitimate story in Washington. But for the rest of the nation, it most likely will produce a collective yawn. “What else is new?” they might ask.

The report was prepared in July. It was accidentally leaked by a junior staffer who used software from his home computer known as “peer-to-peer” technology. “(It) has previously caused inadvertent breaches of sensitive financial, defense-related and personal data from government and commercial networks,” the Post reported.

The breach scared the crap out of House committee members. Zoe Lofgen (D-Calif.) , its chairperson, interrupted a series of House votes to alert lawmakers, cautioning that some of the activities are preliminary and not a conclusive sign of inappropriate behavior. “No inference should be made as to any member,” she said.

Rep. Jo Bonner (Ala.), the committee’s ranking Republican, said the breach was an isolated incident. Right. The junior staffer was fired.

The Post explained:

The ethics committee is one of the most secretive panels in Congress, and its members and staff members sign oaths not to disclose any activities related to its past or present investigations. Watchdog groups have accused the committee of not actively pursuing inquiries; the newly disclosed document indicates the panel is conducting far more investigations than it had revealed…

The 22-page “Committee on Standards Weekly Summary Report” gives brief summaries of ethics panel investigations of the conduct of 19 lawmakers and a few staff members. It also outlines the work of the new Office of Congressional Ethics, a quasi-independent body that initiates investigations and provides recommendations to the ethics committee. The document indicated that the office was reviewing the activities of 14 other lawmakers. Some were under review by both ethics bodies.

Most of the inquiries already have been made public.

Lawmakers named in the July report include House Ways and Means Chairman Charles B. Rangel (D-N.Y.); Rep. Maxine Waters, (D-Calif.) a high-ranking member of the House Financial Services Committee in addition to Reps, Murtha (D-Pa.), Moran (D-Va.), Visclosky (D-Ind.), Shuler (D-N.C.), Graves (R-Mo.), Harman (D-Calif.), Barton, (R-Tex.), Kaptur (D-Ohio),Young (R-Fla.), Tiahrt (R-Kan.), Nunes (R-Calif.) and Mack (R-Calif.).

I am suspect of any organization that investigates itself. It’s all and well that the investigative process is kept secret. But the findings should be a matter of public record, not as they are now which are leaked or by exonerated lawmakers showing their “Get Out Of Jail” free card.



7 Responses to “Ethics Probe Of 33 Lawmakers A Yawner”

  1. PWT says:

    I'm sad to see that (R)s are falling behind their (D) counterparts in regards to corruption. Have they cleaned up their act or just gotten smarter about it?

  2. AustinRoth says:

    The truly sad thing is that 33 Congressman are being investigated, and they are just the ones blatant enough to warrant investigation, and as a whole, we don't seem to care. This is why corruption is systemic to the system, and it does not matter which party is perceived as the corrupt one. Once voted out of power, the other side quickly fills the vacuum.

  3. dduck12 says:

    What committee is investigating Sen. Dodd?

  4. Zzzzz says:

    A lot were arrested or thrown out of office. There are a lot fewer R's to get in trouble, but don't worry. Elect more R's and they will happily catch up with the D's in the corruption games.

  5. JeffersonDavis says:

    Perhaps that's why we should Vote “Green”, and recycle Congress.

    ZERO INCUMBENTS

  6. ProfElwood says:

    In general, those in power get the most opportunities for corruption, and they're more able to get away with it at the same time.

  7. DLS says:

    “But for the rest of the nation, it most likely will produce a collective yawn.”

    If they're stupid sheep, I guess so. But it already has made some of us wonder aloud, what does it say about the priorities among those who at least are purported to pay attention to such things (including on this political-forum Web site)?

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