I
wasn�t too surprised when I read a report on Politico that in over
30 of the probes the new Office of Congressional Ethics was considering,
the only active investigations were on black Congresspersons.� That
is the way institutional racism is supposed to work.�
During
the 2008 presidential campaign, when Congressional ethics and corruption
hit the top of the polls Nancy Pelosi, then the newly installed
Speaker of the House, promised to �clean the swamp.�� She proceeded
to establish a new outside entity, the Office of Congressional Ethics,
comprised of former members of Congress with a staff of former government
lawyers.� The role of OCE is to investigate cases and refer those
with �probable cause� to the official House Ethics Committee to
be further considered.
The
big ethics news, however, was on the Senate side when the Ethics
Committee recently admonished Roland Burris in one of the harshest
letters on record for misleading investigating committees over his
contacts with Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich.� But the Committee
has done nothing about Senator Mary Landrieu�s mysterious $25,000
donation to the U.S. Treasury to cover the source of an illegal
campaign contribution, or Jane Harmon�s reputed contacts with Israel
to insure them she would be in a position to protect their interests,
or the long running saga of the affair of John Ensign (NV) with
a campaign staffer, or Republican minority Leader Mitch McConnell�s
(KY) insertion of an earmark for clients of his former a Chief of
Staff, now a lobbyist, in exchange for campaign contributions.�
That is also the way politics works.
Nevertheless,
it is curious that OCE with over 30 cases recommended for consideration
by such watchdog groups as Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics
in Government (which has a good bi-partisan record) came to focus
on Reps. Maxine Waters (CA), Laura Richardson (CA), Charlie Rangel
(NY), Carolyn Kilpatrick (MI), Bennie Thompson (MS), Donald Payne
(NJ), Donna Christensen (Virgin Islands), Jesse Jackson Jr. (Ill),
all with former CBC member Yvonne Burke on the OCE.�� Obviously
the targeted members have been angry about the charges, but CBC
Chairwoman Barbara Lee was so upset she met with the OCE to press
their case (of probably racial profiling).� Then, CBC member Rep.
Emanuel Cleaver (MO) believes that setting up the committee itself
was a mistake; it does amount to a public double-jeopardy situation
for those charged.
Without
analyzing all of these cases, I am pointing to how this institution
works racially and politically.� A good comparison is that many
whites, including senior members of the House Appropriations Committee,
John Murtha (PA), Pete Visclosky (IND), Alan Molohan (WVA), and
Jim Moran (VA), are all on the list, but let�s see if, for example,
John Murtha goes through this process, since he is a strong ally
of Speaker Nancy Pelosi.�� She stood with him against the Bush policy
in Iraq to limit US involvement and supported him for House Majority
Leader against Steny Hoyer.� My view is they won�t lay a glove on
him.
They
also haven�t as yet gone after rising Republican star, Eric Cantor
(VA) a Newt Gingrich-styled Republican who has been trying to run
a conservative movement from his congressional office.� OCE issued
a complaint saying in part, �the use of taxpayer funds to support
partisan political activities is prohibited by House rules.�� He
should have been first up on the block.
Well,
you get it; if you have the money of Senator Jane Harmon or the
power of John Murtha, very little will happen to you.� My surprise
is that they went after Charlie
Rangel and Bennie Thompson, both Committee Chairs, becasue traditionally,
blacks whatever their positions are not given the power and public
standing they deserve through positive media exposure.� So, few
people even know they are there.� Otherwise, Pelosi has so far stood
behind Rangel especially because of his central role in passing
the House health bill. �But she can turn on the CBC members, such
as Bill Jefferson�s (LA) whose seat on the house ways and Means
Committee she took even before he was convicted.
I�m
not defending black members of Congress who violate ethics rules,
but as long as whites are exonerated, so should blacks.� So, as
long as the rules of politics and/or race color the outcome, here
is hoping CBC members have the same fate as the first case of the
OCE against Republican Rep. Sam Graves (MO) that was sent to the
House Ethics Committee and thrown out.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member, Dr. Ron Walters, is the Distinguished Leadership
Scholar, Director of the African American Leadership Center and
Professor of Government and Politics at the University of Maryland
College Park. His latest book is: The Price of Racial Reconciliation (The Politics of Race and Ethnicity)
(University of Michigan Press). Click here
to contact Dr. Walters. |