Honest Enforcement: What Congress Can Learn From Independent State Ethics Commissions
2/6/2007
Executive Summary
Some argue that last year's scandals, which led
to the conviction of two congressmen and several
top aides, are evidence that ethics enforcement
in Congress works. The actual facts leading up
to the convictions, however, are more an
indictment of the current process than a
testament to its success. A whistleblower who
took his case to the media and the U.S.
Department of Justice-not the House and
Senate ethics committees-uncovered the
dealings of lobbyist Jack Abramoff. Neither the
House nor the Senate ethics committee has
indicated publicly that they looked into the matter
or considered if other members of Congress
broke any Senate or House rules, regardless of
whether outside laws were broken. Among the
many concerns, the secrecy of the process
provides no assurance to the American people
that members take these scandals seriously.
Although Congress recently passed strong new
rules to limit undue access by powerful interests,
the federal ethics enforcement process is flawed
in many ways. The House and Senate ethics
oversight committees are comprised of
colleagues who know and work with one another
and who rely on one another's support for
legislation or campaign contributions, creating
both the appearance and practice of a conflict of
interest. Committee members have no
guaranteed terms and can and have been
removed as recently as 2006 for taking actions in
the course of their work of which their colleagues
disapprove. Complaints in the House can only
be filed by other colleagues, limiting the ability of
outside and more impartial observers to make
their concerns heard.
While not every state has experienced the level
of corruption uncovered in Congress last year,
state legislatures face similar challenges. How
should legislative ethics rules be enforced? How
can lawmakers identify and hold accountable
colleagues who cross the line and reassure
skeptical voters that they are honest brokers of
public policy and taxpayer money?
We decided to examine if state governments
have had any success in creating an important
layer of independence between the investigators
and those being investigated-the state
legislators. We found that the states are far
ahead of Congress in understanding the inherent
conflict of interest of colleagues overseeing
colleagues. In fact, as of January 2007, at least
23 states had established independent
commissions, boards or offices to oversee
enforcement of ethics rules for their state
legislators.
State commissions vary in how they were
created, who participates and how they operate,
but those that are independent from the
legislature have, for the most part, several
features in common:
• The commissions include outside
panelists who oversee a professional
director and a staff of impartial
investigators;
• The commissions have clear and
mandatory conflict of interest guidelines
limiting service to those who are not
covered by the rules or closely involved
in partisan activities;
• Commissioners serve set terms and
cannot be removed for any reason other
than cause (i.e. neglect of duty, gross
misconduct or other specified actions);
• The commissions have the power to
receive complaints from the general
public; and
• The commissions may launch
investigations without legislative or
outside approval and recommend or enforce sanctions against those who
have violated the rules.
Some independent commissions also enjoy
guaranteed funding outside of legislative
appropriations and offer better disclosure of
ethics complaints. In a few cases, to protect
against partisan abuses, commissions will not
release publicly or act on any complaint filed
within 60 days of an election.
We can divide the states with independent ethics
commissions or offices into roughly three
categories. All of these states have taken steps
to remove the inherent conflicts of interest when
colleagues investigate colleagues. States in
Categories 1 and 2 meet all of the independence
criteria listed above including outside oversight,
meaningful conflict of interest rules, protection
against arbitrary removal of commissioners, an
open complaint process, full investigative
authority and full disclosure of complaints filed
and actions taken. They are strong commissions
with model design features that provide for
significant independence. States in Category 1,
however, also include features that provide
additional checks on the system. The
commissions in Category 3 states include most
of the design elements necessary for
independence from the legislature, but they fall
short in one or more of the areas. For example,
most of these commissions only disclose ethics
complaints if the commission finds a violation.
The states not listed either allow legislators to sit
on their ethics commissions or do not have
commissions that oversee ethics rules for state
legislators. Other states have ethics
commissions that only oversee compliance with
campaign finance and lobby disclosure laws but
not ethics rules or enjoy jurisdiction only over
state executive branch officials, the judiciary or
other non-legislative elected or appointed officials
and their staff.
Congress is almost alone in choosing to selfpolice.
If members are serious about honest and
open government, they should follow the lead of
almost half of the states and establish an
independent ethics enforcement commission.
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