Weekly Opinion Editorial
ETHICS ARE IN THE HEAD
BEFORE
THEY ARE IN THE HAND!
by Steve Fair
The German philosopher, Immanuel Kant said, “In law a man is guilty when he violates the rights of others. In ethics, he is guilty if he only thinks of
doing so.”
The Oklahoma
Ethics Commission is a five(5) member board of commissioners appointed by
various elected officials. The
commissioners serve with no compensation- it’s a volunteer position. Currently there are three Democrats and two
Republicans on the commission. The
Ethics commission was created in 1990 by the passage of a State Question by Oklahoma voters. The stated purpose of the Ethics Commission is
to “promulgate rules of ethical conduct
for state officers and employees, campaigns for elective state office and
campaigns for state ballot initiatives.”
In other words, they are the
political contribution police. The
Ethics Commission requires candidates, political organizations and lobbyists to
report who contributes to their cause and how they are spending those
contributions. They provide some
transparency into the political process.
Last week at
their regular monthly meeting, the Ethics Commission proposed some changes to
how lobbyists register and report. They
proposed increasing the amount a lobbyist can spend on a meal with a state
legislator from $100 to $500. They also
proposed that state colleges and universities in Oklahoma be allowed to give legislators two
tickets to every sporting event, lecture, or seminar at their school. That is potentially two tickets to every
softball, baseball, football, basketball game from every state institution in Oklahoma for all 149 Oklahoma legislators. Wow!
State
Representative Mike Reynolds, (R-OKC), says, “These proposed rule changes have the potential
of increasing lobbyists’ gifts to lawmakers by hundreds of thousands of dollars
each year. Instead of limiting influence on lawmakers, the Ethics Commission
seems to be declaring open season for lobbyists on elected officials.” Reynolds plans to introduce legislation in the upcoming 2014 legislative session to disapprove the
proposed rule changes by the commission. Four thoughts:
First, lobbyists represent people.
I realize that lobbyists have a bad reputation, but understand most lobbyists
are people representing groups of people. Lobbyists are often representing people who
are working and can’t personally lobby their elected officials. Not all
lobbyists are bad- just like not all jelly salesmen are bad. Most lobbyists provide valuable information
and educate a legislator on an issue.
The key is the legislator must understand that when the lobbyist is
presenting their side of the story they are only presenting ONE side. They must remember that every issue, like a
pancake, has two sides.
Second, there is no such thing as a free lunch. When a lobbyist buys a legislator a meal, he ultimately
expects to get a return on his investment.
Any state legislator that doesn’t recognize that isn’t smart enough to
represent the people of Oklahoma. No lobbyist can stay in business buying lunch
and not delivering the votes to his clients.
When a lobbyist says he doesn’t expect anything from entertaining, he is
either naïve or lying.
Third, taxpayer funded lobbyists must go away. Currently large state agencies, colleges and
universities in Oklahoma
use taxpayers dollars to contract outside lobbyists to convince legislators to
give them more of our tax dollars. Senator
Anthony Sykes, (R-Moore) introduced legislation several years ago to eliminate
taxpayer funded lobbyists. The bill
never got out of committee. It is time
for the taxpayers of Oklahoma
to demand a proposed constitutional amendment (a state question) on the ballot
that would eliminate this incestuous practice.
Fourth, it is good we have an Ethics Commission in Oklahoma.
Some believe the Ethics Commission violates their constitutional rights
and they favor a no holds barred free for all in campaign finance. They favor no reporting or contribution
limits, but the public has a right to know where a candidate is getting the
money to fund a campaign. The public has
a right to know what clients a lobbying fund represents and how much money the
lobbyist spent ‘educating’ legislators.
The
most disturbing proposed rule change by the commission is one that would stop
ethics violation investigations in the last days of a campaign. As any experienced politico knows, most
ethics violations occur in the final reporting periods. If the commission ceases to investigate
those, then they will have become as sounding brass and tinkling cymbal.
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