SMRs and AMRs

Monday, September 06, 2010

NYT editorial: Follow the Money to the Floor

Three House members got word the other day that investigators have recommended that the ethics committee delve into their fund-raising from Wall Street donors — lucrative labors that happened to coincide precisely with some big votes on reforming Wall Street. Five other members were cleared in the same inquiry, raising the question of exactly what it might take to violate the Capitol’s notoriously porous rules about political fund-raising.

The track history of the full ethics committee suggests nothing much will come of the inquiry. But at least the new House watchdog — the semi-independent Office of Congressional Ethics — has dared to focus on the meat and potatoes of Capitol culture.

Members don’t twitter about it to the folks back home, but the heart of the workday often involves writing laws with one hand, then ducking out of the people’s House to beg for money with the other. It’s not that inconvenient. The smarter special-interest check writers are right in the neighborhood.

In the same fashion, lawmakers of both houses must go out of the Capitol to nearby political party offices where colorless cubicles are maintained for them to “dial for dollars” — beg for more money — from donor lists. Privately, members admit loathing such politicking, but they follow this proven, cash-rich way to protect incumbency.

(More here.)

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