By Dennis Jett
November 22/23, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" - In every other
developed democratic country, the role of
ambassador, with only very rare exceptions, is given
to career diplomats who have spent decades learning
the art of international relations.
In the U.S., however, many ambassadors are
untrained in diplomacy, and have simply bought their
way into a prestigious post.
The involvement of the American ambassador to the
European Union,
Gordon Sondland, in the Ukraine scandal has
prompted interest in the media and Congress in the
role of non-career ambassadors like him.
On Oct. 30, U.S. Rep. Ami Bera, a Democrat from
California,
introduced legislation that would require at
least 70% of a president’s ambassadorial
appointments to come from the ranks of career
Foreign Service officers and civil servants.
Career appointees have to spend decades working
their way up through the ranks in government before
being nominated,
as I did before becoming ambassador in
Mozambique and later in Peru.
Bera’s bill likely does not have the support in
Congress to ever be enacted. More importantly, it
does not address what I think is the real problem
with political appointee ambassadors. That is the
selling of the title in exchange for campaign
contributions to people who are clearly unqualified
for the job.
While this is a time-honored practice used by
presidents of both parties, it has arguably gotten
worse under the Trump administration.
1. Who picks ambassadors?
The Constitution says nothing about the
qualifications required to be an ambassador. All it
says is the president can appoint them with the
advice and consent of the Senate.
In other words, a president can appoint whoever
he wants for whatever reason he wants.
The Senate
can refuse to confirm a nominee, but that has
not happened in over a century. Instead,
occasionally the Senate will refuse to vote on the
nomination and the nominee languishes until either
the Senate does decide to act or the White House
withdraws the nomination.
That kind of delay is not uncommon, but it is
almost always due to policy disputes between the two
branches, rather than anything to do with the
qualifications of the person being proposed for an
ambassadorship.
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2. Who’s qualified?
Deciding what qualifies someone to be the
personal representative of the president abroad is
therefore almost entirely up to the president.
During the Nixon administration, the president’s
personal lawyer asked the wife of a wealthy
department store owner for a US$250,000 campaign
contribution
in exchange for the ambassadorship to Costa Rica.
She famously replied, “That’s a lot to pay for Costa
Rica, isn’t it?” She eventually
went to Luxembourg as ambassador, and shortly
thereafter wrote checks to the Nixon re-election
campaign that added up to $300,000.
That overt quid pro quo prompted the passage of
the Foreign Service Act of 1980.
The act states that those appointed to be an
ambassador “should possess clearly demonstrated
competence to perform the duties of a chief of
mission,” including knowledge of the language,
history and culture of the country.
It added that, given those requirements, such
positions “should normally be accorded to career
members of the Foreign Service, though circumstance
will warrant appointments from time to time of
qualified individuals who are not.”
It also stressed that “contributions to political
campaigns should not be a factor in the appointment
of an individual as a chief of mission.”
3. How many ambassadors are career diplomats?
Despite its intended purpose, the act did little
to change how business was done in Washington.
The percentage of political appointee ambassadors
only went down very slightly, hovering around 30%
after the act was passed.
The one exception was the Reagan administration,
which got the figure up to 38% by sending Reaganites
to places like Rwanda and Malawi, where normally
only career ambassadors would dare to tread.
4. How much does an ambassadorship cost?
While some political appointees are political
allies and friends of the president, for many
postings – particularly in Western Europe and the
Caribbean, where
80% of the ambassadors are political appointees
– who gets the job depends on money.
Even after the Foreign Service Act was passed,
political contributions continued to play such a
role that it was possible to estimate how much more
London would cost than Lisbon. The larger a
country’s economy and the number of tourists that
visit it,
the
higher the price of becoming ambassador.
And for those who want to add a fancy title to
their resume and have the money, a six or even seven
figure price is not too high.
For his first inauguration,
President Obama put a limit of $50,000 on
contributions. President George W. Bush capped his
at $250,000.
For Trump, the sky was the limit and the
floodgates were opened for those who wanted to buy
access or influence.
More than 250 donors gave $100,000 or more,
which amounted to over 90% of the $107 million that
was collected for the inaugural festivities.
Though Sondland had not backed Trump in his bid
to be the Republican candidate,
he contributed
$1 million after the election to Trump’s
inaugural committee.
Under Trump, it’s not just the posts in rich
countries and tropical paradises that are for sale.
United Nations ambassador Kelly Craft and her
husband
contributed over $2 million to Trump’s election
campaign and inauguration. She also
gave generously to over half the Repubican
senators on the Foreign Relations Committee that had
to approve her nomination.
So while the percentage of political-appointee
ambassadors may not increase all that much by the
end of Trump’s current term, the price for buying
one certainly has.
I think this practice of selling ambassadorships
is unlikely to change, despite the image it creates
abroad when a person with no knowledge of a country
is put in charge of the American embassy there.
Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Elizabeth
Warren has said she will appoint no big donors
as ambassadors - period. But when I have contacted
the campaigns of every other person seeking the
nomination to ask if they would make a similar
pledge, I have been met with silence. That is
because in Washington money does the talking.
Dennis Jett: Professor of International
Affairs, Pennsylvania State University
This article was originally
published by "The
Conversation" -
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