Mapping Corruption: Donald Trump’s Executive
Branch
By Jim Lardner
April 10, 2020 "Information
Clearing House"
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THE
DEFENSE GOT ONE THING RIGHT at
Donald Trump’s Senate trial. The case against him was
thin, his team kept saying; and so it was, compared to
the enormity of this administration’s other offenses.
Set aside the
hate-mongering and the stream of conspiracy theories and
demagogic bombast. Trump has sowed corruption of a
breadth and brazenness unseen in the far-from-innocent
annals of our nation’s history. In three years as
president, he has transformed the executive branch into
a giant favor factory, populated with the agents or
willing partners of virtually every special interest.
Add up all the routine, daily outrages—the quasi-bribery
and quasi-extortion, the private raids on public funds,
the handouts to the undeserving, the massive flow of
cash, jobs, and freebies back in return—and Trump’s
attempt to squeeze a little re-election help out of the
fragile government of a desperate Eastern European
country does not loom particularly large in the
reckoning.
Adding it
all up is a challenge, though. It’s hard to fathom the
depths of the kleptocracy when there’s so much happening
on the surface to divert us. The corruption most
directly in our faces involves the looting and skimming
and self-dealing of the president and his family. Our
first hotel-owning president has inspired a parade of
foreign diplomats and domestic lobbyists to pay tribute
with overnight stays that are functionally
indistinguishable from bribes. The Secret Service has
blown over half a million dollars on golf carts
protecting a leader who has spent
nearly one out of every three days
of his first term at one of his resort properties, which
get free advertising on top of the revenue from lodging
his guards and retinue. Ivanka Trump
snags a valuable set of Chinese trademarks
on the same day she dines with Xi Jinping. Kellyanne
Conway
hawks Ivanka’s products
in TV interviews.
But the
personal corruption of the Trumps themselves perversely
masks the sliminess perpetrated by literally thousands
of presidential appointees, from Cabinet officials to
obscure functionaries. Amid all the distractions, it’s
hard to focus on the more consequential crookedness and
follow out the plotlines of all the sordid stories, and
grasp the brutal consequences visited upon countless
people. We lunge from scandal to scandal without ever
filling in the bigger picture, or taking proper account
of all the knaves, thieves, and corporate stooges and
their handiwork.
Hard, but
worth doing—an undertaking commenced here and continued
and expanded online at
https://prospect.org/mappingcorruption,
with an interactive, agency-by-agency exhibit of the
major offenses thus far committed. Only by traveling to
the far corners of this swamp, looking through the muck,
and drawing up a map of the territory—the stories both
known and unknown—can we begin to understand our times.
CONSIDER THE ISSUE of
immigration. At its mention, some Americans conjure up
images of dark-skinned interlopers threatening to steal
our jobs or live idly off our public services, while
others are more likely to think of children cruelly
separated from parents and desperate asylum seekers
stuck in Orwellian turnaround. Either way, we tend to
overlook a big central fact of today’s immigration
policy: the huge sums of money drawn from the U.S.
Treasury in the name of guarding our borders, and
deposited into the coffers of a booming private-prison
industry.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
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The two
giants in that field, GEO Group and CoreCivic,
run a combined 41 facilities housing more than
half the detainees held in custody by the
Department of Homeland Security’s Immigration
and Customs Enforcement unit, known as ICE; as
of mid-2019, GEO and CoreCivic had collected an
estimated $2.9 billion for their services—a huge
haul reflecting a remarkable reversal of their
fortunes, directly traceable to Trump and his
homeland security team.
A cloud
had descended over their line of business before the
2016 election. After a succession of scandals involving
substandard medical care, deaths, suicides, sexual
abuse, and exploitative labor practices, the Obama
Justice Department had
announced a phaseout of
the private sector’s role in the federal prison system.
While the Department of Homeland Security pointedly
excused itself from the new policy, it nevertheless
posed a serious threat to the industry’s future. And the
industry responded: Just a day later, a GEO subsidiary
gave $100,000 to a pro-Trump super PAC. GEO-associated
executives and entities went on to contribute another
$350,000 for transmittal to Trump and other Republican
campaigns, plus $225,000 to help finance the Trump
inaugural festivities. When Jeff Sessions got tapped for
attorney general, GEO Group
hired two former Sessions Senate aides,
David Stewart and Ryan Robichaux, to lobby on its
behalf. A month after Inauguration Day, Sessions
revoked the Obama-era
guidance, by which time GEO’s stock market value had
doubled, and CoreCivic’s was up 140 percent. “Thanks to
President Donald Trump,” CNN observed, “America’s
private prisons appear to be entering a golden age.” And
thank President Trump they did, in the form of roughly
$1 million in contributions to his election and
re-election campaigns, at last count.
The
payday lending industry made a parallel comeback,
courtesy of the Trump administration’s decision to
cancel an Obama-era plan to protect borrowers from being
sucked into long-term debt at triple-digit interest. An
estimated $2.2 million donated by payday groups to the
Trump campaign and inaugural committees during the 2016
election cycle spurred this shift, and payday lenders
weren’t shy about their intent.
The Washington Post
caught Mike Hodges, CEO of the mega-chain lender Advance
Financial, telling industry peers that money put into
the Trump cause would mean access to top administration
officials. “I’ve gone to [Republican National Committee
chair] Ronna McDaniel and said, ‘Ronna, I need help on
something,’” Hodges said on an industry webinar. “She’s
been able to call over to the White House and say, ‘Hey,
we have one of our large givers. They need an
audience.’”
The
turning point for payday loan executives came when
Richard Cordray, the Obama-era head of the Consumer
Financial Protection Bureau, stepped down, and Trump’s
top budget official and noted CFPB-phobe Mick Mulvaney
stepped in to replace him. The validity of Mulvaney’s
appointment was contested, since it went against the
fairly explicit succession provisions of the legislation
creating the bureau. The White House took care of that
problem by having its Office of Legal Counsel provide a
supportive memo. Its author, Steven Engel, had been the
lead attorney for a
payday lender in a dispute over charges that the CFPB
would
eventually drop—after
Mulvaney took charge.
LIKE CON MEN everywhere,
our president relies on misdirection, using words to
distract from deeds. Every bit of airtime or mental
space claimed by one of his performances is attention
deflected from his government and the actions of his
appointees—the former coal lobbyist charged with
protecting our air and water, the pharma executive
guiding health care policy, the oil lobbyist at the
Department of the Interior, the Raytheon lobbyist at the
Department of Defense, the telecom lawyer chairing the
Federal Communications Commission, the ex–Goldman Sachs
lawyer (married to an ex–Goldman Sachs executive)
heading up the Securities and Exchange Commission, the
ex–Goldman Sachs partner directing the Treasury
Department, the shipping heiress running the
Transportation Department, the private equity tycoon
holding down the Commerce Department, and the auto
industry lobbyist over at Energy. That’s a partial list.
“One of the
overarching narratives of the Trump administration is
the total handover of the levers of government to
corporations, and particularly the empowering of
corporate representatives to oversee the very companies
they worked for,” says Robert Weissman, the president of
Public Citizen, the venerable and still-toothy ethics
watchdog. “That is the defining story of this
administration, and it’s been badly underreported and
underappreciated due to the whole Trump circus. It’s
more extreme than anything we’ve seen. It’s
all-pervasive. It includes a lot of examples that look
like parodies.”
Personnel
is policy, the saying goes, and it has never been so
horribly true. Holding the post of secretary of
commerce, for example, is Wilbur Ross, whose private
equity firm paid a $2.3 million fine in 2016 over
undisclosed fees charged to investment partners, and who
went on to be described by
Forbes magazine as
“among the biggest grifters in American history” for
siphoning an estimated $120 million from unhappy former
associates. Ross made his name and fortune by seizing
control of financially shaky companies, clearing their
debts for pennies on the dollar, and unloading the
remaining assets for a quick buck, sometimes after
walking away from worker health and pension obligations.
For nearly a year after his confirmation, Ross retained
his ownership in a shipping company named Navigator
Holdings, tied to Russian oligarchs and members of
Vladimir Putin’s family. The Commerce Department is
deeply involved in commercial shipping matters; the
department logo features an actual ship. Just the same,
before selling his stake in Navigator, which
happens to own “the
world’s largest fleet of natural gas carriers,” Ross
personally
negotiated a deal to
facilitate the
export of
American-produced liquefied natural gas to China. The
ethics officer who signed off on Ross’s continued
investment got a promotion.
Betsy DeVos
came to the administration’s notice through her work as
a leading Republican donor and bundler, drawing on the
fortune made by her father-in-law, Richard M. DeVos,
from the multilevel-marketing giant Amway. At the
Education Department, she gave a bunch of top jobs to
people formerly employed by the likes of Career
Education, Bridgepoint, and DeVry—for-profit college
companies that had paid fines or made settlements over
charges of deceptive marketing and inflated
job-placement statistics. She and her team have treated
that industry with remarkable solicitude, insisting that
the defrauded former students of Corinthian and ITT go
on making loan payments and maintaining the flow of
federal funds to some of the smarmiest for-profit
schools still on the scene.
Meanwhile, DeVos’s policies have left tens of thousands
of teachers, nurses, police officers, and others unable
to realize any practical benefit from a congressionally
mandated program of public-service loan forgiveness.
DeVos would appear to wield more than a typical Cabinet
officer’s clout in this administration, to judge,
anyway, by the fate of a
presidential demand for
measures to ease the impact of $1.5 trillion in
ballooning student debt on millions of recent college
attendees and the state of the economy. DeVos, whose
department would have to implement this directive, has
essentially ignored it; and Trump, whose re-election
prospects depend on her money and Michigan campaign
ties, has done nothing to force the issue. So the
president of the United States is blocked from his
desired goal by a functionary whose wealth confers
political protection.
DeVos has
achieved a certain cartoon-style celebrity through her
hapless confirmation testimony and evident scorn for the
public schools. By contrast, the pervasive corruption of
the Interior Department under David Bernhardt has
received comparatively little notice. Bernhardt was a
longtime partner with the Denver law and lobbying firm
of Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck, collecting at least
$4.5 million from a roster of mining, oil, and gas
clients. He replaced one of the administration’s
penny-ante grifters,
Ryan Zinke, who had become too much of an embarrassment
by trying to spend $139,000 on six new office doors in
addition to using government resources for travel with
his wife. Bernhardt would soon disclose 20 separate
declared conflicts of interest, deciding in what he must
have imagined as an expression of transparency to carry
the list around with him on an index card. It is far
from clear, however, that his list had much effect on
his conduct.
Under his
leadership, Interior has moved to grant a long-term
water supply contract to the Fresno-based Westlands
Water District, a big former client of Bernhardt’s and a
supplier of water to large almond growers and other
agribusinesses in Northern California, potentially at
the expense of San Francisco residents who depend on the
same source of supply. As deputy secretary in 2017,
Bernhardt pushed to weaken protections for fish in order
to justify giving more water to Westlands—an issue on
which he had recently lobbied. Documents released by
Friends of the Earth show Bernhardt taking part in
multiple meetings on the issue, even when the rules said
he shouldn’t.
In all,
Bernhardt’s department has opened a million acres of
California land to fracking and oil drilling, while
taking friendly action on a total of 25 measures sought
or supported by former clients, according to the Center
for Western Priorities. In addition to this stream of
services to those he once represented, Bernhardt’s
tenure has been a windfall for his former (and possibly
future) firm. Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck has
quadrupled its revenues during his time as a Cabinet
secretary. No one should be concerned about any of this,
Bernhardt
assured The New
York Times, because “Everything I do, I go to our
ethics officers first.”
The
personal corruption of the Trumps themselves
perversely masks the sliminess perpetrated by
literally thousands of presidential appointees.
Elaine
Chao arrived with a shorter list of conflicts, but with
a remarkably easygoing posture toward ethics. She would
be leading the department that regulates international
shipping while her father and other family members ran a
huge international shipping business that builds ships
in Chinese-government-run facilities and has received
hundreds of millions of dollars in loans from a bank
tied to China’s authoritarian regime. At the same time,
she would be overseeing the distribution of federal
transportation funds to states and localities across the
country while her husband, Mitch McConnell, served as
Senate majority leader. To make matters even messier,
the financial fortunes of the couple rested on the
shipping business: In 2008, McConnell and Chao had
received a gift from Elaine’s father valued at between
$5 million and $25 million, according to
federal disclosures.
Critics
of the Chao nomination spoke of the danger of her
participation in decisions benefiting either the family
business or her husband’s political career. In office,
she has abundantly justified both concerns. A New
York Times investigation last year identified
numerous actions taken by Chao or her department that
could be advantageous to the family business; they
included public appearances with her father and a
planned joint trip to China to meet with government
officials there. Under the secretary’s leadership, the
department has moved to cut subsidies for cargo shippers
that compete with her family’s business. Until
June 2019, moreover,
she had failed to sell her holdings in Vulcan, a
manufacturer of road construction materials—a line of
business profoundly affected by Department of
Transportation policies. She took action to divest only
after The Wall Street Journal revealed her
continued stake.
Meanwhile, Chao
set up a special pipeline for Kentucky transportation
projects, overseen by a top deputy, Todd Inman, who had
previously worked for McConnell. At last report, DOT had
authorized grants in Kentucky totaling at least $78
million during the run-up to her husband’s 2020
re-election campaign. One highway improvement project
went to a McConnell political stronghold, Paducah, that
had been twice rejected for previous grant applications.
Chao was not bashful about her role: “I try not to come
empty-handed,” she quipped at a Lexington, Kentucky,
event where she announced a $2.3 million grant to the
local transit authority.
Steven
Mnuchin, Trump’s loyal finance director in the 2016
campaign, got personally rich while working for Goldman
Sachs as a specialist in the kind of private-label
mortgage securities that nearly wrecked the global
economy. He got even richer by capitalizing on the
carnage to buy a failing, scandal-stained bank on the
cheap and carry out 36,000 foreclosures (many involving
high-risk reverse mortgages marketed to elderly
homeowners) while collecting federal subsidies intended
to help keep people in their homes. In his first six
months as Treasury Secretary, Mnuchin spent
$1 million flying government jets;
he would have used one for his honeymoon if lawyers
hadn’t advised against it. More crucially, as head of
the Financial Stability Oversight Council and leader of
the agency overseeing the IRS, Mnuchin became the
administration’s point man in efforts to weaken bank
regulations, obscure scrutiny of financial activities,
and provide favorable tax rulings for wealthy
individuals and businesses—an expanse of territory
filled with opportunities for him to bestow favors on
his industry cronies. In 2017, Mnuchin’s office released
recommendations for tax regulations that were
almost entirely lifted
from a memo put out by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
The list
goes on and on. Health and Human Services Secretary Alex
Azar has
refused to commit to
making a hypothetical vaccine for coronavirus
affordable; Azar is a former executive with
pharmaceutical giant Eli Lilly, whose drug prices shot
up during his time there. Agriculture Secretary Sonny
Perdue was a founder or part-owner in more than a dozen
agribusiness companies; he personally collected $278,000
in farm subsidies from 1996 to 2004. While in Wisconsin
for a gathering of uneasy dairy farmers at a time of
widespread distress and a surge in suicides in their
ranks, Perdue implied that they should just get used to
it,
telling reporters, “In
America, the big get bigger and the small go out.”
Housing
and Urban Development Secretary Ben Carson
ordered a $31,000 dining set
for his office. Scott Pruitt, the now-departed EPA
administrator, spent
$43,000 on a soundproof phone booth
and dispatched aides to purchase him an old mattress
from the Trump Hotel. Seema Verma, the administrator of
the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and proud
crusader against “waste, fraud and abuse” in the
Medicaid program, apparently had no problem with
devoting $2 million of her agency’s budget to a personal
PR campaign aimed at, among other things, getting
designated one of the country’s top “Power Women” and
gaining coverage in places like Glamour
magazine.
To an extent
uncontemplated by even the most business-friendly
administrations of the past, Trump and company have
filled decision-making posts at the subcabinet level
with industry alums and apologists. Scott Angelle came
to his Interior Department job overseeing safety and
environmental enforcement after earning roughly $1.5
million on the board of an oil and gas pipeline company.
Before that, he fought the BP-spill-triggered moratorium
on Gulf Coast drilling while serving as Louisiana’s
secretary of natural resources, a job from which he
resigned when a brine company he was in charge of
regulating created a giant sinkhole. Addressing an oil
industry audience in 2017, Angelle gave out his
cellphone number and advised his corporate listeners to
communicate with him by phone in order to avoid leaving
a paper trail.
One of
Angelle’s colleagues at Interior, Assistant Secretary
Doug Domenech, is a former oil and gas lobbyist who ran
an industry-financed foundation dedicated to making the
“forgotten moral case for fossil fuels.” The Justice
Department’s first female associate attorney general,
Rachel Brand, had been a lawyer or lobbyist for Google,
T-Mobile, and the United States Chamber of Commerce,
besides filing a friend-of-the-court brief that helped
Citigroup dodge an admission of wrongdoing for its role
in the sale and promotion of toxic mortgage bonds. (In
February 2018, Brand left the administration to become a
top executive at Walmart.) At the Department of
Agriculture, Deputy Secretary Steve Censky had spent 21
years as CEO of the American Soybean Association, which
lobbied against disclosure rules for products containing
genetically modified organisms, or GMOs. Brooke
Appleton, Censky’s chief of staff, had been a lobbyist
for the National Corn Growers Association, to which she
returned in February 2019. Kailee Tkacz, tapped to serve
on a nutritional policy advisory panel, had been a
lobbyist for the Corn Refiners Association, the National
Grocers Association, and the Snack Food Association,
battling against federal efforts to discourage excessive
sugar and salt consumption.
In
October 2019, ProPublica reporters attempted to count up
the former lobbyists recruited into the Trump
administration. They arrived at a
working total of 281—one
lobbyist for every 14 non-civil-service job openings,
and four times more than Obama had hired during his
first six years in office.
Review the Dossiers! Browse the Map of
Corruption
Nowhere has
industry capture been more extreme than at the
Environmental Protection Agency, where the résumés of
key staffers glitter with the names of such past
employers as Exxon, Hess, BP, DowDuPont, Dynegy,
Bechtel, Duke Energy, and (in multiple instances) the
American Petroleum Institute and the American Chemistry
Council. Even at EPA, however, it would be hard to find
a more appalling case than Nancy Beck, named to head its
office of chemical safety after holding a top job at an
industry lobbying group, on whose behalf she had battled
against an EPA proposal to halt the sale of a trio of
chemicals linked to birth defects, nerve damage, and a
disturbing number of deaths. Within weeks of her
arrival, Beck was leading the charge against that
proposal, based on the same arguments she had developed
as a lobbyist, and over the protests of agency
professionals who had been working on the issue. Was
there a conflict of interest in there somewhere? Lest
anyone think so, the EPA had its legal counsel compose a
pair of “impartiality determination” memos citing Beck’s
“unique expertise, knowledge and past experience” and
the need to consider “all perspectives.” If the Senate
goes along with President Trump’s wishes, Beck will soon
be running the Consumer Product Safety Commission.
EPA is one of a
number of agencies where public-interest advocates find
themselves regularly dealing with officials who, in past
lives, were working “directly to undermine the agencies
they are now serving as managers,” says Andrew Rosenberg
of the Union of Concerned Scientists. Agencies are
increasingly making policy decisions without “the
professionals even being in the room,” and putting out
rules or guidance documents with no analysis or
supporting evidence, he adds; instead, “It’ll just be
‘We’ve decided to do this.’”
THE TRUMP
administration’s sky-high turnover rate reflects, among
other factors, its open hostility to dissent or indeed
to an interest in facts. “You get the sense that … this
is not a place for you to be exploring things that don’t
agree with someone’s political views,” Lewis Ziska
told Politico, after
the conclusion of two decades’ work as a plant
physiologist at the Department of Agriculture. His
resignation had been spurred, he said, by the experience
of seeing his superiors blow off a study of climate
change’s impact on the future of rice-growing and the
600 million people who depend on it.
One thing you
can’t get in trouble for in this administration is the
use of official powers to see to the needs or whims of
the president. That has proved to be a sound survival
strategy. Trump’s original attorney general, Jeff
Sessions, lost his job for recusing himself from the
Russia inquiry; his successor, William Barr, has made
himself indispensable by ordering investigations of
Trump enemies and squelching probes of Trump himself.
Mnuchin, for his part, has worked with IRS officials to
keep the Trump tax returns on lockdown, reportedly
overruling lawyers who argued that the agency had no
choice but to turn them over in response to a House
subpoena.
One thing
you can’t get in trouble for in this administration
is the use of official powers to see to the whims of
the president.
The Treasury
Secretary also had a hand in tweaking the rules of the
Opportunity Zone tax credit so that it might be more
readily available to rich real-estate wheeler-dealers.
The beneficiaries we know about include Jared Kushner,
former Governor Chris Christie of New Jersey, New York
real-estate magnate and longtime Trump associate Richard
LeFrak, former White House aide Anthony Scaramucci, and
Mnuchin’s longtime friend, the convicted securities
crook Michael Milken, who later secured a presidential
pardon with Mnuchin’s further assistance.
By
looking out for Trump, you gain a license to look out
for yourself—that is the credo of this administration.
Wilbur Ross accepted the task of cooking up a
phony legal pretext for
the White House’s effort to discourage Latino voting
through the insertion of a citizenship question into the
2020 census, a plan stymied by the Supreme Court. In
return for his dutiful service, Ross has been permitted
to play a leading role in U.S.-China trade and natural
gas export matters, despite his joint investment in the
Navigator shipping company (along with a Chinese state
fund) and natural gas concerns. In addition, he has
conferred with leaders of state-controlled funds in
Qatar, Japan, and Singapore, which had previously placed
money with his private equity firm. He has also held
official meetings with the CEOs of Chevron and Boeing
while his wife owned shares in those companies valued at
$400,000 and $2 million, respectively.
Officials of
the Department of Homeland Security, including current
acting Secretary Chad Wolf, have been steady
cheerleaders for Trump’s cherished border wall,
participating in promotional events that effectively
double as re-election commercials. Meanwhile, a stream
of DHS people have moved on to lucrative positions in
businesses that rely on Homeland Security contracts. One
of them, Scott Sutterfield, now an executive at LaSalle
Corrections, previously ran ICE’s field office in New
Orleans. During his time there, ICE began using eight
new for-profit detention centers in Louisiana and
Mississippi. Sutterfield then went to work for LaSalle,
the company operating six of the new jails. Although he
claimed to have recused himself from the contracting
process, a colleague didn’t sound so sure. “Not
extremely a lot,” said LaSalle Director of Operations
Kevin Sumrall when asked if Sutterfield had been
involved in decisions affecting LaSalle.
SINCE THE BEGINNING of
his presidency, Donald Trump has managed to fend off two
long official inquiries, one going as far as
impeachment. Now that the goal is to win an election,
some investigation-weary Democrats are counseling their
party to go easy on the attacks and the whole subject of
corruption, to concentrate on kitchen-table concerns and
accentuate the positive in order to appeal to a small
but theoretically crucial bloc of Trump-susceptible
swing voters in swing states.
That way lies
political disaster. “You don’t bring a knife to a
gunfight, Donald Trump taught us that,” says Richard
Cordray, who has watched the Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau, which he led for six years, get
dismembered by Mick Mulvaney and other Trump hirelings.
Cordray, who ran unsuccessfully statewide in Ohio twice
(once for attorney general and once for governor),
scoffs at the notion of the Midwest as a zone of
comparative indifference to Trump political thievery.
Voters everywhere react very badly to public officials
“who steal from our pockets and stuff their own,”
Cordray says.
There is
plenty of evidence to support him. Since the financial
crisis of 2008, polls show corruption climbing the
ladder of voter concerns to a place
near the top.
Unfortunately, voters all too often set their corruption
outrage aside out of a weary sense that things will be
pretty bad regardless of which way they go. That
perception was one of Trump’s triumphs in the 2016
campaign; it was achieved through a combination of his
“drain the swamp” chants and his endless attacks on a
Democratic nominee who had made herself conveniently
vulnerable. He will no doubt deploy the same techniques
again if Joe Biden is the nominee, pounding away at
Hunter Biden’s high-paid corporate board gigs
(emblematic, if truth be told, of small-time, bipartisan
corruption that masks the much worse stuff), and ginning
up whatever other scandals or pseudo-scandals come to
mind. His assignment could be tougher if the Democrats
end up making a different choice.
When corruption
gets rampant and brazen, however, and when it is heavily
concentrated in one political party, it makes for wave
elections like those of 1974, 2006, and, indeed, 2018.
Voters went to the polls in the most recent midterms
with their heads full of tawdriness involving the likes
of Michael Cohen and Paul Manafort, and proceeded to
oust a record number of House incumbents from office.
Many of those legislators lost to Democratic challengers
running on strong clean-government platforms and
rejecting corporate PAC dollars.
Afterward,
Nancy Pelosi was one of a number of observers pointing
to corruption outrage as the biggest driver of the
outcome. This was so, they concluded, even though party
leaders had been timid about the issue beforehand,
pumping out advice and talking points with an almost
obsessive emphasis on health care.
This time
around, Democrats enter the 2020 campaign with the
advantage of an agreed-on corruption-fighting platform
(the already-passed House legislation symbolically
dubbed H.R. 1), and with the chance to put the crimes of
Trump & Co. front and center. They can do so not only on
the campaign trail, but, thanks to their 2018 success,
in House oversight hearings, following up on the work of
media and watchdog organizations. More digging, with
this administration, is bound to unearth more dirt.
They can, above
all, follow the lead of Elizabeth Warren (in a valuable
legacy of her unsuccessful campaign) by drawing the
connection again and again between issue areas where
obvious and widely supported policies keep going
nowhere, and the industries whose corrupt influence
guarantees that. Corruption, in addition to being a
powerful issue in its own right, can help the party
transcend debates over potentially divisive policy
specifics: Progressives and moderates may disagree about
Medicare for All and a public option, but they can unite
behind the foundational need to rein in the
self-interest of the drug, insurance, and hospital
industries. Trump’s industry-laden Health and Human
Services Department exemplifies this kind of influence,
and should be held up as a model—one of a great many to
be found in the executive branch of government under
this president.
Democrats must
summon the courage, most importantly, to make the leap
from denouncing Trump’s over-the-top personal corruption
to acknowledging and challenging the more generic and
abiding money corruption that, with or without Trump,
gives billionaires and rapacious corporations and
financial interests way too much clout, at incalculable
cost to the rest of us and the idea of democracy.
As messy as
things look right now, a referendum on corruption and
clean government is the kind of election that gives the
country, as well as the Democratic ticket, the best shot
at a decisive victory. “Corruption is not a peripheral
concern,” says Jamie Raskin, the Maryland congressman
and constitutional law scholar. “It’s the very heart of
what ails us … We have to elevate the anti-corruption
agenda to the top of our political program.”
Jim
Lardner is a journalist and political activist.. -
"Source"
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