Congressional Democrats claimed majorities in the House and Senate partially on the promise to clean up Washington. With that in mind, the House Democratic leadership has at last introduced ethics reform legislation. There are only two problems: it doesn’t go as far as many of their own Members had hoped; and, it’s already in trouble. We kick off with coverage from the Politico:
Bundling is the practice by which a lobbyist aggregates donations from many individuals and presents it to a lawmaker in one ‘bundle.’ In that way, a single donor might be able to deliver tens or even hundreds of thousands for a lawmaker. Flush with cash after their first taste of the majority in years, Democrats are reluctant to do anything that would put a chill on their fundraising machine. Roll Call reports that this weak the legislation has already come under attack from House Democrats–for going too far:
It’s clear that the ethics package needs serious improvements if Democrats really want to gain the public trust. In particular, they will never be able to convince voters that they’re truly adhering to a commonsense code of conduct as long as sitting Members of Congress are left judging each other’s ethics. This is the ultimate case of the fox guarding the hen house. Republicans ought to push for the strictest ethics reform possible. And they ought to back the creation of an outside body to review allegations of misconduct. In this case, it’d be both good policy and good politics.
