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- iHaveNet.com: Politics
by Cal Thomas
Before Rep. Nancy Pelosi became speaker of the House, she promised during the Bush administration that if voters allowed Democrats to regain a congressional majority Democrats would establish "the most ethical
Not only has the swamp not been drained, Democrats have begun treating it as a hot tub. The party is a long way from achieving anything close to ethical purity. But then, so are Republicans. To most people it doesn't seem to matter who is in the majority. The results are the same.
One story serves as one of many examples of the problem. Carol Leonnig of the
In an email exchange, Leonnig writes, "one senior officer said he didn't understand why he had to attend the fundraiser when he didn't even drink wine.
'You don't have to drink,' Innovative Concepts chief technology officer, Andrew Feldstein shot back in an email. 'You just have to pay.' "
The fundraiser was hosted by the
There are 13,740 active registered lobbyists in Washington, D.C., today, according to the
The latest to have their names added to the list of the corrupt include Charles Rangel (D-NY), David Paterson, New York's Democratic governor, and Rep. Eric Massa (D-NY). Republicans have their own hall of shame, most recently those associated with Jack Abramoff.
The problem in Washington has at least two dimensions.
One is the virus of corruption that does not discriminate between parties. The other is the character of the individuals voters send to Washington, too many of whom become corrupt because they stay too long and appear too weak to withstand the pressures of lobbyists, money and the pretense that Washington power is real power.
There is a way to fix this, or at least make it better. But it would require an act of selflessness not usually associated with politics and politicians.
In the 10th district of North Carolina, the Iredell County commissioner is challenging first-term Republican congressman Patrick McHenry in the May 4 primary. Leaving aside whether one term is enough, commissioner Scott Keadle has the right attitude about serving in
In the 1990s, term limits got some traction when voters demanded them for state legislators, governors and mayors. But in 1995, the
Another way to the same end must be found, even if it means turning out the party in power in every election until one party gets it and starts acting in the public's interest.
Available at Amazon.com:
The Political Fix: Changing the Game of American Democracy, from the Grassroots to the White House
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Nancy Pelosi: Draining the Swamp? | Cal Thomas
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