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After twelve
years, the tide
of power turned
this November.
Great
responsibility
comes with
power, and we
will soon be
witness to that
power in the
110th Congress.
Knowing that
Congress is an
institution, we
can find comfort
in the fact that
faces may change
but purpose
remains. During
the years, we as
elected
officials
represent our
home districts,
our people and
our values. We
hold ourselves
to higher
standards
because we have
been given the
power to change
law, to create
law, and to fund
our government.
And when those
standards weaken
in the House, we
monitor each
other through
the use of the
Ethics
Committee.
Since its
inception in
1968, the
Committee on
Standards for
Official Conduct
(informally
known as the
House Ethics
Committee) has
been unique in
the House of
Representatives.
It is the only
standing
committee in
which membership
is equally
divided between
each party. The
make-up of the
committee is
intended to
provide a fair
procedural
framework for
the conduct of
the committee’s
activities and
to help ensure
that the
committee serves
well the people
of the United
States, the
House of
Representatives,
and the members,
officers and
employees of the
House.
I have been in
the unique
position of
serving on the
Ethics Committee
as a member and
as Chairman.
During my
service, I have
come to the
conclusion that
the process
works if
Leadership
allows it to.
Having an
equally divided
committee
fosters a
working
relationship
that has rarely
been equaled on
other
committees. In
my time as
Chairman, no
decision was
made on a
partisan basis,
and most
decisions were
unanimous. I
would be hard
pressed to
remember a time
when Congress
was not under
scrutiny, but in
recent times we
have come under
a direct
dissection and
search for
credibility. To
be a credible
ethics process,
bipartisanship
must exist not
only in
Committee
deliberations
and actions, but
also in the
development of
the rules under
which those
deliberations
and actions will
occur.
I believe some
of our
credibility
disappeared in
late 2004 and
early 2005 when
Leadership
fast-tracked
legislation,
calling on party
loyalty to pass
the rules
changes. This is
a misfortune
that should be
remedied in the
110th Congress.
The vote on the
ethics process
should be
separate and
apart from the
vote on the
House rules. The
vote on House
rules is a
party-line vote,
but the vote on
the ethics
process should
not be. The
January 2005
vote signified a
major detour
from a
bipartisan
ethics
resolution.
Besides the
actual rule
changes, I am
troubled by the
actual process
Leadership
engaged in to
fasttrack the
rules changes.
Despite numerous
requests by the
committee,
Leadership did
not consult the
committee on any
of the changes
they proposed
and
publicly
released the
text of these
rules only a few
hours
before they were
to be voted
upon. The Ethics
Committee has
almost 40 years
of bipartisan
tradition. From
its very
beginning, the
rules for its
operation were
the results of a
bipartisan panel
composed of six
Democrats and
six Republicans.
To continue
working without
undue influence,
it is imperative
to develop the
rules in a
bipartisan
manner.
Past evidence
reveals the
chair and
ranking member
would submit
changes
to the ethics
rules
when the
process stopped
working.
By submitting
changes,
the committee
commits
to three things:
bipartisanship,
careful
deliberation,
and a showing
of
necessity.
Through
change,
we strive to
strengthen the
ethics rules.
From
1997, when I
served
my first
term, until
2004,
while
serving my last,
we as
a
committee gave
unanimous
or
overwhelmingly
bipartisan
conclusions.
The
committee, as
part of
the
institution,
worked.
Deadlock
never reared its
ugly
head.
Partisanship was
left at the
door. And
careful
deliberation
carried us to
our
conclusions.
The importance
of the
Ethics
process for the
new
Congress
will redefine
the
character
of Congress. We
have the duty to
protect
the
institution
Congress
represents, and
within that
duty, we
must hold
ourselves
accountable for
our own
actions
as well as our
colleagues’
actions. I would
suggest
that if Chairman
Hastings goes on
to other
things,
the new Minority
Leader of the
House should
appoint
Representative
Kenny Hulshof
(R-MO) to
be the
ranking member
of the Ethics
Committee.
Hulshof,
in my opinion,
represents a
proven option
to lead
the committee.
He has proven to
be nonpartisan
and holds
the respect of
everyone. If
there is
any
committee on the
Hill that should
aspire to
nonpartisanship
and
respect, it is
the Ethics
Committee.
The
Ethics Committee
can continue to
produce fair
decisions
so long as
Leadership stays
out of the
process.
As I face the
last days of
service here in
the House,
I urge
those returning
and those just
chosen to use a
different
process than
used in January
2005 to adopt
the new
ethics rules for
the House. We
have done a
great
disservice to
ourselves by
voting for
partisanship
in the
ethics process,
and the
consequences of
that
vote show
in the form of
stalemate during
most of
the last
Congress. It is
my hope that a
real analysis of
the rules
is undertaken
when
deciding
on changes.
Based
on my
experience on
the
Ethics
Committee, I,
along
with
Representative
Hulshof,
have
suggested
reforms to
the House
ethics procedure
that were
not included in
H.R.
4975, the bill
which passed the
House. Our bill,
H.R. 4988, does
three things
the
passed
legislation does
not. Our
bill gives the
Ethics
Committee
broader subpoena
power
during informal
investigations,
which is when
the key
decision is made
whether
to fully
investigate a potential violation. Our bill
would strengthen
the
independence of
the chair and
ranking
Member by giving
them
presumptive six
year
terms
like other
Chairmen.
And our
bill would
strengthen
the
independence of
the Ethics
Committee
staff by making
this a
career office,
like the
Parliamentarian’s
office, yet with
the
accountability
all staff
should have.
In the end, it
is the
independent
nature of the
Ethics
Committee that
will sustain
change and
provide
oversight to the
standards
necessary for an
institution
worthy of
respect. The
Ethics process
sets the
tone.
RF
Joel Hefley has
represented the
Fifth District
of Colorado in
the U.S. House
of
Representatives
since 1987. From
2001 until 2005,
he served as
Chairman of the
Ethics
Committee. He is
retiring at the
end of this
term. |