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n
old-fashioned shakedown has just taken place in California politics.
It began when
a Democratic insider named Michael Berman, the brother of L.A. congressman
Howard Berman, got a contract worth nearly $1 million to draw a
new map for the Golden State's 53 congressional districts.
The Orange
County Register mentioned in two heavily buried paragraphs
that the state's Democratic members of Congress were joining
forces in an "incumbent-protection plan," as Democratic
Rep. Loretta Sanchez put it. The price of admission: $20,000 per
lawmaker.
Let's read
further in today's issue of Highlights for Grownups. Can
you find the hidden bribe? "Twenty thousand is nothing to keep
your seat," Sanchez said. "I spend $2 million every election.
If my colleagues are smart, they'll pay their $20,000, and Michael
will draw the district they can win in. Those who have refused to
pay? God help them." That wasn't hard, was it?
But
surprise good government types aren't expressing outrage.
And the media, typically hypersensitive to any hint of financial
corruption, are greeting the news with a yawn. When David Broder
picked up the Sanchez quote in the Washington Post, he relegated
it to the last paragraph of his piece.
Most politicians
like to get on their soapbox and rail about the bad guys engaging
in bribery or dirty politics. Kind of hard to do though, isn't it,
when you're the ones making the payoffs?
In the 2000
race, Al Gore harangued the Republicans about campaign finance reform
while experiencing a bout of Zen-like amnesia over his own fundraising
improprieties. So how does that square with the lack of outrage
from all the Dems who have been touting ethics in politics? Where
are the media on this one? Why not denounce the practice in editorials
or interview the 30 out of 32 congressional Democrats who
forked over the $20,000 to Berman? Surely they could provide some
justification for this legalized bribery. We might have to eat into
some Condit coverage, but my guess is the republic can survive.
Consider the
scenario in reverse. It's some faraway decade, and Republicans control
the California governorship and the delegation to Capitol Hill.
Rep. Christopher Cox announces that he's paying off the GOP-anointed
redistricting czar and brother of Rep. Dana Rohrabacher
to keep his seat safe from a Democratic takeover. Other Republicans
follow suit.
Everyone involved
would be tarred, feathered, and raked over the coals. Their improper
behavior would be splattered over front pages and debated on cable
talk shows. Dan Rather would introduce the story in somber tones.
Liberal pundits would rightly condemn it as corruption.
Of course,
part of our democracy has always been for sale. Unions buy off politicians
for a piece of the action; corporations with first-rate lobbyists
win government subsidies. But a $20,000 payment to ensure that one's
district remains intact smells, tastes, and feels like a quid pro
quo. Even Loretta Sanchez admits that.
In California
at least, when it comes to cleaning up government, the Democrats'
credibility is evaporating like an ocean mist over Malibu.
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