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Black Caucus Criticizes Ethics Probe of Trip to the Caribbean

More news stories on Blacks in Charge

Mike Soraghan, The Hill, June 23, 2009

An investigation into a trip taken by members of the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) is triggering a backlash against the Office of Congressional Ethics (OCE)—House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s signature ethics proposal.

CBC members, frustrated at what they perceive as an accusation by a conservative group that’s been blown out of proportion, last week formed a working group to look at taking on the 2006 resolution that created the OCE.

“We might need to revisit that law,” a source said.

While the dealings of both the OCE and the House ethics committee are confidential, the OCE appears to have referred allegations about a trip to the Caribbean island of St. Maarten to the full House ethics committee, which has begun investigating.

In a CBC meeting last week, members complained that the office doesn’t have enough minority staffers, and that the investigators “acted like they were with the FBI.”

The task force, composed mostly of CBC members who are lawyers, is being headed by Rep. Chaka Fattah (D-Pa.), who last week declined to comment. A CBC spokesman did not return calls seeking comment.

It’s not clear whether CBC members want to change or abolish the OCE. CBC sources said it is premature to say what the working group’s goal might be.

Leo Wise, the staff director of the OCE, would not confirm any investigation, but he disputed accusations that his organization lacks diversity and that its investigators are rude.

The OCE has three “investigative counsels,” Wise said. One is a woman; one is Arab-American and a third is an African-American who has been hired but hasn’t started.

{snip}

The independent ethics office was a keystone of Pelosi’s (D-Calif.) promise to “drain the swamp” when Democrats took over Congress in the wake of a series of Republican scandals, such as GOP members dealings with lobbyist Jack Abramoff. There was widespread criticism that the ethics committee had been ineffective at policing members’ conduct.

The OCE, which has a review board of former members, can accept formal complaints from outside groups and private citizens and can refer those complaints to the House ethics committee.

It has never been popular with the CBC, whose members were among the most outspoken opponents of Pelosi’s proposal. Critics feared that partisan groups could use the office to launch politically motivated ethics investigations. Now, some CBC members think that’s just what’s happened.

{snip}

The Hill reported earlier this month that the House ethics committee is reviewing allegations that lawmakers attended a conference on the island last year that was paid for by corporate sponsors, and thus was in violation of House rules. Staffers from the OCE had previously contacted aides to lawmakers who attended.

The accusations have been pressed by the National Legal and Policy Center, a conservative watchdog group. {snip}

It’s not clear whether the panel has launched a full investigation into the Caribbean trip or whether the committee has expanded an ongoing probe into House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Charles Rangel’s (D-N.Y.) personal finances and fundraising activities to include his trip. The panel usually announces the formal launch of an investigation after taking a preliminary look into the matter. Rangel is one of six members to have attended.

House rules imposed by Democrats after they took back the House in 2006 bar lawmakers from accepting travel lasting more than two days if corporations that “employ or retain a registered lobbyist” are underwriting or organizing any part of them. They were designed to prevent trips like the now-infamous golf junket to Scotland that Abramoff organized.

{snip}

Original article

(Posted on June 24, 2009)

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Comments

1 — Question Diversity wrote at 5:51 PM on June 24:

The OCE isn’t popular with the CBC for much the same reason that black non-politicians tend to be suspicious of cops. Because they run afowl of ethics regulations and laws pretty often.

If the OCE is LollaPelosi-run, how can it be conservative? Nancy Pelosi has two male relatives of her immediate family that were both mayors of Baltimore, so she should know better than offending blacks for any reason.

2 — Obscuratus wrote at 6:27 PM on June 24:

CBC members, frustrated at what they perceive as an accusation by a conservative group that’s been blown out of proportion, last week formed a working group to look at taking on the 2006 resolution that created the OCE.

“We might need to revisit that law,” a source said.

The epitome of an advanced, functioning society: Those in power changing the laws, rules etc whenever they have been “caught out”.

Just like Zuma and the Scorpions

3 — sbuffalonative wrote at 6:59 PM on June 24:


“In a CBC meeting last week, members complained that the office doesn’t have enough minority staffers, and that the investigators “acted like they were with the FBI.”

When committing illegal or questionable activity, it’s always good to have insiders to hide the evidence.

4 — q wrote at 7:50 PM on June 24:

A trip to the Carribbean no doubt was for reasons having to do with race, since blacks inundate the islands.

This is just more proof that blacks concern themselves completely ONLY with things or people that are black. This is, of course, blatant bias of the highest order.

That they might appear to be hypocritical when they criticize whites for having a momentary lapse when they do one wee little thing that doesn’t include a black, never occurs to them, mostly because they don’t know what hypocritical means and the concept is too complicated for them to understand.

So they go on about their business concentrating on all things black, except when they criticize the white power structure for not producing any black rocket scientists.

5 — SKIP wrote at 8:15 PM on June 24:

Of course the blacks would object to ANYTHING that might bring their outrageous conduct into close scrutiny, and what is an Indian, Rep. Chaka Fattah (D-Pa.) doing representing the CBC? Is he a member? I KNOW Indians do not like blacks, at least in their country, they are to much trouble

6 — Jeffrey K wrote at 10:48 PM on June 24:

The CBC is doing what blacks are famous for: When they don’t want to follow the rules, they complain that the rules aren’t fair to blacks. Not whites, Indians, Asian, Hispanic..etc.. just blacks. If their whining doesn’t work, they cry racism.
Why is it that NO OTHER race demands unfair advantages because of their race? Isn’t the meaning of Equality that everyone is equal??

7 — abc wrote at 5:22 AM on June 25:

I am surprised this is even an issue, the conduct of the CBC is never questioned, there will be heads rolling over this.

8 — Anonymous wrote at 7:27 AM on June 25:

Chaka Fattah is not an indian. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaka_Fattah

9 — seejay wrote at 8:51 AM on June 25:

Did I understand this right?
The Congressional BLACK Caucus is accusing the Office of Congressional Ethics of not being DIVERSE enough…..?
Um….

10 — john wrote at 9:23 AM on June 25:

Why should this surprise anyone? Blacks in government, any government, be it ours or the government of Zimbabwe, display the same tendency toward crime and corruption shown by blacks in any other environment. Of course they’re going to object to any scrutiny directed at their behavior.

11 — SKIP wrote at 1:14 PM on June 25:

Chaka Fattah is not an indian. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaka_Fattah

What is he then? With a name like that and looking black! Should I invoke the one drop rule?

12 — Simon Jester wrote at 6:31 PM on June 26:

What is he then? With a name like that and looking black! Should I invoke the one drop rule?

This from Wikipedia:

Fattah’s parents, David Fattah (born Russell Davenport) and Sister Falaka Fattah (born Frances Brown, also known as Queen Mother Falaka Fattah), are community activists in West Philadelphia

LINK

It sounds like he’s an American black whose family converted to some weird Islamic sect.


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