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Denise Yu National Attorneys General Convention (Montana) Hillsborough High School Corrupt Politicians Political corruption is as timeless as a Rolex. As long as democracy has been around in America, so too has the bad egg in the government who tries to bend the political process to his own gain. Take, for example, three case studies: In 1872, a company called Credit Mobilier was a government contract firm. The firm was bribing members of Congress in return for government favors. In reality, the company was just a front set up to increase the profits of shareholders. Representative Oakland Ames (R-MA) granted Credit Mobilier a no-bid contract to build a railroad, and Ames sold shares to his colleagues at discounted prices. As the railroad business flourished, so did the Credit Mobilier stock. There was one problem: Credit Mobilier never built one foot of railroad. Millions of dollars in illicit profits were uncovered following media scrutiny, and the first anti-corruption laws were created in 1876. The end of the Great War brought a wave of economic prosperity and with it, an undercurrent of corruption. President Harding’s Interior Secretary Albert Fall leased government-owned oil fields to two millionaires. Democratic Senator John B. Kendrick cried foul when he heard that the land, which had originally been set aside for fuel for naval vessels, had been secretly leased. His informal inquiries yielded no information, so he pursued a resolution to further investigate the transaction. The Interior Department admitted to leasing the property without bids. Secretary Fall’s explanation placated many Congressmen, but not Senator Robert Lafollette. He began a series of investigations that was concluded by Senator Thomas J. Walsh. The prodding revealed perjury, influence buying, hush money, coded telegrams, unsecured loans, briefcases filled with cash and bonds, secret meetings, among other clandestine activities. The entire scandal, nicknamed Teapot Dome after one of the illegally-leased oil sites, died on its own, but allegations of corruption lived on. Fall was eventually found guilty of bribery. The Watergate Scandal is one of the most commonly-cited cases of political corruption. Unlike the Credit Mobilier and Teapot Dome scandals, Watergate concerned not money, but dirty trickery on the part of powerful officials. Members of the Nixon administration were found to have broken into the Democratic National Committee Headquarters, where they planted and then tried to fix wiretaps that were not working. The scandal revealed the White House dirty tricks squad, a secret campaign fund associated with the Committee to Re-elect the President, involvement in backhanded actions by high-level officials such as the Attorney General, among other embarrassing discoveries. Watergate is significant for setting off a knee-jerk reaction of reforms targeting corruption and abuse in political campaigns and in the government as a whole. Several pieces of legislation have been passed to address corrupt politics. The Freedom of Information Act, signed on Independence Day in 1966, which requires that legislative documents be made publicly accessible. Different states practice this political transparency to different degrees, some even allowing the public to observe public government meetings. Public presence creates political accountability for lawmakers. The decision to abstain from freedom of information legislation stipulates that the burden of proof be on the party being asked, not the individual seeking the information, and failure to disclose said information requires a valid reason. In the 1970s, the Public Integrity Section of the government was created in the Justice Department. In 1978, the Inspector General introduced protection legislation for government whistleblowers and installed inspectors general in various Cabinet departments and government agencies. The Ethics in Government Act followed that same year, setting guidelines for investigation of allegations of corruption where high-level executive branch officials are concerned. It also created financial transparency requirements for former-governmentemployees-turned-lobbyists. All sources of income, including stocks, bonds, property, investments or debts, spouse’s income, and other positions in business or nonprofit organizations held by all members of the Executive Branch must be disclosed under the provisions of the Act. It also set limitations on former government employees’ involvement in the lobbyist sphere. In 2002, Senators John McCain and Russ Feingold introduced the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act, which aimed at corruption, specifically bribery from lobbyists, in political campaigns. Montana is just as much concerned with political corruption as any other state. Corrupt politicians are a national and nonpartisan problem. The Democratic Party aims to change ethics and lobbying policies, and “restore honest leadership and open government”. The Democrats’ proposals include raising transparency levels for lawmakers and lobbyists in regards to their activities and relationships. Criminal punishment will be doled out in the event of failure to comply. The Democrats additionally want to prohibit lobbyists from funding Congressional travel and meal expenses as well as increasing the waiting period before Congressmen can become lobbyists. They also want to expand on the lobbyist eligibility provisions of the Ethics in Government Act of 1978. Negotiations for private-sector employment, a twenty-four-hour review period after legislation is approved, government contracts, and no-bid contracting are other areas targeted for increased transparency clauses. Political corruption must be addressed from several different angles. First, the National Attorneys General Convention must find a means of enforcing existing anti-corruption legislation, with the goal of deterring future corruption. Included in this aspect are adequate investigation and prosecution procedures. Second, corruption must be prevented where possible. Whistleblower protection laws, stringent transparency rules, freedom-of-information laws, auditing and internal-control requirements for both public and private organizations, and antimoney-laundering vigilantes can ferret out corrupt practices. Finally, the government must adopt a culture that emphasizes positive standards and vilifies corruption, thus strengthening the enforcement and prevention efforts. Political corruption may be a weed in a democratic government, but by combining these three facets, the National Attorneys General Convention can effectively fight and uproot corruption, one politician at a time.