From the Daily Herald
An ethics step, but more are needed
Daily Herald Editorial Board
Published: 9/24/2008 12:04 AM
Comptroller Dan Hynes says the 55-0 Senate vote Monday to override the governor's
veto on ethics legislation - on top of a 110-0 House rebuke earlier this summer
- shows that Rod Blagojevich "has zero credibility" with lawmakers.
Blagojevich says his rewriting demonstrated "real reform," needed
because lawmakers had not gone far enough.
Unfortunately, both views are correct.
The ethics bill that will become law Jan. 1 is a much-needed step toward cleaning
up the state's dismal and deserved reputation as a place where the public's
business is for sale with the legal tender being campaign contributions to its
overseers. Now, it will be illegal for anyone with a state contract of $50,000
or more to contribute to the state official who awarded that contract or candidates
for the office that oversees it.
But that is hardly a panacea for what ails Illinois government. The system still
allows contractors to contribute to state officers in some circumstances, and,
as Senate President Emil Jones points out, contractors can still funnel money
to candidates through political parties.
Blagojevich's amendatory veto addressed these points, and it would have established
more complete disclosure of lawmakers' lobbying and clarified the process for
raising their own and other state officials' pay.
These are important next steps, and to see the suddenly principled Senate whisking
through them on Tuesday, you might think lawmakers were serious about addressing
them. But the fact is they could have been part of the original legislation,
and were not. Moreover, the governor, who took no role in the development of
the law, waited until the last possible day to introduce his objections. These
are not the behaviors of people who truly want change.
Illinois' entrenched political leaders have long held that as long as politicians
report their contributions, the voters can decide what's acceptable and what's
not. They clung to that reasoning through scandal after scandal and despite
constant pleas for reform. So, we can hardly rush to cheer them for their actions
this week, and we cannot be blamed for wondering whether the expansion bill
that passed the Senate Tuesday will ever actually traverse the House and reach
the governor's desk. It should not be forgotten that these same leaders practically
had to be dragged kicking and screaming to this stage.
With his heavy-handed, ill-timed amendatory veto, the governor added much to
the kicking and screaming, but little to the dragging needed to move the state
further toward a campaign finance system in which voters can be confident.
If Blagojevich is serious about producing deeper reform, let him begin rebuilding
his relationship with lawmakers and help to make it happen. If legislators and
state officers are serious about reform, let them not hide behind the ragged
skirt of the governor's unpopularity and pretend that they've cleaned up government.
They haven't. There's much more work ahead. As with just about every other issue
facing the state these days, it's up to the governor and lawmakers to demonstrate
some maturity and cooperation and get this work done.