[wordup] [Fwd: Nepotism in Washington poses a threat to institutional integrity.]

Adam Shand adam at personaltelco.net
Tue Jan 21 13:36:07 EST 2003


Via: The Eristocracy <Eristocracy at merrymeet.com>
From: 
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-turley13jan13,0,445106
2.story?coll=la%2Dnews%2Dcomment%2Dopinions

Public Payroll: a Family Affair
Nepotism in Washington poses a threat to institutional integrity.
By Jonathan Turley
Jonathan Turley is a law professor at George Washington Law School.

January 13 2003

In Washington, the battle line is drawn between the forces of
conservatism and liberalism. While patriotism is often cited as a shared
value, there is only one "ism" that truly unites members of both parties
in a common cause: nepotism. In the last two years, nepotism has
flourished in Washington to a point that would make the most inbred
potentate blush.

Just last week, former Sen. Frank Murkowski's handpicked successor was
introduced to the nation. (Murkowski was elected governor of Alaska and,
as such, was entitled to appoint his Senate replacement.) The new
senator immediately assured the public that she "shared the same vision
for [Alaska], the same values." She should: She also shares his DNA.
Lisa Murkowski is the daughter of Frank Murkowski. It appears that the
former Republican senator scoured the entire state of Alaska for a
suitable replacement, only to find the best candidate in his own family.
Imagine that.

Frank Murkowski's extreme variation on "Bring your Daughter to Work Day"
follows a long, dubious tradition of nepotism in Washington.

The current list of family appointments is too long to recount in its
entirety. Vice President Dick Cheney's daughter was made a deputy
assistant secretary of State. Cheney's son-in-law was given the plum
position of chief counsel for the Office of Management and Budget.
Secretary of State Colin Powell's son was made chairman of the Federal
Communications Commission.

The administration has not neglected key members of the Supreme Court in
access to the public trough of appointments. Both Chief Justice William
Rehnquist and Associate Justice Antonin Scalia (who voted with the
majority in favor of President Bush in the 2000 election challenge) have
watched their children sworn in to high-ranking positions. After a
contentious confirmation hearing, Scalia's son Eugene was made the top
lawyer at the Department of Labor. He has since resigned.

Rehnquist's daughter, Janet, was made inspector general at the Health
and Human Services Department. (President Bush's father had given her a
job on his White House staff.) In her short tenure, Janet Rehnquist has
triggered an array of scandals, ranging from her storing a gun --
without a trigger lock and not in a gun safe -- in her office to more
serious allegations of intervening in departmental cases to assist
personal and political friends. She is under federal investigation and,
most recently, was hit with allegations of shredding incriminating
documents relevant to that investigation.

Congress has proved particularly eager to respond to Bush's call for
greater family values in government. Elaine Chao, the wife of Sen. Mitch
McConnell (R-Ky.), is secretary of Labor. (Chao can claim experience to
justify the position.)

Sen. Jim Bunning, a Kentucky Republican, was not willing to rely on
experience alone in securing an appellate judgeship for his son, David.
Rather than recuse himself, Bunning interviewed 11 finalists for the
position and, with McConnell, reduced them to three. Amazingly,
Bunning's son made his dad's cut. He didn't make the American Bar
Assn.'s cut. It found young Bunning to be unqualified, due to his lack
of experience and the "serious doubts by respected members of the bench
and bar" as to his intellectual and professional abilities. Bunning's
colleagues confirmed him anyway.

Former Sen. Strom Thurmond (R-S.C.) was able to secure confirmation of
his son, Strom Jr., as U.S. attorney in his home state, despite the fact
that the 28-year-old Strom Jr. barely outranked a Justice Department
intern in experience.

Of course, many politicians in Washington do not try to appoint sons and
daughters to high positions: Many do not have eligible sons or
daughters.

The father of Rep. Charles W. "Chip" Pickering Jr. (R-Miss.) was
nominated for an appellate judgeship and, after being denied
confirmation by the committee, has just been renominated. Republican
Rep. Jim Ramstad of Minnesota is pushing his sister, Sheryl Ramstad
Hvass, for a judgeship.

The list goes on and on. Ultimately, the problem is less about
individual qualifications (or the lack thereof) as it is institutional
integrity. With branches of government swapping siblings, spouses and
offspring, our constitutional checks and balances become mired in
personal debts and alliances.

Perhaps the election of the son of a former president inspired the shift
toward a more aristocratic system of government. It could be worse. In
the year 40, the Emperor Caligula appointed his favorite horse,
Incitatus, to the Roman Senate. Incitatus proved to be lacking in the
temperament or tact for public service. Of course, Incitatus had one
positive characteristic: He was a gelding who could neither produce nor
appoint offspring.





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