Last week
I mailed each of my congressional colleagues a copy of a speech
outlining my views on the lobbying and ethics scandals engulfing
Washington. Im afraid many of them wont like my conclusion:
to reduce corruption in government, we must make government less
powerful and hence less interesting to lobbyists.
I find it
hard to believe that changing the congressional ethics rules or
placing new restrictions on lobbyists will do much good. After
all, we already have laws against bribery, theft, and fraud. We
already have ethics rules in Congress. We already have campaign
finance reform. We already require campaigns and lobbyists to
register with the federal government and disclose expenditures.
We already require federal employees, including the president
and members of congress, to take an oath of office. None of it
is working, so why should we think more rules, regulations, or
laws will change anything?
Lobbying,
whether we like it or not, is constitutionally protected. The
First amendment unequivocally recognizes the right of Americans
to petition the government for a redress of grievances.
We cant deal with corruption in government by ignoring the
Constitution.
I dont
believe the problem is corrupt lobbyists or even corrupt politicians
per se. The fundamental problem, in my view, is the very culture
of Washington. Our political system has become nothing more than
a means of distributing government largesse, through tax dollars
confiscated from the American people always in the name democracy.
The federal budget is so enormous that it loses all meaning. Whats
another million or so for some pet project, in an annual budget
of $2.4 trillion? No one questions the principle that a majority
electorate should be allowed to rule the country, dictate rights,
and redistribute wealth.
Its
no wonder a system of runaway lobbying and special interests has
developed. When we consider the enormous entitlement and welfare
system in place, and couple that with a military-industrial complex
that feeds off perpetual war and encourages an interventionist
foreign policy, the possibilities for corruption are endless.
We shouldnt wonder why there is such a powerful motivation
to learn the tricks of the lobbying trade and why former members
of Congress and their aides become such high priced commodities.
The
dependency on government generated by welfarism and warfarism,
made possible by our shift from a republican to a democratic system
of government, is the real scandal of the ages. If we merely tinker
with current attitudes about the role of the federal government
in our lives, it wont do much to solve the ethics crisis.
True reform is impossible without addressing the immorality of
wealth redistribution.
After all,
criminals by definition ignore laws; unethical people ignore the
rules of ethics. Changing the rules or the players is merely a
band-aid if we dont change the nature of the game itself.