Analysis
How Louisiana v. Callais Could Impact Pre-Midterm Redistricting
When Congress passed the Voting Rights Act in 1965, it understood a hard truth about power: discrimination in voting is rarely done explicitly or out in the open. More often,…
Analysis
You probably remember that the Monday before the 115th Congress was sworn in, in the dead of the night on a holiday, House Republicans tried (and failed) to pass rules to weaken the independent ethics office meant to police members of Congress.
Last month, however, Meredith McGehee, Issue One’s Chief of Policy, Programs and Strategy, highlighted one little-noticed rule that did get passed by House Republicans that could damage bipartisan ethics oversight. And, just last week, the story was featured by the Washington Post.
As McGehee pointed out in January, these under-the-radar, partisan maneuvers to undermine bipartisan ethics cooperation are not going to go away. Here are three other ways that the Office of Congressional Ethics (OCE) could be weakened that we must watch out for:
Issue One will continue to closely monitor these and other potential maneuvers to weaken this important office, as well as any other conflicts of interest, ethics issues and government reform issues as they appear on Capitol Hill, in the courts and at the White House.
Issue: Congressional Ethics
Analysis
When Congress passed the Voting Rights Act in 1965, it understood a hard truth about power: discrimination in voting is rarely done explicitly or out in the open. More often,…
Analysis
President Donald Trump’s second term in the White House has been defined by its repeated intervention on behalf of dominant technology firms, from picking winners and losers to shielding the…
Analysis
One year of Donald Trump profiteering from public office and selling access and influence...
One year into his second term in the White House, President Donald Trump has reshaped the presidency to drastically blur the lines between government and business, abetting unprecedented levels of…