February
14, 2007
Statement
from Bob Hall, executive director of Democracy North
Carolina, regarding the guilty plea of former House
Speaker Jim Black:
The
image of “strings attached” runs through
the sad and not-yet-finished story of House Speaker
Jim Black’s fall from power. Investigators at
the State Board of Elections began pulling on a string
connected to one group of Black’s political
donors soon after Democracy North Carolina filed a
complaint in July 2004 about the illegal donations
to his campaign from video-poker operators. That string
led investigators to a host of other problems. Meanwhile,
another ball of string connected to gambling, namely
the proposed state lottery, began unraveling and revealing
attachments between Speaker Black and other problem
areas, including what eventually emerged as illegal
lobbying and fraud.
Federal
and state investigators following the strings kept
finding new tangles and entanglements. It was only
a matter of time before a clearly illegal quid-pro-quo
attachment sealed the fate of House Speaker Jim Black.
This story is not over, however. We would hope that
Black assists investigators in punishing the money
suppliers involved in illegal activities. Corruption
cuts at the heart of our fundamental system of self-government,
which relies on open debate and honest representation
of the people for the public good. Corruption is a
crime against the people, against democracy itself.
It should be rooted out and defeated.
Unfortunately,
the danger today is more than one person committing
a crime. Jim Black illustrates that even well intentioned,
conscientious public servants can get caught up in
a system that leads people to make bad choices. In
search of money to stay in power, they follow the
wrong strings and become entangled in attachments
that eventually smother them. As the state has become
more competitive and campaign costs have risen, the
demand for political donations has soared.
More
than four times as much money moved through the 2006
state legislative campaigns as did just a dozen years
ago. And too much of that money comes with strings
attached. The money chase in North Carolina today
clearly threatens the integrity of fair elections,
free from corrupting influences. That’s why
Democracy North Carolina and a host of others recommend
providing candidates with a new supply of clean money,
attached only to the voters’ interests and conditioned
on the candidates satisfying certain public-trust
condition. There is no complete solution, but without
tackling the root cause of corruption, we can expect
to see another politician endure the same fate as
Jim Black – and Meg Scott Phipps – in
the not too distant future.
Bob
Hall, Executive Director
Democracy North Carolina
Click
here to read the original complaint regarding
the video-poker donations.
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