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Is "Ethics" the Best Word for Conflicts of Interest?

“Ethics” is an unfortunate name for what appears in government ethics codes. When people think about ethics, they think about right and wrong, about moral obligations, about being honest and upright, about the Golden Rule. This isn’t what government ethics deals with. Government ethics deals with a limited area of conduct: conflicts of interest. And most people don’t realize this, or understand conflicts of interest. Click here to read the rest of this blog entry. When something is unethical, it is wrong.

Is Helping One's Industry Really Different from Helping One's Employer?

The ethics rules of the Minnesota State Senate limit conflicts of interest to instances where a bill would provide a financial benefit to a senator or his or her employer that is not shared by other similarly situated individuals or firms. This is a common standard. According to an article in today's Star Tribune, a Minnesota senator brought to the ethics committee two bills she had sponsored that some argued involved a conflict of interest.

Asking for Ethics Advice

If anyone questions the value of advice regarding municipal ethics issues, look at these statistics from the Atlanta Ethics Office. 66% of ethics complaints filed in 2007 alleged use of city property. 3% of the requests for advice in 2007 involved use of city property. If only people would ask. At least, Atlanta has an Ethics Officer to ask. My guess is that people who want to make use of city property don’t want to be told they can’t. They know the answer, so they don’t ask.

Does the Constitution Truly Require Pay-to-Play? The New Campaign Finance Lawsuit in New York City

Campaign finance is an area of municipal ethics that is often treated as a separate field entirely. But they’re closely related. Both involve the conflict between private and public interest, and especially gifts to elected officials. The principal difference is that campaign contributions are a perfectly legal way of giving to elected officials, which makes the problem a bit more complex. I began administering the public campaign financing program in New Haven, Connecticut last year.

A Dream Machine

See 1/16/09 addendum at bottom The dream of every machine politician is to have his city controlled by those who work for him. Unfortunately, every city has citizens who don’t work for the city administration. Or so I thought until I learned about Vernon, California. Vernon is “an exclusively industrial city,” which is a fancy term for one big conflict of interest. Here’s how it works, according to the Economist and a wonderful fictional dialogue by public administration professor H.