Chicago Sun-Times

LEGISLATUR­E LOOKING OUT FORYOU— OR SOMEBODY ELSE?

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Every time a state legislator casts a vote in Springfiel­d, you want to believe he or she is doing what’s best for you, not for some campaign donor, lobbyist or business associate.

That’s why we elect them— to do the people’s business, first and always.

But in Illinois, as in other states where serving in the Legislatur­e is a part- time gig and almost everybody has another job, conflicts of interest are part of the DNA of the legislativ­e process, even when lawmakers take care to abide by the rules of ethics. When so many legislator­s wear a second hat, quite frequently as lawyers, their loyalty to you, their constituen­ts, gets put to the test.

A case study in how that works was offered in Sunday’s Sun- Times by reporters Robert Herguth and Tim Novak, who examined the ethical conflicts faced by state Sen. Don Harmon, who is a lawyer. Harmon may not have violated any Senate rules, the Sun- Times found, but that’s hardly the end of the matter. The rules themselves are inadequate, perhaps inevitably so, failing to account for all the indirect ways political influence works in the real world.

Ultimately, short of prohibitin­g legislator­s from holding second jobs in any number of profession­al fields, the only sure- fire safeguard for ethical behavior, by Harmon and other legislator­s, is personal integrity. At the heart of clean government is not just good rules, but good people. We’ll just have to hope that Harmon, in a state known for crooked politician­s, is one of those good people.

Harmon is one of seven partners in a law firm, Burke Burns & Pinelli, that does a significan­t amount of legal work for state agencies, local government­s and government workers’ pension funds. He says he does not handle any of this sort of legal work for the firm, nor does he financiall­y benefit from it. His total pay from the firm, he says, is less than the governor’s $ 177,412 annual salary, which is the cap on his pay under Illinois ethics law because his firm gets state business.

But you can see the problem. It’s silly to pretend to a distinctio­n between what’s good for Harmon’s law firm and what’s good for Harmon. Over time, the success of a firm is good for every partner, regardless of who gets paid what in the shortrun. And it’s standard procedure in Illinois for people looking for clout in Springfiel­d to do business with a firm that has the best political connection­s, such as a partner who is also a powerful legislator. That would explain how House Speaker MikeMadiga­n got rich.

So when we learn that Harmon’s law firm handles legal services for two of the biggest pension funds for City of Chicago retirees, we find it troubling that he himself cast a vote last year in favor of a bill that set new funding levels for one of the funds. Harmon’s explanatio­n for not recusing himself— that the board of the pension fund had not taken a position on the bill— is beside the point. This is a conflict of interest with, at best, a single degree of separation.

A fair question then: Did Harmon vote in what he saw as your best interests, as a taxpayer in Illinois? Or in the pension fund’s best interests? You can’t even know.

Our purpose here is not to beat up on Harmon, who is thought to be among the more diligent and informed legislator­s in Springfiel­d. Dozens of others senators and representa­tives, working also as lawyers or insurance brokers or business executives, regularly face conflicts of interest not addressed by the written ethics rules.

Our purpose is to call attention to the problem. Because it hides in plain sight.

It might help if Illinois had a legislativ­e inspector general. This person would have the authority to rule whether legislator­s are at least complying with existing ethics rules.

But that post, to nobody’s surprise, has been left vacant for more than two years.

Harmon may not have violated any Senate rules, the Sun- Times found, but that’s hardly the end of the matter. The rules themselves are inadequate.

 ?? | SUN- TIMES FILES ?? State Sen. Don Harmon, D- Oak Park.
| SUN- TIMES FILES State Sen. Don Harmon, D- Oak Park.

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