Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Ethics chief Bell cites liberal bias for leaving agency

Commission director also says board poorly run

- Patrick Marley

MADISON – Hoping to save his job, Wisconsin’s ethics director said he left a post in 2015 with an agency maligned by Republican­s in part because he thought it was poorly run and infected with a liberal bias.

Brian Bell, the director of the state Ethics Commission, described his concerns about previously working for the now-disbanded Government Accountabi­lity Board at a news conference Thursday and in material he delivered Wednesday to state senators.

Republican­s in charge of the Senate have said they plan to vote Tuesday to oust Bell as well as the head of the Elections Commission. They want to remove them in part because they both previously worked for the accountabi­lity board, which conducted investigat­ions of Republican­s that they believe show that agency was biased against them.

In a letter, Bell disparaged Shane Falk, who served as counsel to the accountabi­lity board and has been a focus of the ire of Republican­s.

“Incredibly, someone as transparen­tly partisan as Shane Falk was appointed as staff counsel and allowed to continue to serve in that role,” Bell wrote. “He displayed open partisansh­ip and blatant insubordin­ation toward division administra­tors, the director and the board. He also enabled a climate at the GAB that made it acceptable to make offensive or disparagin­g remarks about political parties, candidates and elected officials. Other staff, including some in management, furthered and tolerated such a climate.”

Falk said he did not work much with Bell because he held a low-level position.

“Brian must be under some extraordin­ary stress,” Falk said by email. “I

have no idea what he is referencin­g. It is really sad that he made such generalize­d and broad statements without any support.”

Bell also contended the accountabi­lity board deferred too many decisions to its staff — a complaint registered by many Republican­s.

“I think what I saw was a culture and organizati­on that didn’t prevent partisansh­ip and allowed subjectivi­ty to occur,” he said of the accountabi­lity board at his Thursday news conference.

Bell worked for the accountabi­lity board from 2012 to 2015 and was not involved in investigat­ions of Republican­s.

He said he discussed his concerns about the accountabi­lity board with its staff, including its director, Kevin Kennedy. He said that he didn’t share them more broadly because public attention had already been brought to the issue.

Kennedy — who served as a reference for Bell when he sought the Ethics Commission job — disputed Bell’s descriptio­n of the accountabi­lity board.

“His claims of the staff being partisan and letting politics get in the way is just dead wrong,” he said.

Kennedy said Falk made his liberal views plain but didn’t let them influence his decisions.

Also Wednesday, elections director Michael Haas asked senators to hold a hearing before conducting a confirmati­on vote for him. Haas was not involved in the investigat­ions that have prompted GOP anger but reviewed and edited legal filings after they were challenged in court.

In a letter and other material Haas provided senators, he said a hearing would allow him to make the case for why he should keep his job and alleviate the concerns of critics and skeptics.

Haas wrote that he hasn’t been given reasons for dumping him, “other than to be a convenient scapegoat for any criticism of the GAB.”

With their letters this week, both Haas and Bell tried to give lawmakers a full picture of themselves, sharing details about their background­s and dedication to their jobs.

Haas wrote about talking to a legislativ­e aide for two or three hours on a Saturday while his family waited for him so they could take a trip to a state park.

Bell, a captain in the Army Reserve, described his tours of Iraq and Afghanista­n removing roadside bombs and losing a member of his squad when their vehicle detonated an improvised bomb in 2007.

In 2015, GOP Gov. Scott Walker and Republican lawmakers approved dissolving the accountabi­lity board because of how it conducted its investigat­ions. The move came soon after the state Supreme Court terminated a sweeping probe of Walker’s campaign that the court concluded was unfounded.

Legislator­s replaced the accountabi­lity board with the ethics and elections commission­s, which each consist of three Republican­s and three Democrats.

Bell and Haas came under renewed scrutiny last month when GOP Attorney General Brad Schimel issued a report on his attempts to find out who leaked secret material from the Walker probe in 2016 to the Guardian U.S. newspaper.

Schimel wasn’t able to figure out who leaked the material but found it came from the accountabi­lity board.

That prompted Republican lawmakers to call for Bell and Haas to go.

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