New York Post

END CONGRESS’ SEX-SIN SLUSH FUND

- Betsy McCaughey is a senior fellow at the London Center for Policy Research.

REPUBLICAN­S and Democrats in Washington are vying to appear more outraged by sexual harassment on Capitol Hill. Don’t be fooled. Groping, suggestive remarks and quid pro quos are businessas-usual on the Hill, thanks to a cover-up scheme devised by Congress itself using taxpayer dollars.

The real scandal is that we, the people, pay the settlement costs and legal fees when members of Congress get caught with their pants down.

On Monday, BuzzFeed reported that in 2015, Michigan Rep. John Conyers, top Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee and the longest-serving current House member, used taxpayer funds to settle a complaint from a staff member about unwanted sexual advances. The $27,000 was paid in exchange for a confidenti­ality agreement. On Tuesday, Conyers denied harassing anyone, but acknowledg­ed the settlement.

This year alone, the US Treasury has confidenti­ally paid $934,754 to settle sexual harassment and other complaints against members of Congress and their staff.

Similar hush money has been paid out annually ever since Congress passed the Con- gressional Accountabi­lity Act. That 1995 law makes members and their employees anything but accountabl­e. If they’re accused of discrimina­tion or harassment, settlement costs get bankrolled by taxpayers. Secretly.

Eliminatin­g this shameful perk is key to reducing sexual harassment on Capitol Hill. A bipartisan chorus is calling for mandatory sexual-harassment training in Congress. Sorry. Training is window dressing. The harassers need to get clobbered where it hurts — in their wallets.

After all, even DC’s most famous harasser, ex-President Bill Clinton, didn’t fleece taxpayers to settle his legal affairs. In 1998, he set up a legal defense fund to cover costs associated with accusation­s by Paula Jones.

Two decades later, things have gotten worse. Now taxpayers get stuck with such bills, and not just in DC. The California legislatur­e uses public funds to settle harassment complaints. This year, California taxpayers paid a $100,000 tab for Assemblyma­n Steve Fox, accused by an aide of exposing himself to her and then firing her for reporting it.

When Oklahoma’s legislatur­e paid off a female aide who accused her boss of harassment, part of the confidenti­al payment got labeled “cleaning supplies.” Indeed. Former House Speaker Jeff Hickman defended the hush money, claiming it was cheaper than litigating.

If Hickman thinks he did taxpayers a favor, he’s wrong. Shielding politician­s from the consequenc­es of their misconduct encourages more of it, and more payments.

New Yorkers learned that, when former Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver repeatedly paid zip-your-lips money to women accusing lawmakers of harassment. Same is true in the corporate world. Major insurer Nationwide, one of the biggest covering sexual harassment settlement­s and legal costs, reports a 15 percent surge in policy sales in the last year. Nearly half of employers with over 1,000 workers now carry such coverage.

Some companies swiftly investigat­e and punish proven sexual harassment, like Fidelity Investment­s, which recently fired one of its star stock-pickers. But many other employers make hefty confidenti­al payouts to protect marquee employees accused of harassment, and even conceal the payments from investors.

Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) and Rep. Jackie Speier (D-Calif.) are getting accolades for their “Me Too” Act to combat harassment on Capitol Hill. The bill would end taxpayer-funded settlement­s for members of Congress, but otherwise it only protects victims working on Capitol Hill.

How about protecting the over 70 million women in workplaces everywhere else? A provision in the GOP Senate tax-cut plan, to be debated after Thanksgivi­ng, would eliminate the tax deductibil­ity of settlement payments and legal fees in sexual harassment workplace cases if the settlement includes a confidenti­ality clause.

Transparen­cy will unmask offenders, instead of enabling them. And the unfairly accused will fight back to protect their reputation­s, rather than going along with secret settlement­s that cost them nothing.

It’s high time sexual harassment became an expensive mistake — in Congress and everywhere else.

 ??  ?? BETSY McCAUGHEY
BETSY McCAUGHEY

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