Rappahannock News

About that inaugurati­on fiesta, governor

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BY STEPHEN P. NASH

Afew days have passed, and I just can't get over the open-handed support of some of the patrons of the $1.9-millionplu­s inaugurati­on of our new governor, Ralph Northam. What could inspire that kind of generosity?

It's a bipartisan question. Let's say I'm a conservati­ve here in Rappahanno­ck County. What's my sneaking hunch about the fairness of conservati­ve corporate CEOs deciding they have to celebrate a liberal-ish governor?

The donors list posted by the non-profit, nonpartisa­n Virginia Public Access Project includes: Altria, the tobacco company: $50,000; the Virginia Cable Telecom Associatio­n: $32,500; Anthem, the health insurance megasaurus, Appalachia­n Power, Aetna Life and Casualty, Norfolk Southern, all $25,000. Political appointees, lobbyists, and corporate chieftains are here on the long $10,000-plus list, too. Do they have business before the state government pretty often?

And then there’s Dominion Energy, our supposedly stateregul­ated private corporate monopoly. It pollutes air and water, stifles independen­t solar power, aligns with climate-change deniers, and tries to ram unneeded gas pipelines over the mountains to its profit and our loss. Dominion gave $50,000 to the inaugural committee.

Unlisted: the non-profit Children's Home Society. Is it supposed to muster a fat contributi­on and hope to get on the political radar screen? The society has labored for years to improve Virginia's shocking record in placing abused and foster children in adoptive homes. We are often in last place among the 50 states, along with Mississipp­i.

How about Virginia Organizing, whose agenda includes looking out for gay people, working people and beleaguere­d immigrants; the Virginia Center for Public Safety, which lobbies for sane firearms laws; the Chesapeake Climate Action Network? It's a rhetorical question.

Dominion's the biggest giver to the political campaigns of our state legislator­s, too — both Republican­s and Democrats. And it has the darndest good luck getting its way down at the Capitol. Just type in your Rappahanno­ck County zip code at VPAP.org you can see all the big donors to your own state senators and delegates. Then ask them how they can take money from the same people they're making laws about.

Or you can congratula­te them for not doing so. Roanoke Delegate Sam Rasoul, for example, refuses campaign donations above $5,000 from anyone, and takes no money at all from special-interest PACS and corporatio­ns.

Our elected public servants who accept such gifts assure us that they can still be fair to all. Maybe so. But if a reporter for this newspaper took money from sources and offered the same assurances, she'd be fired. Why do we suspend common sense when it comes to our elected officials?

Actually, we don’t. Our state legislatur­e has been referred to as a "favor factory." One poll found that three-quarters of Americans, Republican­s and Democrats in nearly even numbers, think Congress is for sale. Witness the widespread disgust, conservati­ve and liberal, with the carnival of conflicts of interest that is the Trump administra­tion.

The legal scholar and former New York gubernator­ial candidate Zephyr Teachout writes in her book Corruption in America that “A gift can be a bribe. A bribe can be a gift . . . They can create obligation­s to private parties that shape judgment and outcomes.”

There’s no suggestion here that our elected state officials are personally corrupt. But they work within a corrupt system that they have the power to change. Clean government is the deepest pragmatism of all. His inaugurati­on is little different from prior ones, but it's time for a change, of that and much else.

Last May, as a candidate, Northam himself called for a ban on campaign donations from corporatio­ns and businesses and a $10,000 cap on all donors except party committees. “Virginians across every part of the political spectrum want a system that is more responsive to the people, and less reliant on big checks from a few donors,” he said back then. That's a start. Public campaign financing, as in Maryland, Arizona, Connecticu­t or Vermont would be far more effective.

There's a better way to pay for public celebratio­ns, too. France sent the Statue of Liberty to America in the 1880s, but there wasn't money to put it up. Newspaper publisher Joseph Pulitzer urged the public that the statue was paid for “by the masses of the French people

. . . irrespecti­ve of class or condition . . . It is not a gift from the millionair­es of France to the millionair­es of America.” More than $100,000 was raised, mostly in donations of $10 or less. Children collected tens of thousands of pennies. The statue was erected.

Richmond's Capitol Square should not be, nor appear to be, “a gift from the millionair­es to the millionair­es,” nor to anyone else. I appreciate your considerin­g that, Governor Northam, and helping us regain faith in the integrity of our state government.

Stephen Nash is the author of Virginia Climate Fever: How Climate Change Will Transform Our Cities, Shorelines and Forests, published by the University of Virginia Press; and Blue Ridge 2020: An Owner’s Manual. He is a Visiting Senior Research Scholar at the University of Richmond.

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