The Sun (San Bernardino)

Corruption is a plague on civil society

When we think about corruption, which is the abuse of power by politician­s and bureaucrat­s for personal gain, we envision the gritty politics in older Midwestern or East Coast cities. In Richard J. Daley’s Chicago and William “Boss” Tweed’s New York City,

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Yet in recent years, corruption scandals have plagued our state. Today’s section reviews a number of them and tries to pinpoint causes and solutions. We’ve seen our share of the oldschool variety. For instance, former Los Angeles Councilmem­ber Jose Huizar pleaded guilty to taking $1.5-million in bribes from developers. That sordid tale seems right from the movies, with a Huizar aide allegedly picking up literal boxes of cash.

And who can forget former Leland Yee, a top-ranking Democratic state senator and noted gun-control advocate, who received a five-year prison term in 2016 after pleading guilty to racketeeri­ng and an arms-traffickin­g conspiracy involving a Chinatown gang figure? At the time, two other leading senators were under indictment – one for voter-fraud and another on bribery related charges.

In decidedly not Chicago-ish Orange County, the recent scandal involving former Anaheim Mayor Harry Sidhu is an eyeopener. Following Angel’s stadium sale negotiatio­ns, the FBI accused Sidhu of providing the team with confidenti­al informatio­n as he allegedly sought contributi­ons. Sidhu denies the allegation­s, but the scandal seems reflective of a City Hall culture dominated by a “cabal” of lobbyists representi­ng Resort Area interests.

California also has endured many legal “corruption” scandals, as public-employee unions have exerted their political power at the state and local levels to achieve absurdly generous compensati­on packages and thwart government­al reform. In one column, we tie the problem to an overly large government that doles out billions of dollars in cash and contracts, typically in a legal but corrosive manner.

So why is corruption such a problem? For starters, it appears to be a growing challenge. In 2021, a Transparen­cy Internatio­nal report found that corruption in the United States was at its worst level in a decade. The group blamed the problem in part on insufficie­nt oversight of pandemic-related spending, which reinforces our point that too much government spending leads to corrupt outcomes.

Corruption – of the illegal and legal variety – undermines the public’s faith in its institutio­ns. It creates the sense that the system is rigged and an average citizen can’t get a fair shake. In a self-governing society, people need to have the confidence their dealings with, say, police officers, tax collectors and regulators are based on a set of fairly applied rules rather than a system of graft or political ties.

“In a country with high corruption levels, the population has no confidence in their politician­s and civil servants,” explained a 2019 article in The Conversati­on. “With suspicion and even fears of elites, the population can’t invest itself in voting, being involved in the civil society or participat­ing to the public debates. As the result, the culture of democracy begins to crumble.”

Corruption is a plague that undermines our freedoms.

The best way to combat it is through transparen­cy, which is why we believe the issue merits today’s extensive coverage.

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