UPDATE (Friday): They keep coming. I missed the
Houston Chronicle on Wednesday:
Voters have made their dissatisfaction with the status quo clear by giving Democrats a working majority. The new House leaders must act swiftly to win approval for the task force recommendation and demonstrate that they are committed to ethics reform rather than business as usual.
And the San Francisco Chronicle
chimed in today:
What we said: “There is no reason to trust Congress' ability to police itself. An independent watchdog commission should be established as a complement to any reforms. History has shown, beyond a doubt, that power corrupts without regard to whether someone has an R or a D after his or her name.
I haven't seen or heard of anything from prominent TV pundits like Keith Olbermann (yet) on this, and I also haven't seen anything from prominent bloggers. Hopefully they'll jump on board for this final push -- if you know we've missed something, drop it in the comments.
...
Just trying to keep up with all the editorial support for an ethical Congress with independent oversight....
Last week, USA Today praised the proposal for its independence and transparency:
When Congress judges itself, ethics fall by the wayside
Anyone who's been called for jury duty knows that one of the first questions a judge asks prospective jurors is: Do you know the defendant? A "yes" answer is almost always disqualifying, which makes perfect sense.
After all, how can people objectively sit in judgment of someone they know? Even if they could, the public would rightfully question the verdict.
Somehow, though, Congress has never been able to grasp that common-sense concept.
They were
joined by the New York Times:
Members should face up to a vote that tests their mettle -- and most recent campaign promises -- as upholders of ethical reform for the peoples' House. We suggest lawmakers fight their anxiety by quietly repeating the name Jack Abramoff, Jack Abramoff -- the imprisoned superlobbyist who corrupted House members -- as a prevote mantra.
And AlterNet ran my piece today on the strange
contradiction of Congress hectoring Major League Baseball about the league's lack of independent oversight when Congress itself has a lack of... you know.