From Campaign for Accountability <[email protected]>
Subject CfA Newsletter - June 16
Date June 16, 2023 5:00 PM
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Ethics Office Still in GOP Crosshairs

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** CfA's June 16, 2023 Newsletter
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With your support, Campaign for Accountability is working to expose corruption and hold the powerful accountable.


** This Week's Updates:
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House Republicans Take Swings at Office of Congressional Ethics
On Tuesday, a subcommittee of the Committee on House Administration held a hearing ([link removed]) regarding the Office of Congressional Ethics (OCE), the independent entity tasked with reviewing allegations of misconduct brought against members of Congress and their staff. The hearing was led by Oversight Subcommittee chairman Rep. Barry Loudermilk (R-GA), who opened the proceedings by describing the limits of OCE’s authority and remarking that the Senate’s lack of a corresponding entity called the office’s value into question.

Rather than focusing on OCE’s processes for investigating lawmakers, however, members spent most of the hearing grilling OCE Staff Director and Chief Counsel Omar Ashmawy, who was charged with a DUI ([link removed]) at the end of last year. The decision to retain Ashmawy was defended by OCE Chairman Paul Vinovich and Co-Chairman Mike Barnes, who argued that Ashmawy’s transgression had been taken seriously and that he had been treated like any other staffer convicted of the same crime. Republican lawmakers also zeroed in on a 2015 OCE investigation which connected nine lawmakers ([link removed]) to an all-expenses-paid trip to Azerbaijan, bankrolled by a state-owned oil company. OCE leadership defended their decision to release the full report on the investigation—in defiance of the House
Ethics Committee—and maintained that they had never leaked news of the investigation to the press.

Ultimately, members of Congress (often on both sides of the aisle) don’t particularly like the existence of an independent entity tasked with holding them accountable for their behavior. As long as the Office maintains some oversight and investigatory abilities, it’s reasonable to assume attacks like this will continue.
Senate Democrats Weigh Supreme Court Ethics Reform
On Wednesday, the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Federal Courts, Oversight, Agency Accountability, and Federal Rights held a hearing ([link removed]) on a Supreme Court ethics bill introduced by Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) and Rep. Hank Johnson (GA-4). Dubbed the Supreme Court Ethics, Recusal, and Transparency Act, the bill ([link removed]) would establish a code of conduct holding justices to a much higher standard for gift disclosures and recusals. The bill would also establish a “judicial investigation panel” composed of five randomly selected circuit court chief justices, with the power to review complaints filed against individual Supreme Court justices. The panel would be able to hold hearings, take sworn testimony, and issue subpoenas. While the bill has little chance of becoming law, Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR) is exploring other
options ([link removed]) to investigate Harlan Crow’s many undisclosed gifts to Justice Clarence Thomas, which could lead to a Finance Committee subpoena for Crow.
Meta Faces Bipartisan Rebuke on Child Sexual Exploitation Failures
On Wednesday, House Energy and Commerce Committee Chair Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-WA) and Committee Ranking Member Frank Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ) released a joint statement condemning Meta for allowing a network of pedophiles to operate on its platform, as detailed in The Wall Street Journal ([link removed]) last week. “It is clear these companies cannot be trusted to protect children on their platforms,” said the lawmakers, “which is why the majority of parents want Congress to do more to strengthen protections for online safety.” Now, committee staff are arranging briefings with both Meta representatives and the researchers who helped uncover the child sexual abuse material.

This isn’t a new problem for Meta. In 2020, CfA’s Tech Transparency Project found that Meta failed to provide ([link removed]) law enforcement with the initial tipoff about child sexual exploitation taking place on its platforms in the vast majority of cases. This passive approach is largely enabled by the fact that Meta cannot be sued for enabling the sexual abuse of children, thanks to the Section 230 liability shield.


** What We're Reading:
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Jack Teixeira, airman arrested in Pentagon leak, indicted by federal jury ([link removed])

Wisconsin Republicans Sowed Distrust Over Elections. Now They May Push Out the State’s Top Election Official ([link removed])

GSA joins EPA in putting the brakes on how employees use generative AI ([link removed])


** Follow Our Work:
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We thank you for your continued support. Without people like you, our work would not be possible.

Here is how you can stay involved and help us accomplish our mission:
1. Follow CfA on Twitter ([link removed]) .
2. Follow the Tech Transparency Project on Twitter ([link removed]) .
3. Tell your friends and colleagues ([link removed]) about CfA.
4. Send us a tip ([link removed]) .
5. Make a tax-deductible donation ([link removed]) .

Be on the lookout for more updates about our work in the upcoming weeks. Thanks again for signing up to be a part of CfA!

Sincerely,

Michelle Kuppersmith
Executive Director, Campaign for Accountability

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