[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 83 (Wednesday, June 12, 2013)]
[House]
[Pages H3292-H3293]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
STATE ETHICS LAW PROTECTION ACT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Illinois (Mr. Quigley) for 5 minutes.
Mr. QUIGLEY. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to announce my reintroduction
of the State Ethics Law Protection Act. At a time when indictments and
allegations of ethics violations of our elected leaders have become all
too common, now more than ever we must use every tool at our disposal
to fight corruption.
Unfortunately, the Federal Government is currently preventing
numerous States from using one of the most important tools we have to
fight cronyism, corruption, and waste. My home State of Illinois, which
is no stranger to these issues, along with several other States around
the country, has taken a stand against corruption by passing laws to
eliminate shady pay-to-play contracting.
Pay-to-play politics is the practice of trading campaign
contributions for lucrative government contracts. Pay-to-play practices
erode the integrity of our public works projects and allow individuals
to profit at the expense of American taxpayers. It is the most common
example of government corruption.
Fortunately, it is also one of the easiest to solve. Anti-pay-to-play
laws are designed to ensure that the competitive bidding process for
government contracts is open and fair, not rigged or otherwise biased
by lining the
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campaign pockets of those responsible for awarding the contracts.
Amazingly, a loophole created in a previous administration in the
Federal Highway Administration's contracting requirements is making it
difficult, if not impossible, for States to implement these
anticorruption laws. The Federal Government has threatened to cut off
highway funds to any State that passes an anti-pay-to-play law. The
Highway Administration's competitive bidding requirements have been
interpreted to mean that States can't weed out corrupt contractors.
Clearly, this was not the intent of Congress when it passed these
requirements. That is why I'm reintroducing the State Ethics Law
Protection Act. This important measure simply amends the Federal
Highway Administration's contracting requirements to allow States to
pass these important laws. It ensures States that do pass
anticorruption laws do not face financial penalties for doing so.
It is time for us to make it clear that Congress supports the right
of States to fight corruption as they see fit. States have the right to
ensure their contracting conforms to the highest ethical standards and
offers the best value to taxpayers. It is not the Federal Highway
Administration's place to second-guess a State on how to best ethically
award contracts. States like Connecticut, New Jersey, South Carolina,
Pennsylvania, and Kentucky have all passed laws like Illinois to root
out this kind of blatant corruption.
These States should be applauded, not punished, for doing the right
thing. By amending the Federal Highway Administration's contracting
requirements, we can ensure that States have every tool at their
disposal to encourage transparency and accountability. Our States have
shown they are ready to reform. It is now our duty to ensure they have
the ability to implement these reforms.
I am often asked what the true cost of corruption is. I will tell
you, in my view, coming from Illinois, it is the loss of the public's
trust. We cannot lead without this trust. And at this critical
juncture, we must do all we can to restore trust and inspire the
confidence of people across this country.
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