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Ask the candidates: Are you for bribery?

Wisconsin used to be known as a beacon of clean, open and honest government.

A big reason is we used to have some of the nation’s best anti-corruption laws.

Those laws are now obsolete. They are no longer worth the paper they are written on.

Here’s why. The anti-corruption laws we refer to are still on the books.

Bribing a public official was outlawed in Wisconsin in 1897.

A comprehensive ethics code was added in 1973 that included a conflict of interest law requiring officials to abstain from taking any action that might personally benefit them or their family members.

And a gift ban making it illegal to give public officials “anything of value” if it might influence or reward them.

Under these laws, it is illegal to buy a legislator a beer or a cup of coffee.

But you can write out a check amounting to a whole week’s pay – or a month’s – and legally hand it to that same office holder.

Or you can take all the money you make in a year – or two or 10 – and pay for ads on local TV stations singing the praises of that office holder. Also legal.

Make sense? Of course not.

Laws that once served us well have become a bad joke.

That’s because the bribery law is silent on the money in election campaigns.

So are the gift ban and conflict of interest law.

These laws offer little real protection from political corruption because they do not deal with the way corruption works today.

The people who wrote these laws could not foresee a time when running for office would turn candidates into full-time beggars.

They could not envision a time when only complete fools would offer or accept old-fashioned bribes because they could accomplish the same thing in entirely legal ways.

What was impossible for them to see is now our reality.

Citizen Action of Wisconsin and the Wisconsin Democracy Campaign have developed a proposal to bring Wisconsin’s anti-corruption laws into the 21st Century.

It adds simple common sense to these laws, amending them to acknowledge that campaign donations have substantial value to today’s politicians and can be corrupting.

It aims to end the new form of bribery that plagues us.

So now in this season when politicians are asking for your vote, voters and the media need to look for opportunities to ask them a question: Are you for bribery?

After they try to change the subject – and they will try – you need to ask them again.

Do you believe the ethics code should be silent on the large amounts of money that change hands in election campaigns?

Do you support updating our ethics laws so they meaningfully protect the public from the corruption that campaign contributions can produce?

Are you for bribery or aren’t you?

Mike McCabe is executive director of Wisconsin Democracy Campaign. Robert Kraig is executive director of Citizen Action of Wisconsin.

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