- United States
- Mass.
- Letter
Close the Corruption Loopholes
To: Rep. Trahan, Sen. Warren, Sen. Markey
From: A verified voter in Lowell, MA
April 26
Americans can see the problem clearly: public power and private wealth are becoming dangerously intertwined. Voters across party lines understand that corruption is not just a matter of one scandal, one official, or one party. It is a system of loopholes that allows wealthy donors, federal contractors, political insiders, family members, foreign interests, and public officials to convert access into influence and influence into profit. Congress needs to stop treating corruption as a campaign slogan and start treating it as a legislative emergency. Recent reporting has shown why voluntary ethics promises are not enough. Presidential family members and informal advisers can operate near the center of power while maintaining private business interests, foreign investments, cryptocurrency ventures, or policy-adjacent roles. Federal contractors can benefit from taxpayer money while their executives and affiliates spend heavily to influence the officials who control those contracts. Billionaire-backed super PACs and dark-money groups can shape elections while hiding the true sources of their funding. Members of Congress can trade stocks while receiving information unavailable to ordinary investors. Supreme Court justices can operate under weak self-policing rules that would not be tolerated in lower courts. This is not how public trust is restored. It is how cynicism becomes rational. Congress should pass a serious anti-corruption package. That package should include full disclosure of dark money in federal elections, real transparency for online political ads, and strict limits on large political spending by federal contractors, their affiliates, top executives, and major shareholders. Congress should create a small-donor public financing system so candidates can run competitive campaigns without becoming dependent on billionaires, corporate interests, and industry-funded super PACs. Congress should also ban stock trading by members of Congress and senior staff, requiring assets to be held in broad-based funds or qualified blind trusts. Public service should not be a side door to private enrichment. Federal ethics laws must apply meaningfully to the president and vice president, including real conflict-of-interest rules, divestment requirements where necessary, and enforceable limits on monetizing public office through family businesses or informal advisers. Congress should also codify and enforce the Constitution’s Emoluments Clauses so no federal official can profit from foreign governments, states, or public office without accountability. The Supreme Court needs a binding ethics code with outside enforcement, transparent complaint procedures, stronger recusal rules, and meaningful financial disclosures. The pardon power also needs reform so it cannot be abused to protect family members, donors, political allies, or well-connected insiders. Corruption thrives when rules are weak, enforcement is optional, and consequences are reserved for people without power. That must end. The United States should not be a country without consequences. Congress should prove that public office still belongs to the public.
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