Philip Guelpa
In a major scandal that exposes the thoroughgoing rot and hypocrisy
of capitalist politics, Sheldon Silver, Democrat and long-time Speaker
of the New York State Assembly, was indicted last Thursday on charges of
corruption. A federal magistrate issued orders to freeze more than $3.8
million in various bank accounts controlled by Silver, whose
legislative salary was $121,000 a year.
As assembly speaker for the past 20 years, Silver wielded tremendous
power, along with the governor and the state senate majority leader, as
part of the notorious “three men in a room” who made key decisions on
state government policy.
In a news conference after Silver’s arrest, US Attorney Preet Bharara
stated that the indictment exposes “an overabundance of greed, cronyism
and self-dealing.” Silver “illegally monetized his public position,”
Bharara said. The investigations are ongoing, meaning that more
indictments may be announced in the future.
The indictment against Silver accuses him of receiving a total of $4
million in bribes and kickbacks from two law firms, which he reported as
legal fees. In one case, Silver allegedly steered a half-million dollar
grant to a doctor who had been sending victims of asbestos-related
illnesses to a law firm with which Silver was associated, generating
millions in fees to the firm. In the other, he is said to have received
$650,000 from a firm representing real estate interests in order to
influence relevant legislation.
Silver has been linked to other recent scandals, including one
involving New York’s Metropolitan Council on Jewish Poverty, in which
more than $9 million was stolen from the charity by its CEO, a close
friend of Silver’s, whose wife is the Speaker’s chief of staff. In other
scandals, involving charges of sexual harassment and official
corruption, Silver was accused of using his power and influence to
protect members of the Assembly from prosecution.
New York politicians have a long-standing reputation for corruption,
with occasional legal entanglements when their activities became
especially egregious (see: “Arrests of New York politicians reveal systemic corruption”).
Research by Citizens Union found that 28 New York lawmakers have left
office because of criminal or ethical issues since 2000. Over the past
six years, six New York legislative leaders have faced prosecution,
including Republican Joseph Bruno, the former Senate Majority Leader.
The state government in Albany has long been a watchword for
political corruption, summed up in the slogan “pay to play,” as business
interests ante up for legislators who steer state contracts to them. It
has long been an open secret that Silver and other legislators appeared
to have incomes much higher than could be accounted for in official
disclosures, but nothing was done about it.
Claiming to take up a fight against political corruption among
legislators, Democratic Governor Andrew Cuomo established the “Moreland
Commission” in 2013, a supposedly independent body to carry out
investigations. After an initial show of support and cooperation, the
legislature quickly moved to mount legal opposition to the inquiry.
A year later, Cuomo abruptly dissolved the commission without
credible explanation. At the time, it was suggested that the
investigation was getting too close to Cuomo allies or other powerful
figures, perhaps even to Cuomo himself. A subpoena from the commission
to Silver was pending, but had been stalled by legal action, when Cuomo
acted. The US attorney’s office then took over the commission’s records
and proceeded with the investigations, leading to Silver’s indictment.
Bharara is reportedly looking into whether Cuomo attempted to
influence the commission. The governor spent $100,000 on a criminal
defense attorney to represent him on this issue.
Cuomo has suggested, in an interview with the editorial board of the Daily News,
that his disbanding of the Moreland Commission may have been, in part, a
way of circumventing the legislature’s legal maneuvers against the
investigation, thus allowing the federal prosecutor to move forward with
the Silver investigation.
Silver has been associated with certain union bureaucracies,
including the teachers union, that are currently at odds with Cuomo over
the division of the loot in Albany.
Whatever the exact nature of the backstabbing maneuvers, Silver seems
to have been done in politically, although he may well escape any legal
consequences for his actions. This was the case for Bruno, the former
state senate leader, whose corruption conviction was reversed, following
a 2010 state supreme court ruling based on the contention that, in
effect, influence peddling is standard practice for politicians.
US Attorney Bharara is clearly conscious of boundaries that must not be crossed. He is quoted in the Daily News
saying, “We are not looking to criminalize ordinary politics. Nor are
we demanding that elected officials be virtuous or vice-free.”
In other words, the normal practices of class rule, including the
routine buying and selling of political patronage, are acceptable. Only
when such activities become so egregious as to discredit the entire
political system must examples be made.
Political corruption is not the result of a few, or even many, “bad
apples,” as loathsome as such individuals may be. Rather, it is an
intrinsic part of the system of power and privilege of the capitalist
class.
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