Washington is guilty of more than one kind of corruption

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Paul Manafort’s style of alleged Washington corruption is old-style, writes Mona Charen. But, she says, corruption works in other ways, too. | AP Photo

When people think of corruption in high places, they think of elites feathering their own nests.

Bill and Hillary Clinton monetized political power into a personal fortune of hundreds of millions of dollars, and played the system better than any couple since Napoleon and Josephine. Paul Manafort is alleged to have sold his services to sketchy foreign powers (including a Putin puppet in Ukraine), pocketed multiple millions, evaded American taxes and spent up to a million dollars on cashmere suits and ostrich jackets.

OPINION

President Donald Trump is defending his former campaign chairman: “Paul Manafort worked for Ronald Reagan, Bob Dole and many other highly prominent and respected political leaders. He worked for me for a very short time. Why didn’t government tell me that he was under investigation. These old charges have nothing to do with Collusion – a Hoax!”

But the president might answer a few questions, too.

Why didn’t he do a background investigation of Manafort? His career representing tainted foreign leaders such as Ferdinand Marcos and Jonas Savimbi was public knowledge. Allegations that he received off-the-books payments from overseas interests were only a click away.

In 2016, Manafort flatly denied the allegations: “The simplest answer is the truth: I am a campaign professional. … I have never received a single ‘off-the-books cash payment’ as falsely ‘reported’ by The New York Times, nor have I ever done work for the governments of Ukraine or Russia.” That didn’t age well.

Another question for President Trump: Didn’t it strike him as odd that a man of Manafort’s tastes and lifestyle would agree to work for Trump for free? Didn’t he pause and reflect, “Hmm, I wonder what he expects to get out of this, and from whom?”

Manafort is the poster child for Washington corruption of the old-fashioned variety — the influence selling and pocket-lining kind. A remarkable number of Trump’s people have displayed a similar foible.

Just in the first 18 months, the secretary of health and human services (private jets at taxpayer’s expense), the secretary for veterans affairs (vacations for the family at government expense) and the Environmental Protection Agency chief (a soundproof booth) all have been forced out for misusing government funds for their own little luxuries.

The secretary of housing and urban development (a $31,000 dining room set), the interior secretary (a land development deal adjacent to his property), the commerce secretary (shorting stocks on nonpublic information) and the treasury secretary (misuse of military aircraft) all have been accused of improper spending as well. Far from drained, the swamp has been stocked by this administration.

But there is another kind of corruption that is more disturbing for the health of our republic — the retreat from governing in favor of posturing.

As Yuval Levin notes in a Commentary essay, “Congress Is Weak Because Its Members Want It to Be Weak,” the 21st century’s profusion of technologies permitting transparency have had some good but many baleful effects. Because virtually everything is televised, politics itself has become less and less about actual governing, with the trades and compromises that requires, and more like performance art.

This tendency among legislators to grandstand and to posture as the brave truth-tellers condemning the “dysfunction” of their own institution is actually the true dysfunction. When nearly every member seeks to be a cable or local TV star rather than a lawmaker, it’s no wonder that very little actual legislating gets done.

As Levin notes, even controlling both chambers and with a Republican president poised to sign anything they send up, the Republican Congress has achieved very little. They passed a tax cut, but concerning the other priorities they campaigned on for years — reforming the health care system, adjusting the immigration laws, confronting the entitlement crisis — they have done nothing and seem to have no plans.

As for the chief job of Congress, developing a budget, well, for the first time in 40 years, neither chamber has even considered a budget resolution. And while Republican leaders demur, the president is again threatening a government shutdown.

That we have a president who struts and howls and shows little interest in the mechanics (to say nothing of the norms) of governing is well known. But the Congress, designed by our nation’s founders to be the most powerful branch, is willingly surrendering its intended role for the pleasures of a few hits on MSNBC or Fox News.

That is an outcome that the founders didn’t anticipate and will likely outlast our current tweeter in chief.

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