2.19.2009

We Are All Tax Cheats Now

Given my fellow journalists' unsettling curiosity about all things Palin, this story about the Alaska Governor and some unpaid taxes seems a bit undercirculated. It seems the great "reformer" has been extra-mavericky when it comes to the taxes on "nearly $18,000 in expenses she charged the state for living in her home outside Anchorage instead of at the state capital..."

It will be interesting to see how the GOP spins the latest news about their down-to-earth darling, especially in light of their eagerness, of late, to pounce on the Geithners and Daschles of the world.

I don't bring this story up to tag Palin (while it appears she made a definite mistake, it's not of the magnitude we saw with some of the Cabinet nominees), nor do I mention it to let Daschle or Geithner off the hook (seriously, guys). In fact, I wish to make the opposite point. It's time to lift the partisan wool from over our eyes when we look at ethics violations and abuses of power.

Without fail, when a member of the majority party commits an error, the minority party is quick to label them the party of corruption. Dems do it when the Republicans are in power; the GOP is all too happy to reciprocate. Each group is happy to create a narrative utilizing their opponent's past five or so scandals to deem them inherently corrupt, failing to note that their own closet is manned by a skeleton crew.

Issues of ethics and power should not send us red-faced or blue-faced into our respective corners and, they should not send us scrambling to play a home version of the Shift-The-Blame Game (I think Parker Bros. has a patent pending). Instead, they should unite us around the causes of justice and transparency. If each of us have, in some small, partisan way, felt the sting of scandal, we should be all the more vigilant about rooting out scandal, no matter what capital letter sits next to a politician's name.

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