… Special Interests Give to Jerry Brown Charities: Part 2
This week the Los Angeles Times ran a story headlined, “Card clubs and other special interests give to Jerry Brown charities.” I discussed the issue of ‘behested payments’ – philanthropic giving at the behest of an elected official – from the standpoint of a nonprofit organization and of a donor (who might lack charitable intent) earlier this week. In this post I will comment on this issue with a focus on Jerry Brown – the solicitor.
1. First, let’s acknowledge that Mr. Brown is a great volunteer. He is committed to the organization(s), he understands the importance of fund raising, and he is prepared to step up and do it. If every nonprofit board or committee member were prepared to rise to the occasion in this way, the world would be a different place. (I say this as someone who has worked in partnership with volunteers for many years.)
And let’s acknowledge the strategic decision-making that is an essential element of any thoughtful solicitation plan: we select the volunteer (or executive) in the best position to make the ask. Who has a relationship with the prospect? Who might wield some influence over her/his decision? Whose vision and judgment does s/he respect? Who will the prospect find it harder to say ‘No’ to, or easier to give an affirmative response to?
For the two Oakland charter schools we have discussed, Jerry Brown was the go-to volunteer. We don’t know how many folks said ‘No’ to him, but we know a number of individuals and institutions came through with major gifts at Brown’s behest.
2. But Mr. Brown is also the Attorney General of the State of California (and may be elected Governor within the year) – with jurisdiction over many matters of concern to the folks he solicited. That leads to this predicament: these gifts pose obvious conflicts of interest.
In fact virtually all fund raising by elected officials raises conflicts of interest. It doesn’t matter whether the money is to elect someone to office, to enact a proposition, or (as in this instance) to support a favorite charity. One naturally feels gratitude (and perhaps some sense of obligation) upon receiving a gift; it would be natural for a donor to expect Mr. Brown at the least to “keep an open mind…” [see the Times article for the full quote] in any future conversations about matters of public policy … which leaves open the possibility of staking out a position amenable to the donor’s interests.
“It’s great to give, but are they giving because Jerry Brown is a great guy or because he’s attorney general?” asks Robert Stern, president of the Center for Governmental Studies in Los Angeles (as quoted in the Sacramento Bee’s CapitalAlert blog). Mr. Stern also notes that such gifts cannot be banned. The best we can do is to require disclosure, which is why we can find lists of behested payments at the Fair Political Practices Commission website.
With full disclosure – and much additional information – we are in a position to make judgments about behested payments and about the public officials who made the successful solicitations. What considerations might we bring to bear on our judgments?
Via Google, it is simple enough to find any number of allegations of improper behavior related to elected officials’ relationships to nonprofit organizations. I will not bother with the links, but the examples include: 501(c)(3) organizations that funded activities unrelated to any charitable purpose, including organizations that functioned as illegal conduits for money-laundering. Nonprofits that provided income for a politician or spouse. Nonprofits that funded activities to generate crowds and publicity to benefit the politician, including nonprofits conveniently named after him.
When we review the list of individuals or industries that have made ‘behested payments’ we make judgments about the nature of the charity involved and the political figure’s relationship to it. We make judgments about the character of the public official and the measure of charitable intent we perceive. We also – if we are vigilant – make judgments about any decisions the office holder makes that may benefit or disadvantage donors who responded with a behested payment.
Jerry Brown responded to the suggestion that behested payments might influence the performance of his official duties with these words, “I have an unimpeachable record of integrity.”
This brings to mind the words of the late Jesse Unruh, who said of legislators, “If you can’t take their money … and vote against them, you don’t belong here.“ (The whole quotation is more colorful – the legendary ‘Big Daddy’ of California politics was a colorful figure – but this excerpt makes my point clearly.)
Can Jerry Brown do that: make decisions and undertake activities opposed by special interests that have made gifts at his behest? Perhaps. I actually don’t think this is at all far-fetched. His long political career has generated considerable attention and controversy, but has been remarkably free of the suggestion of scandal. I see no reason to question his genuine commitment to the Oakland School for the Arts or the Oakland Military Institute.
For my part, I will keep in mind the Fair Political Practices Commission’s list of behested payments as I watch Mr. Brown’s decisions and activities as Attorney General.
(Photo by Steve Rhodes at Flickr.)
