Voices Muted By Political Corruption

Chris Mattei
Chris Mattei

When State Senator Ed Gomes asserted political forces blocked him from appearing on the August primary ballot, former federal prosecutor Christopher Mattei presented Gomes’ case in court. A judge ordered Gomes’ name on the ballot and he defeated Democratic-endorsed Dennis Bradley, chair of the Board of Education. Mattei, now an attorney with the Bridgeport-based law firm Koskoff, Koskoff & Bieder, prosecuted former Governor John Rowland and others in public corruption cases. He’s composed a commentary that also appeared in the Hartford Courant about the plague of public corruption with cautionary words about Donald Trump. “His casual view of the rule of law, his racist rhetoric and generally erratic and offensive behavior made his candidacy abhorrent to me. As we now resist his impulse to subject minority communities to heightened surveillance, ban religious minorities or muzzle the press, we must remember that the broader issue of citizens feeling disconnected from their government remains.”

From Mattei:

I’ve stood in the hush of a federal courtroom, and urged citizen jurors to stand against corruption in our political system. I’ve looked into their resolute eyes and argued that corruption silences the one true thing we have in a democracy–our voice. And, I’ve seen them reclaim that voice when they announced their verdict to packed courtrooms.

As I watched this month’s election returns, I was thinking about those jurors. They were drawn from all walks of life. They were united in their reverence for our political system and their contempt for those who would corrupt it. It wasn’t just an illegal contribution or bribe payment that bothered them, though that was enough. It was the sense that our political system was being undermined more broadly and producing policy choices that deprived ordinary people of opportunities and protections they desperately need.

This angered them. And it angers me. That same sentiment was at work in this election on both the Republican and Democratic sides.

In Connecticut, we know this all too well. In the last few years, former Gov. John G. Rowland was convicted for receiving secret campaign payments in exchange for, among other things, using the public air waves to manipulate voters. George Gallo, the former chief of staff to the House Republican caucus, was convicted for siphoning money from our state’s campaign finance system. Eight people, including high level operatives for a Democratic congressional campaign, were convicted for a scheme to make secret campaign contributions in exchange for legislative action that, if successful, would have jeopardized hundreds of millions of dollars in public revenue.

This kind of behavior drives a wedge between citizens and their government, and unfairly tarnishes the many decent public officials who work hard every day.

Whether you were for Hillary Clinton or Donald Trump, the election had less to do with them or their policies, and more to do with the belief that the voices of ordinary Americans have been muted by a political system awash in money, besieged by concentrated corporate power and seemingly immune to the basic concerns of average citizens. This is systemic corruption, a state of affairs where the shared aspirations of average citizens–once a great unifying political force–are sacrificed to the narrow interests of the privileged few. Though our politics often divide us into micro-identities, our yearning for a responsive, functional and humane government unites many of us still.

For years as an assistant United States attorney, I stood apart from politics. The proper administration of justice required that. Of course, like anybody, I held strong personal views. Those views were shaped, in part, from my experiences living and working as a high school teacher on the Navajo reservation and, later, as a union organizer for low wage health care workers, many of whom were first generation Americans. These were people who went through life with very little protection and even less power. I became a federal prosecutor because I believed that the law could protect people who had been treated as if they didn’t matter.

I opposed Donald Trump for reasons too numerous to list fully here. His casual view of the rule of law, his racist rhetoric and generally erratic and offensive behavior made his candidacy abhorrent to me. As we now resist his impulse to subject minority communities to heightened surveillance, ban religious minorities or muzzle the press, we must remember that the broader issue of citizens feeling disconnected from their government remains.

The Supreme Court’s decision in Citizens United, which has led to unthinkable sums of dark money in our political system, remains. Gerrymandering, which has led to legislative paralysis, remains. The trauma of more than a decade of public corruption scandals in our state remains, as do problems that affect all of us: a lack of broad-based economic opportunity, an achievement gap that stifles human potential and a vast and immoral disparity in wealth.

We have many differences in our country, but systemic corruption divides us between those who matter to our government and those who don’t. That is a division that we must not tolerate. In this uncertain time, faith in those with power is far less important than sustaining our faith in each other and advancing the belief that nobody is beyond our collective concern. And whether it be from a jury box or a ballot box, that is the verdict we must render.

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2 comments

  1. Chris Mattei, thank you for your comment and in your last statement you wrote, “In this uncertain time, faith in those with power is far less important than sustaining our faith in each other and advancing the belief that nobody is beyond our collective concern,” you left out the most important point and that’s your faith in whomever your God is if you have one.

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  2. Chris Mattei, thank you for your thoughtful comments. Ron Mackey adds his thought that faith in a higher power can be a more critical component than faith in political power. Amen. However, it is in the hands of each of us as citizens and we must come together rather than allow divisiveness, encouraged by those currently in the spotlight, to keep us separate, suspicious and without effective voice.

    Perhaps my comments from 11-23-16 that only one person posted to are appropriate for a review.

    “I am personally most thankful for the privilege and blessings that are part of living in the United States for over 73 years and wish you, your family and friends additional blessings of this day as you gather in celebration. With my offered thankfulness, please allow me to share some thoughtfulness as well.

    “If you have listened during the last 12 months to public voices in the US, you know the air has been alive with utterances that would have shocked audiences in previous times. News from points around the world has been equally disturbing with governments trying to withstand capitulation to internal or external forces, larger national groupings undergoing member decisions to go it alone, and nature speaking real power to the “truths” that man has built on inadequate foundations causing much misery.

    “The onslaught of words has caused me to pause and reflect a good amount on where we, as citizens, seem to be and our potential in going forward. It has also caused me to seriously reflect on what is required today to be a “citizen of our world.” It is especially disturbing when one’s life is winding down to consider what it takes to be considered a “good citizen” in these times if a legacy of such nature is desired.

    “A good citizen will learn his own history reasonably well at least back to the time of the men and women with whom his grandparents lived. Trying to verify family stories, myths, rumors, etc. can be fun but also humbling and frustrating at times. What does that small arc of human history regarding those close to you reveal?

    “Next is a reflection on the personal assumptions of a life carefully held and respectfully pursued. What can you partially assess upon having reached certain seniority? How have I behaved as a citizen during my time in history? If I have read history more out of duty than for enjoyment until recently, what lessons can be learned or unlearned by digging into original documents of some age as well as contrary reporting of those same times? What makes sense in human terms? How deep does one dig for the truth? How does a person provide ‘voice’ to the truths discovered?

    “Have I voted regularly after being registered at an early age? More importantly, have I sought to know the story of candidates for whom I cast a ballot? Did I independently stay informed on the issues of my time and try to stay up to date with the positions of then current candidates? When I began working for a living, did I pay my fair tax burden regularly without fudging amounts, small or large, as well as fees and penalties that may have arrived at my door? Did I present myself for military or peace service and responsibly carry out my duty?

    “Have I sought to understand the “common good” as a concept and provided my own personal and active support? Through the years did I act in one or more pursuits independently and without personal profit motive with others on tasks that otherwise would not be addressed sufficiently?

    “Have I been a lifetime learner through books and all types of community participation? Have I lived a concern for the weakest or most vulnerable people in our society today? Have I been generous with my time, skills and treasure, at the same time not seeking public notice for such service? Have I affirmed others, encouraging them and providing thanks for those pursuing their “good citizen” responsibilities?

    “Did I form solid and reliable friendships in this service through the years? Have I as a “citizen” provided a model of such behavior and encouraged others to play the behavior in their life journey forward? Have I heard the call of the times and provided a response worthy of the call? Will I finish my days with a list of unmet goals and incomplete objectives to be carried on by others with whom I shared citizen responsibilities?

    “How about you? Our mutual legacies depend on each other reflecting and responding with actions. Time will tell.”

    Time will tell.

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