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Friday, April 27, 2018

Do Conflicts of Interest Matter? In the Michigan Legislature, Not So Much.

Republican state Sen. Darwin Booher of Michigan initially abstained from voting on a 2015 bill that proposed a $12,000 raise for circuit court judges, writing that it “could be perceived as providing a benefit to an individual to whom I am personally related” — his daughter, 49th Circuit Judge Kimberly Booher.

But a year later, the senator did vote on the raises when a House version came back to the Senate. The bill passed and became law, giving his daughter and her peers a salary boost.

Booher is not the only Michigan lawmaker who voted on bills that could potentially benefit them or their close relatives. A Center for Public Integrity analysis of more than 50,000 pages of official legislative journals logging each day’s actions found six other Michigan legislators who voted on bills even when they publicly noted their own conflicts of interest.

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1 comment:

  1. "... and her peers a salary boost."

    As the relatives fall into a group, it's not considered a crime. If your kid is in the military and you're a senator that votes for a military pay raise, are you at fault?

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