The Kentucky Center for Investigative Reporting's latest investigation into money, politics and ethics explored the business ties among longtime Congressman Ed Whitfield, his lobbyist wife, and another well-known lobbyist.For more than a decade, the trio was linked in a financial partnership — a land deal at a luxury resort in West Virginia. Meanwhile, the two lobbyists had clients and employers with business before Whitfield in Congress.
The congressman didn't respond to our 10 inquiries. His wife, lobbyist Connie Harriman-Whitfield, did. She said the American people don't care about alleged misdeeds between lawmakers and lobbyists."Do you think that every time you guys write an article about untoward dealings, or what you perceive to be untoward dealings, about a member of congress or a lobbyist, that people care anymore? They don't care. People don't care," she said in an interview on June 9.Here's the interview: Connie Harriman-Whitfield is a Washington, D.C., insider. She knows politics. She oversaw the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the National Park Service. She later served as director of the U.S. Export-Import Bank and worked as associate solicitor at the Department of Interior. She currently works as "senior policy adviser" at the Humane Society Legislative Fund, which lobbies her husband on issues. The fund has donated at least $8,000 to Whitfield since 2011, when she began lobbying for it. Harriman-Whitfield doesn't want to answer questions from the Kentucky Center for Investigative Reporting. "Let me just tell you. I have answered The Washington Post. I have answered Politico. I am not going to talk to you about the Humane Society," she told us. "You are way behind the curve on that one. I am tired of defending....I am tired." Read the latest investigative report from Louisville Public Media's KyCIR: How a Congressman, His Wife and a Lobbyist Mixed Politics, Personal Finances We talked to six ethics experts. They said the Whitfields' mix of politics and personal finances with lobbyist Juanita Duggan raises serious ethical, and possibly legal, questions. One of them, convicted felon Jack Abramoff — a lobbyist who knows corrupt dealings — said the arrangement "doesn't smell right." Congressman Whitfield's ethics have been under scrutiny before, as we reported. But do you care? Do people really not care about the influence of money in politics, as Connie Harriman-Whitfield told us? Lawrence Lessig, a well-known law professor at Harvard, explored this issue recently in the Atlantic.