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Panel debate: mandatory consultation with State Ethics Commission and separation‑of‑powers concerns

2910790 · April 9, 2025
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Committee members and outside counsel debated whether statute should require legislative panels to consult the State Ethics Commission before disciplining members in matters that touch the State Code of Ethics, with testimony split on separation‑of‑powers risks.

The Government Operations committee spent substantial time on the constitutional question of whether legislative panels (and judicial disciplinary bodies) should be required by statute to consult the State Ethics Commission when a complaint touches the State Code of Ethics. Testimony reflected two enduring tensions: (1) whether a statutorily mandated consultation infringes on the legislature’s core, constitutionally assigned functions, and (2) how to balance an independent statewide ethics process with the legislative body’s prerogative to set its own rules and discipline.

Paul Gillies, a municipal-law attorney and longtime observer of Vermont constitutional practice, told the committee that separation-of-powers jurisprudence recognizes necessary overlaps among branches and that consultation by the ethics commission is unlikely to rise to a constitutional usurpation of core legislative function. "I don't see it as interfering with core legislative responsibilities," Gillies said,…

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