ALBANY, N.Y. — When state officials created New York's new ethics commission in 2022, they billed it as an independent watchdog to replace an old ethics panel roundly criticized for doing too little to reign in public corruption and self-dealing.
One of the Commission on Ethics and Lobbying in Government's early high-profile actions was to investigate former Gov. Andrew Cuomo over $5 million he had gotten for writing a book about the COVID-19 pandemic.
Years later, the commission is fighting for its own survival after Cuomo's lawyers persuaded courts that the panel was given unconstitutional enforcement powers. A state lawyer seeking to reverse a lower court ruling argued before New York's top court Tuesday that the commission's more independent setup is both constitutionally proper and necessary for if to function properly.
The commission has continued to operate as the court case continues. But Rachael Fauss of Reinvent Albany, who listened to arguments with other good-government advocates, said that a ruling against the commission could upend ethics enforcement in New York.
''There would be no watchdog on the beat,'' she said. ''We've had a history of ... corruption scandals in this state, and all the bodies have been ill-equipped to handle them. And if this one — this new body that's the most independent we've had yet — is thrown out, I think it raises a big question about what the Legislature could come up with.''
The commission, known as COELIG, investigates potential ethics and lobbying violations by state officials, employees, lobbyists and their clients. Commission findings involving state lawmakers are referred to the Legislative Ethics Commission for enforcement.
It was created by Gov. Kathy Hochul and lawmakers in 2022 to replace the much-maligned Joint Commission on Public Ethics, or JCOPE. Members of that panel were appointed by the governor and legislative leaders, leading to widespread criticism that commission members had little appetite to hold those officials accountable.
In contrast, COELIG nominations by state officials are reviewed by an independent review committee made up of law school deans. And the governor cannot unilaterally remove commission members.