Pope Francis gift raffle: An example to public officials?
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What do a camera, an espresso machine, and a four-wheel-drive Fiat Panda have in common? All three are gifts to the pope 鈥 and all are soon to become聽 to be held Thursday to raise money for the poor, according to the Holy See.
The raffle, open to the public at , will re-gift some of the hundreds of presents that Pope Francis receives from the world鈥檚 1.2 billion Catholics, while raising funds for charity. Typically, such gifts are quietly donated to missions or charities or put in storage. The decision has been praised as of the pope's devotion to the poor and his 鈥渄o as I do, not as I say鈥 form of leadership of the Catholic Church.
The issue of appropriately dealing with lavish gifts extends beyond church leaders to all heads of state and public officials.
鈥淕ifts can be a minefield for elected leaders,鈥 at The Washington Post. 聽
The Obamas receive many expensive gifts as they host world leaders.聽By law, the US president must turn them over to the National Archives or other institutions for storage or display. He can pay fair market value for those he wants to keep. The US State Department publishes 谤别肠别颈惫别诲.听
Most US states have laws that limit, to varying degrees, the dollar value on gifts that officials can receive as donations. But plenty of politicians have come under fire for circumventing those laws. This week in New Jersey 鈥 which has one of the strictest state policies for banning gifts to public officials 鈥 governor Chris Christie has for accepting luxury box seats and airline tickets to NFL games from Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones.
鈥淚f these seats were given to him by the NFL or anyone else who is trying to influence his policies, that would constitute a gift and would clearly be in violation of his state鈥檚 ethics code,鈥 Craig Holman, government affairs lobbyist for the ethics group Public Citizen,
Another high-profile case is that of former Virginia governor Robert F. McDonnell and his wife, who were last year after they were found to have received almost $180,000 in loans, vacations and luxury items. Their conviction led to reforms to Virginia state law. Missouri and Maryland have likewise to curb the lavish presents that lobbyists and local business leaders give their government officials.
While some might be offended by the Pope Francis's re-gifting plan, most Americans would likely approve. A shows more than three in four Americans find re-gifting socially acceptable and consumers report re-gifting an average of four presents last year.
The pope is as an example for other leaders. He is both "a fearless reformer" and a man who puts his people first, said Jerry Krames, author of聽"Lead with Humility: 12 Leadership Lessons from Pope Francis."聽
To be sure, this raffle is more about the message of compassion and pragmatism than as a significant fund-raising model. This Vatican gift sale won't feed many of the world's poor: Only 13聽gifts will be raffled, as well as more than 30 unspecified "consolation prizes."
Still, polling numbers suggest it might not hurt elected officials to do as the pope does: The pontiff currently enjoys an approval rating of and 鈥 a far cry from the dwindling ratings of both President Obama and Congress.