
His father was a disgraced Massachusetts judge. Now he's the top Democrat on the House Ethics Committee.
'LBJ used to always say, 'I don't want to be like my papa,' because his dad … was very strict about following the rules,' DeSaulnier said in a recent interview with the Globe in his office. 'I sort of always was like Johnson, but for the opposite reason. … I don't want to be the person who gets seduced by this and ends up breaking the rules.'
Get Starting Point
A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday.
Enter Email
Sign Up
It's a consequential time to be taking this particular job. The normally press-averse Ethics Committee has released two high-profile reports in as many years. In 2023, it
.
The report was released after Gaetz had
Advertisement
Charged with upholding ethics, the committee is now facing an even greater challenge, with Washington increasingly polarized and contrition in short supply.
DeSaulnier said that context is precisely why he is eager to lead on the committee, praising its Republican chair, Mississippi Representative Michael Guest, for keeping it nonpartisan.
'Rules are important, boundaries are important, and the pursuit of virtue in public office is really important,' DeSaulnier said. 'That doesn't mean that everybody is the second coming of Christ or George Washington or Abraham Lincoln, but that we should aspire to this.'
Advertisement
****
The second youngest of five kids in an Irish and French-Canadian Catholic family, DeSaulnier's memories are littered with bits of Boston lore. His paternal grandfather owned a Lowell taxi company, and his maternal grandfather was a deputy fire chief there.
xxdesaulnier - In an undated photo, former Massachusetts Governor Foster Furcolo (left) shakes hands with disbarred former Superior Court Judge Edward DeSaulnier (center) as his wife, Virginia (far right), looks on. They were joined by the DeSaulniers' children Ted, Susan, Thomas (left to right) and Mark (bottom), now a congressman. (Tal Kopan/Globe Staff)
Tal Kopan/Globe Staff
DeSaulnier grew up seeing the glamour of having a father in Boston-area politics. He recalls going to classic Boston sporting events with his dad, including seeing the Celtics' John Havlicek steal the ball against the Philadelphia 76ers in the 1965 NBA playoffs and Bobby Orr score the Stanley Cup-winning goal for the Bruins in 1970. When the Celtics won the championship one year during their dominant run in the 1950s and 1960s, DeSaulnier recalls his father somehow getting them into the locker room at the old Boston Garden. His father seemed to know everyone.
Now, DeSaulnier realizes that much of it was probably connected to the corrupt actions that were his father's undoing.
'I'm sure it was part of this stuff,' DeSaulnier said. 'I know it was, because I would be standing there when he was making bets. And I'm going, 'This sounds weird.''
It came crashing down on July 22, 1971. DeSaulnier had been staying on his father's couch in Boston, his parents by then separated, while working a summer job after his freshman year at College of the Holy Cross. That Friday, before a planned weekend trip to Cape Cod, there was a knock at the door from a reporter from the now-defunct Boston Record-American looking for his father, who wasn't home. Phone calls from reporters from the Globe and Herald followed.
Finally, Jack Borden from WBZ-TV informed the perplexed DeSaulnier that a criminal informant had told a Senate committee that his dad had taken a bribe in exchange for arranging a lenient sentence in a fraud case a decade earlier. Stunned, DeSaulnier left for the Cape without his dad.
Advertisement
Judge DeSaulnier denied the allegations, calling them 'preposterous.' But in early August, the Globe's Spotlight team broke its first story that made DeSaulnier's denials more implausible. The Globe reported DeSaulnier had been close personal friends for decades with the bail bondsmen alleged to be the go-betweens on the bribe. In that story and subsequent ones, the Globe revealed other misdeeds, including that DeSaulnier held an active real estate license, contrary to recommended judicial conduct, and that DeSaulnier wrongfully wracked up personal phone charges on a court line, including multiple calls allegedly linked to Mafia gambling junkets.
Superior Court Judge Edward J. DeSaulnier Jr. read a prepared statement of resignation in the office of his lawyer on Jan. 14, 1972. He faced accusations of conspiring to influence a pending criminal case and was disbarred and forced to resign as a result.
Joseph Dennehy/Globe Staff
After investigating, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court disbarred DeSaulnier in January 1972 for 'grossly improper' conduct, the court's first such punishment. DeSaulnier resigned days later. He spent his later years working odd jobs, including a year as a substance abuse adviser to the Patriots. But he also struggled with addiction and gambling problems himself, leaving him destitute, according to his son. He died by suicide in 1989.
DeSaulnier continued college amid the storm of headlines. He decided that he would follow some family out to California while buying books at the Harvard Coop, when he handed the clerk a credit card bearing their distinctive last name.
'She said, 'Oh, are you related to the crooked judge?'' DeSaulnier said, imitating the grimace he made in reaction. 'And then she goes, this is classic Boston, 'I didn't mean it that way. They're all crooked.' … My response was, 'To tell you the truth, that's not really very helpful.''
Advertisement
DeSaulnier joined family in the San Francisco Bay area and went into the restaurant business. An associate in the local Chamber of Commerce encouraged him to apply to the local planning commission, setting off a career in local politics, originally as a Republican, that culminated in his election to Congress in 2014.
Despite not wanting to follow his father's example, DeSaulnier said his Jesuit education's emphasis on service influenced him to pursue it after all. And while he was dedicated to avoiding his father's failings, they also fueled his work. Representative DeSaulnier has championed legislation supporting mental health and addiction recovery. And when Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries offered DeSaulnier a spot on the Ethics Committee two years ago and the top Democratic spot this year, DeSaulnier readily agreed.
A voracious reader, DeSaulnier cited the German philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer on how he feels about the strange journey that brought him to his post today.
'He said, you know, when you get older, you look back on your life … and you go, 'Oh, it sort of all made sense,'' DeSaulnier said, contemplatively. 'And that's the way I feel about being on the Ethics Committee. … I wasn't the architect of this [trajectory], I was the principal in it, but it all sort of made sense.'
Tal Kopan can be reached at
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Yahoo
16 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Letter: Democrats should be careful about hyping election wins
The other day I saw several articles extolling the results of a special election for South Carolina's 50th House District in which a young Democratic candidate beat his Republican opponent by a 70% to 30% margin in heavily Republican South Carolina. Since this result appeared several times in my scrolling, I decided to find more information regarding this potential watershed event, perhaps heralding the beginning of a Democratic comeback from the wilderness. I found out that the 50th District has voted Democratic forever, and the previous holder of that seat ran unopposed on occasion. The last time he had a Republican opponent, he won by 20 percentage points. Furthermore, in the Democratic primary for this seat this year, the winning candidate won his place on the ballot by a mere seven votes in an election that required a recount to confirm his win. Winning candidate Keishan Scott, is a 24-year-old town council member and will be the youngest member of the South Carolina Legislature. He is Black, and his Republican opponent is white. The district population is about 90% Black and 10% white and Hispanic, so Scott's victory is not quite a watershed event. A whopping 14% of eligible voters took part in this special election, and Scott received 2,572 votes. The Democrats are desperate for good news, but hyping this 'victory' is more pathetic than uplifting. Robert Brems Wyomissing
Yahoo
17 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Coinbase adds former top Obama and Harris adviser Plouffe as it broadens its political reach
WASHINGTON (AP) — A senior adviser to Kamala Harris' 2024 presidential campaign is joining Coinbase's global advisory council, which already includes several former U.S. senators and Donald Trump's ex-campaign manager, as the cryptocurrency exchange broadens its political reach. David Plouffe, a top Democratic strategist best known as an architect of Barack Obama's successful 2008 presidential campaign, is the latest addition to the council, joining as the cryptocurrency industry plays an increasingly prominent role in shaping fast-moving legislation in Congress. The legislation aims to create a comprehensive framework for the regulation of digital assets and comes amid a shift in Washington. President Trump, a Republican, has pledged to make the U.S. the global capital of cryptocurrency, contrasting with what industry leaders viewed as a stifling regulatory approach under the previous Democratic administration. Trump and his family have also been aggressively expanding their personal business into almost every part of the cryptocurrency ecosystem, including raising billions of dollars to buy bitcoin, creating a new stablecoin and launching and promoting a Trump-themed meme coin. Chris LaCivita, the former co-campaign manager of Trump's successful 2024 presidential bid, joined Coinbase's advisory council in January. Former U.S. Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, a Democrat-turned-independent from Arizona, also joined the council, which consists of a number of other high-profile figures from both major political parties. Plouffe previously served on the global advisory board for Binance, the world's largest cryptocurrency exchange, before joining Harris' presidential campaign as a senior adviser in August. Faryar Shirzad, Coinbase's chief policy officer, described the role of the advisers as being a 'sound board' to discuss policy efforts and business strategy. In Congress, legislation is advancing far more quickly than usual for a new industry — a pace that some involved in shaping the bills say comes amid an all-out pressure campaign from the cryptocurrency sector. On Wednesday, a group of Democrats joined the Republican majority to advance legislation regulating stablecoins, a type of cryptocurrency typically pegged to the U.S. dollar. Final passage through the Senate could come next week. Meanwhile, a more sweeping bill to implement cryptocurrency market structure has begun moving through House committees.

Associated Press
19 minutes ago
- Associated Press
Coinbase adds former top Obama and Harris adviser Plouffe as it broadens its political reach
WASHINGTON (AP) — A senior adviser to Kamala Harris' 2024 presidential campaign is joining Coinbase's global advisory council, which already includes several former U.S. senators and Donald Trump's ex-campaign manager, as the cryptocurrency exchange broadens its political reach. David Plouffe, a top Democratic strategist best known as an architect of Barack Obama's successful 2008 presidential campaign, is the latest addition to the council, joining as the cryptocurrency industry plays an increasingly prominent role in shaping fast-moving legislation in Congress. The legislation aims to create a comprehensive framework for the regulation of digital assets and comes amid a shift in Washington. President Trump, a Republican, has pledged to make the U.S. the global capital of cryptocurrency, contrasting with what industry leaders viewed as a stifling regulatory approach under the previous Democratic administration. Trump and his family have also been aggressively expanding their personal business into almost every part of the cryptocurrency ecosystem, including raising billions of dollars to buy bitcoin, creating a new stablecoin and launching and promoting a Trump-themed meme coin. Chris LaCivita, the former co-campaign manager of Trump's successful 2024 presidential bid, joined Coinbase's advisory council in January. Former U.S. Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, a Democrat-turned-independent from Arizona, also joined the council, which consists of a number of other high-profile figures from both major political parties. Plouffe previously served on the global advisory board for Binance, the world's largest cryptocurrency exchange, before joining Harris' presidential campaign as a senior adviser in August. Faryar Shirzad, Coinbase's chief policy officer, described the role of the advisers as being a 'sound board' to discuss policy efforts and business strategy. In Congress, legislation is advancing far more quickly than usual for a new industry — a pace that some involved in shaping the bills say comes amid an all-out pressure campaign from the cryptocurrency sector. On Wednesday, a group of Democrats joined the Republican majority to advance legislation regulating stablecoins, a type of cryptocurrency typically pegged to the U.S. dollar. Final passage through the Senate could come next week. Meanwhile, a more sweeping bill to implement cryptocurrency market structure has begun moving through House committees.