Lee Hamilton, Leon Panetta, Marcy Kaptur, Paul Helmke and Richard Painter joining Jill Long Thompson at book’s launch
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – In the introduction to her new book, former Indiana congresswoman Jill Long Thompson tells the story of a dinner invitation from a powerful committee chairman to illustrate the importance of ethics to the future of American democracy.
“It was clear to me that none of the other members of Congress at the table that evening thought it was inappropriate for lobbyists to buy them dinner. They apparently saw no conflict of interest,” said Long Thompson, who chose to join the private dinner but opted only to drink a diet soft drink and reimbursed the host the next day.
The powerful committee chair that evening later was convicted on corruption charges and served prison time. “To this day, I believe he was a genuinely decent man, but he was human … Like many people he probably had never taken the time to seriously and diligently reflect on what constitutes ethical behavior,” she said. “Without ethics, democracy cannot survive.”
Long Thompson, who earned her MBA and doctorate from the Indiana University Kelley School of Business, has drawn upon experiences from her distinguished career in public service to teach at the business school and at the O’Neill School of Public and Environmental Affairs.
Her book, “The Character of American Democracy: Preserving Our Past, Protecting our Future (Indiana University Press),” will be published Sept. 15. Her colleagues for the last five years in Kelley’s Department of Business Law and Ethics and IU Press are co-hosting a virtual book launch that day from 4 to 5 p.m.
She will be joined in conversations by special guests, including Lee Hamilton, Distinguished Scholar and professor of practice in the Hamilton-Lugar School of Global and International Studies; Leon Panetta, former CIA director, secretary of defense and chief of staff to President Bill Clinton; Paul Helmke, professor of practice and director of the Civic Leaders Center in the O’Neill School; U.S. Rep. Marcy Kaptur, D-Ohio; and Richard Painter, the S. Walter Richey Professor of Corporate Law at the University of Minnesota. Registration is required.









