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by t0ddbonzalez 2217 days ago
> "then please hold them to a higher standard, especially if they have any kind of public role."

Thing is, the law doesn't allow one class of persons to be held to a higher standard.

Everybody is supposed to be held to the same standard.

Of course, it seems in this situation that certain people in public service can exempt themselves from the common standard altogether with no punishment.

1 comments

> Thing is, the law doesn't allow one class of persons to be held to a higher standard.

Misconduct in Public Office isn't used very often, but it exists and is there ebcause we do hold people in public office to a higher standard.

The offence of Misconduct in Public Office, as the name suggests, applies only to those in public office. So it's not a higher standard - it's another, different standard. You or I couldn't be prosecuted for the offence (assuming you don't hold a public office...).
I don't get it. You or I can't be prosecuted under it because we're not in public office, but people in public office can be prosecuted under it, thus there's a class of people held to higher standards.

There's a bunch of stuff that you and I can do, but that we couldn't do if we were in public office.

How can there be a higher standard if something doesn't apply to you?
Members of the public are expected to meet one standard. There are additional -higher- standards placed upon people in public office.

I don't understand how a law that applies to a certain class of people, but not everybody, is not treating that certain class of people differently.

The law creates the higher standard. Behaviour that's perfectly legal for most people becomes illegal for people in public office because we expect higher standards from those people and we expect these higher standards so strongly we created a law to enforce it.