Top Congresswoman Investigated for Alleged Ethics Violations, Seeking to Attend Met Gala

Top Congresswoman Investigated for Alleged Ethics Violations, Seeking to Attend Met Gala
Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.) attends the 2021 Met Gala at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York on Sept. 13, 2021. Theo Wargo/Getty Images
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Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.) is under investigation for allegedly asking for an invitation to the Met Gala, which would violate House rules and federal law on solicitation of gifts, according to a congressional ethics watchdog.

In a June report (pdf) released on Nov. 21, the Office of Congressional Ethics (OCE) said it has “substantial reason to believe that Maloney may have solicited or accepted impermissible gifts” associated with her Met Gala attendance in 2016. The charity event, considered a fundraiser for the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Costume Institute, is generally frequented by celebrities, singers, actresses, and fashion luminaries.
“If Rep. Maloney solicited or accepted impermissible gifts, then she may have violated House rules, standards of conduct and federal law,” the OCE board wrote in the 15-page report, before transferring the matter to the bipartisan House Ethics Committee. In a Monday press release, the committee publicized the findings and said to look further into the matter, though noted the mere fact of the extension and disclosure didn’t indicate any wrongdoing.

Maloney, 76, a longtime attendee of the Met Gala, had secured $2.75 million in federal funding for the Met from 2003 through 2011, and requested in March 2020 $4 billion in federal assistance for nonprofit museums, including the Met, for COVID-19 relief, according to the OCE report. The congresswoman also said she couldn’t recall a year in which she was not invited to the gala.

Yet investigators obtained an internal memorandum from the Met showing Maloney’s name crossed out of its 2016 invitation list. Citing a witness testimony, the report said the congresswoman had specifically requested an invitation to the 2016 event.

“I received a call this past week from Carolyn. She is unhappy to say the least that she is not receiving an invitation to the Party of the Year,” former Met President Emily Rafferty wrote in an email dated April 2, 2016 to then-director and CEO of the museum, Thomas Campbell. “She went on about how much she does for the Met, always responsive when you call, and proactive re the institute’s concerns in DC,” the email reads.

Maloney told investigators she didn’t remember the call with staffers.

She received an invite that year and every year since then. The OCE report also cited a 2018 email that suggests Maloney’s 2016 outreach played a role in future invitations. It also cited an email thread showing Maloney may have requested an invitation as recently as 2020, asking whether she was invited to the ball and how to contact a Met government affairs employee.

Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.) leads a hearing about CCP virus preparedness and response on Capitol Hill in Washington on March 12, 2020. (Joshua Roberts/Reuters)
Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.) leads a hearing about CCP virus preparedness and response on Capitol Hill in Washington on March 12, 2020. Joshua Roberts/Reuters
Maloney, an outgoing New York Democrat, denied the allegation (pdf), saying the House Ethics Committee “has provided no concrete evidence” that she was actually requesting an invitation.

“Chairwoman Maloney’s alleged communications about the 2016 Gala merely reflected her confusion concerning her invitation to the event. However, Chairwoman Maloney’s alleged conduct does not rise to the level of an impermissible ‘solicitation,’” Maloney’s attorneys wrote in an email to Ethics Committee Chief Counsel Tom Rust.

A spokesperson for Maloney told media that the congresswoman was “confident” the House Ethics Committee would dismiss the investigation, yet was “disappointed by the unproven and disputed allegations.”

The incumbent, who has represented New York City’s Upper East Side since 1993, including its 12th Congressional District since 2013, is leaving office after this year after losing to incumbent Rep. Jerry Nadler (D-N.Y.) in a Democratic primary race.
Maloney’s Met Gala red carpet appearance last September featured a suffragette-themed dress, embroidered with words calling for women’s equality. It came as Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.), who also faced an ethics complaint after attending the 2021 Met Gala in New York City, wore a gown worth thousands of dollars that featured the words “Tax the Rich” in red.
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