Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Reps Increasingly Use Revolving Door to Launch Lucr. Lobby Careers

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Reps Increasingly Use Revolving Door to Launch Lucr. Lobby Careers

    Members of Congress Increasingly Use Revolving Door to Launch Lucrative
    Lobbying Careers

    43 Percent of Lawmakers Who Left Office Since 1998 Have Become
    Lobbyists, Public Citizen Analysis Shows

    Public Citizen
    July 27, 2005

    WASHINGTON, D.C. - Forty-three percent of members of Congress who left
    office since 1998 and were eligible to lobby have become lobbyists,
    indicating that Congress has increasingly become a way station on the
    path to the lucrative influence-peddling industry, according to a new
    Public Citizen report released today.

    The report, Congressional Revolving Doors: The Journey from Congress to
    K Street, examines in depth the case of one former member who has done
    particularly well after going through the revolving door. Just days
    after he left Congress in 1999 amid allegations of an extramarital
    affair, former U.S. Rep. Bob Livingston (R-La.) opened a lobbying shop.
    In the first year he pulled in $1.1 million, even though he was
    restricted from personally lobbying his former colleagues for a year.
    (Former members often skirt the lobby prohibition rules by supervising
    other lobbyists for the first year after leaving Congress.) The next
    year, after the cooling-off period was lifted, his firm's lobbying
    revenues more than quadrupled to $4.8 million.

    The report, based on hundreds of lobbyist registration documents as well
    as industry and news media reports, is available at
    http://www.LobbyingInfo.org, a new Public Citizen Web site launched
    today and designed to track the influence of special interests in
    Washington. The Web site contains a searchable database of former
    federal officials and staff who have passed through the revolving door,
    Public Citizen investigative reports on lobbying battles waged by
    industry, detailed summaries of influence-peddling laws and
    recommendations for reforming the system.

    `People used to run for Congress to serve the greater good and help the
    public,' said Public Citizen President Joan Claybrook. `Now Congress has
    become a way station to wealth. Members use it for job training and
    networking so they can leave office and cash in on the connections they
    forged as elected officials. No wonder the public is cynical about whose
    interests lawmakers are protecting in Washington. Lobbying has become
    the top career choice for departing members of Congress.'

    According to the report:

    * Forty-three percent of the 198 members who have left Congress since
    1998 and were eligible to lobby have become registered lobbyists.
    * Fifty percent of eligible departing members of the U.S. Senate have
    become lobbyists (18 of 36) while 42 percent of eligible departing
    members of the U.S. House of Representatives have become lobbyists (68
    of 162).
    * Almost 52 percent of the Republican members of Congress who left
    Capitol Hill since 1998 registered to lobby (58 of 112) compared to 33
    percent of the departing Democrats (28 of 86). This could reflect the
    fact that after George W. Bush became president, Washington became a
    hostile place for lobbyists whose contacts were Democratic. As part of
    the `K Street Project' pushed by Republicans, including House Majority
    Leader Tom DeLay (R-Texas), lobbying firms that hired former Democratic
    members of Congress were to be denied access and business by the
    Republican majority.
    * Of the 2000 departing class, the ratio was even more lopsided when
    Republicans won the White House and retained control of Congress. More
    than 62 percent of Republicans (23 of 37) who left that year became
    lobbyists, compared to only 15 percent of Democrats (2 of 13).

    Livingston exemplifies how a member-turned-lobbyist interacts with his
    former colleagues. In six years, Livingston built his business into the
    12th largest non-law lobbying firm in Washington and took in almost $40
    million from 1999 through 2004, records show. Among his clients are
    Turkey, Morocco and the Cayman Islands, which collectively paid his firm
    $11 million from 2000 to 2004, with $9 million of that coming from Turkey.

    Livingston delivered; he helped ensure that a $1 billion supplemental
    appropriation for Turkey remained intact through the legislative
    process, despite that country's refusal to allow U.S. troops to use its
    soil as a staging area for the Iraq invasion. He also helped kill an
    amendment that would have formally recognized the Armenian genocide that
    occurred between 1915 and 1923. Turkey has always opposed this recognition.

    Livingston, his wife Bonnie and his two political action committees
    (PACs) also contributed $503,449 to various candidates or their PACs
    from 2000 through 2004. Some of that money went to people Livingston
    later lobbied.

    `The revolving door is spinning faster than ever,' said Frank Clemente,
    director of Public Citizen's Congress Watch division. `When nearly half
    the lawmakers in Congress use their position to move into a job that
    pays so handsomely, it's time to change the system.'

    In light of the findings, Public Citizen recommends the following reforms:

    * Extend the former members' cooling-off period (the time during which
    they are not allowed to lobby) to two years and include the supervision
    of lobbyists as a prohibited activity.
    * Require members of Congress to disclose their employment negotiations
    while they are in office if they pose a conflict of interest, similar to
    the requirement for the executive branch.
    * Repeal the privileges that give former members of Congress special
    access to former colleagues (access to the House and Senate floor and to
    members-only gymnasiums and restaurants) if they register to lobby.
    * Prohibit registered lobbyists from making, soliciting or arranging
    campaign contributions to elected officials in the branches of
    government they lobby (Congress, the executive branch or both).


    Public Citizen is a national, nonprofit consumer advocacy organization
    founded in 1971 to represent consumer interests in Congress, the
    executive branch and the courts.

    http://www.citizen.org/pressroom/release.cfm?ID=1999
Working...
X