"Corruption in Washington
isn't about a single president or political party. It runs deep. We should call
it out—and we should pass my sweeping anti-corruption reforms."
Responding to news that
former Democratic Sen. Joe Liebermann—who once promised to
never lobby after leaving Congress—is joining the Chinese telecom
giant ZTE as a registered lobbyist, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) argued on
Thursday that such a move should be illegal and reiterated
her call for "a lifetime ban on members of Congress working as
lobbyists."
Warren, who on Monday offically
announced that she is exploring a 2020 presidential bid, went on to
call for a total ban on foreign lobbying as well, arguing that it would force
"countries like China, Russia, and Saudi Arabia... to conduct their
foreign policy out in the open."
"ZTE is a giant foreign
telecom company that's close with the Chinese government. They've violated
serious U.S. sanctions on Iran and North Korea. Their lobbyists keep blocking
accountability. And today former Senator Joe Lieberman joined them. Should that
be legal? No," Warren declared on Twitter.
"Corruption in Washington
isn't about a single president or political party. It runs deep," the
Massachusetts senator added. "We should call it out—and we should pass my
sweeping anti-corruption reforms to clamp down on all the ways giant companies
drown govt in money to get their way."
As Common Dreams reported,
Warren in August unveiled a sweeping bill titled the Anti-Corruption
and Public Integrity Act (pdf), which would—among a host of other
reforms—completely bar foreign lobbying and impose a lifetime ban on lobbying
by former presidents, members of congress, and federal agency chiefs.
"Our national crisis of
faith in government boils down to this simple fact: people don't trust their
government to do the right thing because they think government works for the
rich, the powerful, and the well-connected, and not for the American people.
And here's the kicker: They're right," Warren declared in a speech after
introducing her bill. "I'd love to stand here and tell you that this was
some sudden drop after Donald Trump was elected, but that wouldn't be true.
This problem is far bigger than Trump."
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