"No lawmaker should be
cashing in on their public service and selling their contacts and expertise to
the highest bidder."
One of Capitol Hill's most
popular new Democrats on Thursday called for a total ban on the revolving door
that allows lawmakers to jump from Congress into K Street lobbying firms as
soon as they leave office.
In a tweet, Rep. Alexandria
Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) said that former members of Congress "shouldn't be
allowed to turn right around and leverage your service for a lobbyist
check."
"I don't think it should
be legal at ALL to become a corporate lobbyist if you've served in
Congress," said Ocasio-Cortez. "At minimum there should be a
long wait period."
After the Democratic wave in
the 2018 midterm elections, 44 federal lawmakers left office. A Public Citizen
analysis, released Thursday, found that of those 44, 26 "were working
for lobbying firms, consulting firms, trade groups or business groups working
to influence federal government activities."
Among those that made the
switch are former Rep. Joe Crowley, the Democrat who Ocasio-Cortez unseated,
and former Rep. Mike Capuano, a Suffolk County, Massachusetts Democrat whose
progressive credentials weren't enough to stop now-Rep. Ayanna Pressley from
besting him in the 2018 Democratic primary.
Former legislators like
Crowley and Capuano came in for criticism from Public Citizen president Robert
Weissman. In a statement, Weissman took
aim at what the revolving door does to Washington politics.
"No lawmaker should be
cashing in on their public service and selling their contacts and expertise to
the highest bidder," said Weissman. "Retired or defeated lawmakers should
not serve as sherpas for corporate interests who are trying to write federal
policy in their favor."
"We need to close the
revolving door and enact fundamental and far-reaching reforms to our corrupt
political system," Weissman added.
In the study, Public Citizen
provides a path toward fixing the problem.
Several pieces of legislation
would strengthen these ethics laws for former government officials. The For the
People Act (H.R. 1), which passed the House of Representatives in March, enacts
sweeping reforms that would raise ethics standards at all levels of government.
Importantly, H.R. 1 would define "strategic consulting" as lobbying
for former members of Congress, subjecting this activity to the existing
revolving door restrictions. The legislation would also bar former executive
branch officials from doing "strategic consulting" on behalf of a
lobbying campaign as well as making direct lobbying contacts for two years
after leaving government service.
But, as Ocasio-Cortez pointed
out in a series of tweets, there's more to consider than just banning—or at the
least delaying—lawmaker entrance into lobbying firms. The nature of
congressional pay and the necessities of the work, Ocasio-Cortez said, make the
easy money of lobbying very attractive to members of Congress.
"Keeping it real,"
Ocasio-Cortez tweeted,
"the elephant in the room with passing a lobbying ban on members requires
a nearly-impossible discussion about congressional pay."
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