Meanwhile, Back at the Henhouse . . .

CaptnKirk

Lifer
Jul 25, 2002
10,053
0
71
GOP's 'Fix' of the Lobbing Laws - just a ploy to rearrange the gamemanship

Well, in thier rush to make it look like they're really terying to do something about the graft and corruption
in unlimited access to LobbyBuck$, the rewriting of the laws are being done to give cover
'if' they pick up the tab
AND make campaign contributions at the same time. This isn'a a 'Fix', it's an end run around the rules
by making a different set of rules that let them continue to play their financing games for themselves.

Until the 'Lobby Money and Corporate Capital is removed from the feild of Congressional play,
it's not going to be Government 'for, of, or by - the People'.

<CLIP>

Lawmakers are about to bombard the American public with proposals that would crack down on lobbyists. Several prominent plans, including one outlined yesterday by House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.), would specifically ban meals and privately paid travel for lawmakers.

Or would they?

According to lobbyists and ethics experts, even if Hastert's proposal is enacted, members of Congress and their staffs could still travel the world on an interest group's expense and eat steak on a lobbyist's account at the priciest restaurants in Washington.

The only requirement would be that whenever a lobbyist pays the bill, he or she must also hand the lawmaker a campaign contribution. Then the transaction would be perfectly okay.

"That's a big hole if they don't address campaign finance," said Joel Jankowsky, the lobbying chief of Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld, one of the capital's largest lobbying outfits.

The plans offered by Republican leaders yesterday would change two of the three areas of law or regulation that govern lobbyists' behavior: the congressional rules that limit gifts to lawmakers and the laws that dictate the amount of disclosure that lobbyists must give the public.

A third major area -- campaign finance laws -- would go untouched, an omission that amounts to a gaping loophole in efforts to distance lobbyists from the people they are paid to influence.

Anything that members of Congress can now do in the pursuit of money for their reelections will still be permitted in the future -- including accepting lobbyist-paid travel and in-town meals -- unless campaign finance laws are altered.

"Political contributions are specifically exempted from the definition of what a gift is in House and Senate gift rules," said Kenneth A. Gross, an ethics lawyer at Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom. "So, unless the campaign finance laws are changed, if a lobbyist wants to sponsor an event at the MCI arena or on the slopes of Colorado, as long as it's a fundraiser it would still be fine."

The result, he added, "may well be more out-of-town fundraising events than there are at the moment."

Paul A. Miller, president of the American League of Lobbyists, said of the loophole: "You may see a shift from what we're able to do now to the political fundraiser side where it is legal."

Currently, lawmakers and staff members are permitted to take "fact-finding" trips paid for by private groups, including lobbying organizations and corporations. These excursions, whose destinations are often major cities and warm resorts in wintertime, need only be disclosed and include official functions to be acceptable under the rules.

Yesterday, Hastert and high-ranking Senate Republicans, led by Rick Santorum (Pa.) and John McCain (Ariz.), said they would eliminate these privately funded fact-finding trips as part of a comprehensive ethics package that they hoped would begin moving through Congress early next month. The senators also said they would restrict gifts to lawmakers but apparently would not go as far as to ban meals, as Hastert said he intended to propose.

None of the lawmakers, however, said they would end travel and meals supplied by lobbyists as part of fundraising events, which, at least for now, would leave the loophole open. Rep. David Dreier (R-Calif.), who is Hastert's emissary on the lobbying issue, said he was tasked to deal with lobbying laws, not campaign-finance laws, which he declared a separate issue.

McCain, who has been a leader on matters dealing with lobbyists and campaign fundraising, said he was aware of the problem. In an interview after his news conference with Santorum, McCain said he knows the loophole exists and vowed to close it before the bill becomes a law.
 

EagleKeeper

Discussion Club Moderator<br>Elite Member
Staff member
Oct 30, 2000
42,589
5
0
And the Dems are going to put forth their recommendations today.
 

DealMonkey

Lifer
Nov 25, 2001
13,136
1
0
The GOP is hooked on free meals and golf trips (remember golf is to the GOP as sex is to the Democrats). Just like a stupid crack addict we have to slap that sh!t out of their hands and book 'em into an in-patient program that can help them deal with their addiction.
 

tw1164

Diamond Member
Dec 8, 1999
3,995
0
76
I've worked for companies that would write you up of you accepted a "gift" valued at more then $25 from a vendor. Why don't the create a simple law similar to that.
 

Genx87

Lifer
Apr 8, 2002
41,091
513
126
In the end do you think either party is going to take their hand out of the cookie jar?
If this goes to a vote, I bet a lot of democrats will vote for it as well.
 

Future Shock

Senior member
Aug 28, 2005
968
0
0
Once again, John McCain comes across as the most MORAL and RIGHTEOUS Republican around.

Why is that? Why can't there be more like him? Does he give other members of government (both parties) the creeps just by being so above board and (at least on the surface) honest and principled?

McCain / Lieberman 2008!!!

Future Shock