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At least 33 former officials including ex-Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke have found ways to sidestep the administrations ethics pledge. Of those, at least 18 are now registered federal lobbyists and the rest work in jobs that closely resemble lobbying.
by Derek Kravitz Feb. 14, 5 a.m. EST
Its been more than two years since President Donald Trump, who rallied campaign supporters with calls to drain the swamp of lobbyists and their ilk, took office. But despite that campaign promise, Washington influence peddlers continue to move into and out of jobs in the federal government.
In his first 10 days in office, Trump signed an executive order that required all his political hires to sign a pledge. On its face, its straightforward and ironclad: When Trump officials leave government employment, they agree not to lobby the agencies they worked in for five years. They also cant lobby anyone in the White House or political appointees across federal agencies for the duration of the Trump administration. And they cant perform lobbying activities, or things that would help other lobbyists, including setting up meetings or providing background research. Violating the pledge exposes former officials to fines and extended or even permanent bans on lobbying.
But loopholes, some of them sizable, abound. At least 33 former Trump officials have found ways around the pledge. The most prominent is former Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke, who resigned in December after a series of ethics investigations. He announced Wednesday that he is joining a lobbying firm, Turnberry Solutions, which was started in 2017 by several former Trump campaign aides. Asked whether Zinke will register as a lobbyist, Turnberry partner Jason Osborne said, He will if he has a client that he wants to lobby for.
Among the 33 former officials, at least 18 have recently registered as lobbyists. The rest work at firms in jobs that closely resemble federal lobbying. Almost all work on issues they oversaw or helped shape when they were in government. (Nearly 2,600 Trump officials signed the ethics pledge in 2017, according to the Office of Government Ethics. Twenty-five appointees did not sign the pledge. We used staffing lists compiled for ProPublicas Trump Town, our exhaustive database of current political appointees, and found at least 350 people who have left the Trump administration. There are other former Trump officials who lobby at the state or local level.)
https://www.propublica.org/article/the-lobbying-swamp-is-flourishing-in-trumps-washington
muriel_volestrangler
(101,414 posts)Hermit-The-Prog
(33,563 posts)The GOPers of Trumpism have overflowed the swamp to spread their corruption further than before.