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View Full Version : These Are The Ex-Lawmakers Who Could Barely Wait To Sell Out




Origanalist
02-06-2015, 10:49 PM
Five House members and two senators who left office in January are already working for lobbying firms that make millions peddling influence on Capitol Hill

It didn’t take long for these lawmakers to cash in on their careers as public servants.

Less than a month after leaving office, at least five former House members and one U.S. senator are already on the payroll at firms that make millions lobbying their congressional colleagues. The findings, provided to Vocativ by the Center for Responsive Politics, a government watchdog group, also show that a second senator who left office at the beginning of January, Alaska’s Mark Begich, took the extra step of starting his own public affairs consulting firm, which has already secured clients in health care and aviation.

While Washington’s contentious revolving door spins in perpetuum—allowing a stream of money, influence and access to flow seamlessly between the private and public sectors—the speed with which these public servants have offered themselves up to big business may raise a few eyebrows.

“It’s not like they were calling up their new employers on the morning of Jan. 5 and asking for a job,” says Russ Choma, a CRP spokesman. “It would seem very likely that as these lawmakers were still voting on bills and debating policies, they were simultaneously negotiating with lobbying firms whose clients may have a direct interest in these issues.”

By law, ex-House members are required to wait one year before they can officially lobby lawmakers on the Hill, while former senators must wait twice as long. Many, however, are able to work around those requirements at firms by signing on as consultants, counsel and strategic advisors, as a recent analysis by CRP and the Sunlight Foundation shows. That study’s conclusion: “The many loopholes limiting who can lobby whom in Washington and whether that lobbying must be disclosed to the public make a hunk of Swiss cheese look like the Berlin Wall.”

continued...http://www.vocativ.com/usa/us-politics/congressman-lobbyist-less-month-meet-class/

CPUd
02-06-2015, 11:24 PM
Didn't see him on the list, but did Eric Cantor go to work with a Wall Street firm?

Origanalist
02-06-2015, 11:39 PM
Didn't see him on the list, but did Eric Cantor go to work with a Wall Street firm?

Why yes he did.

Eric Cantor goes to Wall Street.......http://money.cnn.com/2014/09/02/investing/eric-cantor-wall-street/

enhanced_deficit
02-07-2015, 02:12 AM
Freedom is profitable.

Unfortunately, many of them would become private SWCbags.

DamianTV
02-07-2015, 03:17 AM
They have a No Fly List.

Dont think someone on this side is making their own List?

Time will tell whether selling out was a good idea or not.

Mach
02-08-2015, 12:38 AM
I don't see what the big deal is...... they were already working for lots of those companies before they ever left. :D