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Lobby Reform

 

What's New

In the opening days of the new Congress, the House of Representatives overwhelmingly passed strong new rules to address the scandals that tarnished the last Congress. The new rules include bans on gifts from lobbyists and the use of corporate jets, tighter rules on travel and some measure of accountability on earmarks. The Senate bill on this issue passed on Jan. 18.

For these new rules to be meaningful, Congress must have effective enforcement. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (Calif.) has appointed a bipartisan task force to consider whether Congress should create an independent enforcement process similar to systems in almost half the states.  

How You Can Help

Support Enforcement of the rules

Call your member of Congress and tell him or her to support independent and professional enforcement of the rules. Together, we can hold Congress accountable for the costly scandals, pet projects and special favors for powerful friends. Click here to get the number and to record your call.



Overview

Scandals over the last two years have revealed a number of cases of overt corruption. Former Congressmen Duke Cunningham (Calif.) and Robert Ney (Ohio) were caught trading votes for campaign contributions and other bribes. Disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff landed in jail for masterminding efforts using campaign contributions to steer public funds to his pet projects. Rep William Jefferson (La.) has been indicted after the FBI found $90,000 in cash in his freezer and former Rep. Tom DeLay is still defending himself against corruption charges. Several top legislative and White House aides have already pled guilty to corruption charges, and this may only be the tip of the iceberg.

Enforcement is key. The current system is broken. Overseeing ones own colleagues is difficult under any circumstances, but oversight in a partisan-charged environment like Congress is, as we have now seen, impossible. This is not to say that members of Congress are any less capable than others to self-police. but that no one self-polices well. In the Executive Branch, there is an Office of Government Ethics. Businesses have outside auditors. Congress needs independent and professional oversight and enforcement of the rules.
 
Several proposals, such as the Office of Public Integrity put forth in the House by Reps. Shays (Conn.) and Meehan (Mass.), or an independent ethics commission as detailed in a bill by Reps. Castle (Del.) and Platts (Penn.) create workable models of how a system of ethics oversight would operate.



New lobbying rules passed in January 2007 ban gifts from lobbyists and the use of corporate jets, as well as tighter rules on travel and some measure of accountability on earmarks.