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Campaign Legal Center ● Common Cause
● Democracy 21 ● League of Women Voters ● Public
Citizen ● U.S. PIRG
March 29, 2006
The following statement is released by the Campaign Legal Center,
Common Cause, Democracy 21, the League of Women Voters, Public Citizen
and U.S. PIRG:
The United States Senate failed the American people today.
The Senate failed to pass real lobbying and ethics reform
legislation.
As Washington lobbyist Jack Abramoff was being sentenced today in one
of the criminal cases brought against him, the United States Senate was
choosing to ignore deep public concerns about the corruption and
lobbying scandals in Washington that Abramoff symbolizes.
Our organizations issued six benchmarks for lobbying and ethics
reform on January 23, 2006. Enclosed with this statement is our report
card on the Senate’s performance on these six benchmarks. It is
not a pretty sight and not a report card that any child would like to
take home to their parents.
A majority of Senators voted for lobbying and ethics legislation
today that simply ignores the biggest lobbying and ethics problems in
the Senate.
A majority of Senators, for example, voted against legislation to
address the biggest ethics problem facing the institution, the absence
of a publicly credible and publicly acceptable system for enforcing the
Senate ethics rules.
The defense of the current system by Senate Ethics Committee Chairman
George Voinovich (R-OH) came down to the public equivalent of
“Trust us. We’re doing a good job. We just can’t tell
you what we are doing.”
That is not good enough for the American people.
Our organizations will continue to work for the establishment of an
independent, impartial Office of Public Integrity in the Senate to help
ensure that the Senate ethics rules are enforced.
The Senate lobbying bill also fails to provide any new restrictions
on privately-funded travel for Members, an area of great abuse that will
now continue unabated; fails to stop Members from treating corporate
planes as their own private air force; and fails to stop lobbyists from
financing lavish parties for Members.
The Senate lobbying bill also fails to require disclosure of numerous
ways in which lobbyists are providing financial assistance for Members,
such as soliciting and bundling campaign contributions for Members,
making contributions to foundations and other entities controlled by
Members and paying for Members’ events, including conferences and
retreats.
We recognize that the legislation does make improvements in a number
of areas, including a ban of gifts from lobbyists, quarterly reporting
by lobbyists that is searchable on the Internet, disclosure for the
first time of spending on grassroots lobbying activities and disclosure
for the first time of fundraisers held by lobbyists for federal
candidates.
This, however, does not compensate for the far greater failures of
the Senate to seriously address its most important lobbying and ethics
problems.
We greatly appreciate the outstanding leadership that has been
provided for strong and effective lobbying and ethics reforms during
this effort by Senators Susan Collins (R-ME) and Joe Lieberman (D-CT),
the Chairman and Ranking Democrat on the Homeland Security and
Governmental Affairs Committee, and by Senators Barack Obama (D-IL),
John McCain (R-AZ) and Russell Feingold (D-WI).
We very much regret that a majority of Senators did not support their
efforts.
The Senate has chosen to pass cosmetic, not real, lobbying and ethics
legislation.
The American people will not be fooled.
# # #
Senate Scorecard on Six Benchmarks for Lobbying and Ethics Reforms
Issued By Reform Groups on January 23, 2006
1. Break the nexus between lobbyists, money and
lawmakers.
Cap contributions from lobbyists and lobbying firm PACs to
federal candidates at $200 per election and to national parties and
leadership PACs at $500 per election cycle.
Prohibit lobbyists and lobbying firms from soliciting,
arranging or delivering contributions and from serving as officials on
candidate campaign committees and leadership PACs.
Prohibit lobbyists, lobbying firms and lobbying organizations
from paying or arranging payments for events “honoring”
members of Congress and political parties, such as parties at national
conventions, and from contributing or arranging contributions to
entities established or controlled by members of Congress, such as
foundations.
The Senate bill does nothing to break the money nexus. It does
not impose any new limits on campaign contributions from lobbyists or
fundraising done by lobbyists for Members, or any new limits on the
various ways lobbyist provide financial benefits to Members, such as
paying for parties to “honor” Members, or for Members’
retreats, conferences and other events. GRADE:
F
2. Prevent private interests from financing trips and from
subsidizing travel for members of Congress and staff, and executive
branch officials and federal judges.
Corporations and others should be prohibited from making
privately-owned planes available for Members to travel at the cost of a
first class air ticket rather than the cost of a chartered
plane.
The Senate bill does nothing on this. It adds no new restrictions
on privately-funded trips for Members and other federal officials and
does not require Members to pay fair market value, or charter rates, for
the use of corporate planes. GRADE: F
3. Ban gifts to members of Congress and
staff.
The gift ban should close the existing loophole in the gift
rules that allow lobbyists and others to pay for parties held to
“honor” or “recognize” specific Members, such as
the lavish parties held at the national party conventions.
The Senate bill bans gifts from lobbyists, including meals, but
the ban does not apply to the organizations that employ the lobbyists
and does not prevent lobbyists from paying for lavish parties to
“honor” Members. GRADE: C
4. Oversee and enforce ethics rules and lobbying laws
through an independent congressional Office of Public Integrity and
increase penalties for violations.
Establish an independent Office of Public Integrity in
Congress and provide sufficient resources for the Office to effectively
carry out its responsibilities.
The proposal to establish an Office of Public Integrity sponsored
by Senators Collins, Lieberman, Obama and McCain was defeated on the
Senate floor. The legislation does nothing to improve enforcement of
congressional ethics rules. GRADE: F
5. Slow the revolving door.
Prohibit members of Congress and senior executive branch
officials from making lobbying contacts or conducting lobbying
activities for compensation in either branch for two years after leaving
their positions.
Prohibit senior congressional staff from making lobbying
contacts for compensation with their former offices or committees for
two years after leaving their positions.
The bill extends the current revolving door ban on direct
lobbying of Congress from one to two years, but does not broaden the
scope of the ban for Members to include “lobbying
activities” – organizing and directing a lobbying
campaign. GRADE: C
6. Place sunshine on lobbying activities and financial
disclosure reports.
Require lobbying reports and Members’ financial
disclosure reports to be filed in an electronic format and made fully
searchable on the Internet; lobbying reports to be filed on a quarterly
basis; lobbyists and lobbying firms to disclose grassroots lobbying
activities; lobbyists to file a list of the Members’ offices and
congressional committees they lobbied during the quarter; and reports to
be filed disclosing the financial backers of stealth lobbying
coalitions.
The bill improves disclosure by requiring quarterly reporting by
lobbyists, and requiring the creation of an electronic database on the
Internet. The bill requires, for the first time, disclosure of
grassroots lobbying requirements and improves disclosure by stealth
lobbying coalitions. The bill requires lobbyists to disclose on an
annual basis the contributions they make to federal candidates,
leadership PACs and political parties, and to disclose the fundraising
events they hold for Members . The bill does not require disclosure,
however, of numerous other ways that lobbyists provide financial
benefits to Members, such as paying for parties to “honor”
Members, or contributions to foundations or other entities controlled by
Members and does not include any requirement to list the offices
contacted by a lobbyist. GRADE: B
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