FEINGOLD, OBAMA PUSH FOR STRONGEST ETHICS AND LOBBYING REFORM BILL
POSSIBLE
Architects of Ethics and Lobbying Reform Bill Urge Senate Leaders
to Maintain Provisions That Will Lead to Real Change in Way Washington
Works
June 21, 2007
Washington, D.C. – U.S. Senators Russ Feingold
(D-WI) and Barack Obama (D-IL) are pushing for Congress to produce
the strongest ethics and lobby reform bill possible. Feingold and
Obama are urging several Senate leaders, who will play important roles
in the bill’s fate as the Senate prepares to negotiate the final
bill with the House of Representatives, to include several key provisions
that passed the Senate but were left out of the House version of the
bill. Feingold and Obama were two of the main architects of the Senate
bill which passed in January with broad bipartisan support. Senate
Majority Leader Reid hailed the bill as one of the most significant
pieces of legislation dealing with ethics and lobbying reform in our
nation’s history. Also signing the letter were all of the freshmen
Democratic Senators including Senators Brown (D-OH), Cardin (D-MD),
Casey (D-PA), Klobuchar (D-MN), McCaskill (D-MO), Sanders (I-VT),
Tester (D-MT), Webb (D-VA), and Whitehouse (D-RI), who made cleaning
up Washington crucial parts of their successful campaigns.
“The public voted for change last November in
part because people were sick and tired of the way Washington works,”
Feingold said. “Without provisions like a strong lobbyist gift
ban, and tough restrictions on privately funded travel and corporate
jet flights, the bill won’t do enough to change the status quo
in Washington.”
“Last November, the American people sent a message
to Washington to clean up its act, so it’s important that Congress
take tough action on lobbying and ethics reform,” said Senator
Obama. “Since donors are now limited in the amount of money
they can contribute to candidates, the greatest measure of influence
is how much an individual raises. The final ethics bill must require
that candidates disclose those who have bundled contributions for
their campaigns, so that we can expose the link between lobbyists
who are raising campaign cash in exchange for votes on legislation
and start changing the way Washington works.”
The text of the letter reads:
June 21, 2007
The Honorable Harry Reid
Majority Leader
The Honorable Mitch McConnell
Minority Leader
The Honorable Dianne Feinstein
Chairman
Committee on Rules and Administration
The Honorable Robert Bennett
Ranking Member
Committee on Rules and Administration
The Honorable Joseph Lieberman
Chairman
Committee on Homeland Security & Government Affairs
The Honorable Susan Collins
Ranking Member
Committee on Homeland Security & Government Affairs
Dear Senators Reid, McConnell, Feinstein, Bennett, Lieberman,
and Collins,
At the beginning of the 110th Congress, the Senate
worked diligently in a bipartisan fashion to pass a strong lobbying
and ethics reform bill aimed at changing the culture of political
Washington. That bill, known as S. 1, included several provisions
that we view as vital. We urge you to ensure that the Senate conferees
on S. 1 champion these Senate-passed provisions and seek to include
them in the final bill brought back to the Senate floor.
In particular, we believe that the following provisions
must be included in the final bill if the Congress is to fulfill its
promise to deliver to the American people a lobbying and ethics reform
measure that constitutes real reform and will lead to real change.
We believe that a strong lobbying and ethics reform
bill can help change the way politics is conducted and policy is pursued
in Washington, thereby increasing public confidence in Congress. The
Senate’s work in January gave the public hope that real reform
could actually occur on a bipartisan basis. We strongly urge you to
make sure that those hopes aren’t dashed in this last stage
of the legislative process. We look forward to working with you to
pass a final bill of which the Senate, and the public, can be proud.