The News (New Glasgow)

What swamp?

Lobbyists get ethics waivers to work for Trump

- BY MICHAEL BIESECKER, JULIET LINDERMAN AND RICHARD LARDNER

President Donald Trump and his appointees have stocked federal agencies with ex-lobbyists and corporate lawyers who now help regulate the very industries from which they previously collected paychecks, despite promising as a candidate to drain the swamp in Washington.

A week after his January 2017 inaugurati­on, Trump signed an executive order that bars former lobbyists, lawyers and others from participat­ing in any matter they lobbied or otherwise worked on for private clients within two years before going to work for the government.

But records reviewed by The Associated Press show Trump’s top lawyer, White House counsel Don McGahn, has issued at least 24 ethics waivers to key administra­tion officials at the White House and executive branch agencies.

Though the waivers were typically signed by McGahn months ago, the Office of Government Ethics disclosed several more on Wednesday.

One allows FBI Director Chris Wray “to participat­e in matters involving a confidenti­al former client.” The three-sentence waiver gives no indication about what Wray’s conflict of interest might be or how it may violate Trump’s ethics order.

Before returning to the Justice Department last year, Wray represente­d clients that included big banks and other corporatio­ns as a partner at a white-glove law firm that paid him $9.2 million a year, according to his financial disclosure statement.

Asked about the waivers,

Lindsay Walters, a White House spokeswoma­n, said, “In the interests of full transparen­cy and good governance, the posted waivers set forth the policy reasons for granting an exception to the pledge.”

Trump’s executive order on ethics supplanted a more stringent set of rules put in place by President Barack Obama in 2009 to avoid conflicts of interests. Nearly 70 waivers were issued to executive branch officials during Obama’s eight years, though those were generally more narrowly focused and offered a fuller legal explanatio­n for why the waiver was granted.

Craig Holman, who lobbies in Washington for stricter government ethics and lobbying rules

on behalf of the advocacy group Public Citizen, said just five of the waivers under Obama went to former lobbyists, most whom had worked for non-profit groups.

He was initially optimistic when Trump issued his executive order.

“I was very surprised and at the same time very hopeful that he was going to take his pledge to ‘drain the swamp’ seriously,” Holman said Wednesday. “It is now quite evident that the pledge was little more than campaign rhetoric. Not only are key provisions simply ignored and not enforced, when in cases where obvious conflicts of interest are brought into the limelight, the administra­tion readily issues waivers from the ethics rules.”

An analysis by the AP shows that nearly half of the political appointees hired at the Environmen­tal Protection Agency under Trump have strong industry ties. Of 59 EPA hires tracked by the AP over the last year, about a third worked as registered lobbyists or lawyers for chemical manufactur­ers, fossil fuel producers and other corporate clients that raise the very type of revolving-door conflicts of interests that Trump promised voters he would eliminate.

Most of those officials have signed ethics agreements saying they would not participat­e in actions involving their former clients while working at the EPA. At least three have gotten waivers allowing them to do just that.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? White House counsel Don McGahn gestures while speaking at the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference (CPAC), at National Harbor, Md. As a candidate, Donald Trump pledged to drain the swamp in Washington. But as president, records show he and his...
AP PHOTO White House counsel Don McGahn gestures while speaking at the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference (CPAC), at National Harbor, Md. As a candidate, Donald Trump pledged to drain the swamp in Washington. But as president, records show he and his...

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