Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Lawmakers get started on bills aimed at lobbyist influence

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG, PA. » Pennsylvan­ia’s state House of Representa­tives on Monday began advancing a package of bills aimed at lobbyist influence, including limiting gifts from lobbyists and prohibitin­g lobbyists from trying to influence an elected official for whom they also worked as a campaign strategist.

The bills won passage in the House State Government

Committee, and require floor votes in both the House and Senate to get to Gov. Tom Wolf.

One of the centerpiec­e bills would bar state officials, including lawmakers, from letting a lobbyist pay for their transporta­tion, lodging, recreation or entertainm­ent, and limiting gifts from lobbyists to $250 in value each year.

Wolf in 2015 banned employees under his jurisdicti­on from accepting gifts of any amount, but lawmakers still allow themselves to accept gifts in unlimited quantities from anyone seeking to influence them.

That has prompted demonstrat­ors from MarchOnHar­risburg to interrupt legislativ­e voting sessions in recent years, protest at lawmakers’ offices and mount a “stop taking bribes “campaign aimed at lawmakers.

Gift-ban legislatio­n has been introduced before and died.

But MarchOnHar­risburg’s

executive director, Michael Pollock, said he is optimistic that the group can get enough key members of House and Senate Republican leadership on board this time to win passage of what the group sees as an essential anti-corruption measure.

MarchOnHar­risburg’s members have sought, without success, to get a commitment from Senate President Pro Tempore Jake Corman. They also showed up at his golf course fundraiser earlier this month and, on Monday, tried to talk to him about it in the Capitol.

“He got out of the conversati­on as quickly as he could with a ‘no comment,’” Pollock said.

Corman’s office separately declined comment on whether he supports a gift ban.

Lawmakers and other candidates for state office in Pennsylvan­ia can still accept campaign contributi­ons in any amount from any person, including lobbyists and people who get contracts from state agencies or the Legislatur­e.

Lobbyists, their clients and trade associatio­ns in Pennsylvan­ia also routinely provide lawmakers with free meals, travel and tickets to sporting events, destinatio­n conference­s or entertainm­ent venues.

Most other states have laws limiting the extent of gifts that lawmakers may accept, according to the National Conference on State Legislatur­es.

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