The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Trump outpaces Obama in picking ex-lobbyists

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In less than three years, President Donald Trump has named more former lobbyists to Cabinet-level posts than his most recent predecesso­rs did in eight, putting a substantia­l amount of oversight in the hands of people with ties to the industries they’re regulating.

The Cabinet choices are another sign that Trump’s populist pledge to “drain the swamp” is a catchy campaign slogan but not a serious attempt to change the way Washington works. Instead of staring down “the unholy alliance of lobbyists and donors and special interests” as Trump recently declared, the influence industry has flourished during his administra­tion.

The amount spent in 2019 on lobbying the U.S. government is on pace to match or exceed last year’s total of $3.4 billion, the most since 2010, according to the political money website Open Secrets. Trump also has pulled in hefty contributi­ons from industries with business before his administra­tion, and his hotel near the White House has been a magnet for lobbyists and foreign interests since he was elected.

“An administra­tion staffed by former industry lobbyists will almost certainly favor industry over the general public, because that’s the outlook they’re bringing to the job,” said Lee Drutman, a senior fellow in the political reform program at the think tank New America and author of the book “The Business of America is Lobbying.”

Former lobbyists run the Defense and Interior department­s, Environmen­tal Protection Agency and office of the U.S. Trade Representa­tive. The acting Labor secretary, Pat Pizzella, is a former lobbyist and Trump’s pick to run the department, Eugene Scalia, also is an ex-lobbyist. Scalia’s confirmati­on hearing before a GOP-controlled Senate committee is scheduled for Thursday and Democrats are expected to grill him on his long record of opposing federal regulation­s.

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