Albuquerque Journal

Ethics agency to look at Trump’s waivers in lobbying, trimming it to six months in his case. The ethics agency and the White House didn’t respond to requests for comment. The Ethics in Government Act, the 1978 law that created the agency, gives it the p

Recusal process under scrutiny

- BY BILL ALLISON

WASHINGTON — The federal ethics agency is reviewing every waiver of conflict-of-interest rules that President Donald Trump’s appointees have received.

A memorandum from the U.S. Office of Government Ethics seeks documentat­ion of waivers granted to appointees ordinarily required to recuse themselves from matters in which they or family members have a financial interest.

Issued by the agency’s director, Walter Shaub, it specifies that all agencies and appointees, “including White House officials,” must comply with the notice, which covers appointees in the administra­tions of Trump and Barack Obama.

Trump issued an ethics order in January, days after being inaugurate­d, requiring his appointees to recuse themselves for two years from matters involving former employers and clients. However, the White House and federal agencies can suspend that requiremen­t for various reasons, including in cases where having an official’s expertise in a matter outweighs the potential for a conflict of interest. Such waivers aren’t required to be disclosed under federal law.

Seven Democratic senators, led by Sheldon Whitehouse of Rhode Island, wrote to Trump requesting that he make such waivers public after media accounts of former lobbyists and other officials in his administra­tion receiving secret waivers.

In the April 20 letter, the Democrats wrote that Obama made such documents publicly available. “You have not followed this precedent,” the letter said.

The senators cited a waiver granted to Marcus Peacock, who briefly worked in Trump’s Office of Management and Budget before leaving to join Business Roundtable, a conservati­veleaning group of chief executive officers. The lobbying group said the administra­tion had granted Peacock a waiver of the five-year ban on former officials engaging

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