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CLINTON
BACKPEDALS ON LOBBYING BAN
By Andrew Cain
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
Jan. 3, 2001
Midway
between Christmas and New Year's Day, President Clinton revoked
his executive order that barred his top aides from lobbying for
five years.
Mr.
Clinton had signed the order in his first official act as president
to establish what he called the strictest ethical requirements of
any administration.
He
revoked the order Thursday in a press release with no such fanfare.
The
order required senior aides to pledge that they would not lobby
any agency they served for five years after leaving the government
and that they would never lobby for any foreign government.
White
House aides say the order is unnecessary now that Republican George
W. Bush will take office as president Jan. 20.
"The
main policies underlying the executive order no longer apply when
there is a change of parties at the White House," White House Counsel
Beth Nolan said. "Because special access is no longer a concern,
the special measures contained in the executive order are no longer
necessary."
White
House spokesman Jake Siewert said Mr. Clinton decided "there isn't
much of a question about whether former Clinton appointees would
have undue influence with the members of a Bush administration."
But
good-government groups do not buy the argument. "Now he's repealed
it just in time for all these guys to cash in," said Meredith McGehee,
senior vice president of Common Cause, the Washington watchdog group.
"Anyone
who's followed this issue of the revolving door has to be disappointed
that Clinton has decided to repeal the cooling-off period," Mrs.
McGehee said.
"If
there's one thing this town has shown, it's that access and influence
peddling don't necessarily follow party line," she said.
"It's
appalling, and it makes my blood boil," added Charles Lewis, executive
director of the Center for Public Integrity.
Clinton
aides assisting in the transition will get to know the new Bush
appointees and could use the contacts in lobbying, Mr. Lewis told
the Associated Press.
"For
him to set a higher standard and then quietly remove it at the end
of his administration is not just appalling, it's almost breathtaking,"
Mr. Lewis said.
Federal
law bars most employees from lobbying their former agencies for
a year. The additional restriction applied only to Mr. Clinton's
aides.
Mr.
Siewert said the Bush administration can decide whether to reinstate
the restrictions. "We are declining comment, but we will take a
look at the executive orders after the 20th," said Juleanna Glover
Weiss, a spokeswoman for Mr. Bush.
In
the 1992 campaign, Mr. Clinton railed against "high-priced lobbyists
and influence peddlers." "I want to send a signal that we are going
to change politics as usual," Mr. Clinton said in Little Rock, Ark.,
shortly after he was elected president in 1992.
Mr.
Siewert said think tanks "on both sides of the aisle" believed the
order too broad and "prevented former Clinton administration officials
from calling up and asking the very simplest of questions." "The
president believes that the executive order has served its purpose,"
said Mrs. Nolan, the White House counsel.
Copyright © 2001
News World Communications, Inc. Reprinted with permission of The Washington
Times.
Visit our web site at www.washtimes.com

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