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Obama administration lobbyist count increases

By: Timothy P. Carney
Examiner Columnist
February 20, 2009

Former Raytheon lobbyist William J. Lynn III, accompanied by his wife Mary Murphy, is sworn in as deputy secretary of defense last week at the Pentagon. (AP photo)

Washington lobbyist Christine Varney is poised to take her third pass through the revolving door of lobbying and government with her nomination by President Barack Obama to be his administration’s top antitrust enforcer.

Also, on Thursday, Obama nominated Derek Douglas, a former lobbyist for the O’Melveny & Myers law firm and Center for American Progress, as special assistant on urban affairs.

As with most of the at least 14 former lobbyists nominated or hired by Obama, Varney and Douglas appear to be not covered by his executive order restricting the official activities of former lobbyists.

Obama’s first executive order forbade appointees who had served as registered lobbyists to “participate in any particular matter on which [they] lobbied within the two years before the date of my appointment” or “participate in the specific issue area in which that particular matter falls.”

Varney is not covered by the executive order, it appears, because she last appears on federal lobbying filings in 2006. Varney joined the firm Hogan & Hartson out of law school, where she worked on Netscape’s behalf, asking the Clinton administration to prosecute Microsoft for antitrust violations.

She then joined the Clinton administration in various jobs before rejoining Hogan & Hartson where she lobbied on behalf of the Online Privacy Alliance. In the fourth quarter of 2008, Hogan & Hartson had more than 125 lobbying clients, including Ford and General Motors. (Hogan & Hartson also lobbies on behalf of the Anschutz Corp., a parent corporation of The Examiner.)

Douglas, while at O’Melveny & Myers, lobbied Congress and federal agencies on behalf of a private client before moving to the George Soros-funded Center for American Progress where he served as a lobbyist until late 2006. His lobbying work, therefore, lies outside the two-year window covered by Obama’s executive order.

The executive order allows the president to waive this rule if “it is in the public interest to grant the waiver.”

So far, according to the White House press office, the president has issued only one waiver — for former Raytheon lobbyist William J. Lynn, now deputy secretary of defense.

Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack was a lobbyist last year for the National Education Association, but he did not lobby on agriculture or nutrition issues, according to federal lobbying filings.


tcarney@dcexaminer.com



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

Osama Obama

Feb 20, 2009

Not suprising from a President who still refuses to release ANY of his records. Transparency in his administration.....yes as transparent as a block of Granite.

 

Feb 21, 2009

Why should Obama release any of his records , thats not important.I think whats most important now is that this administration is showing us how the stimulas money will be spent,thats more than what thr last administration did, they lied and hid alot things from the American people,so don't try to critizize the OBAMA Administration

 

Elizabeth Floyd

Feb 21, 2009

After the disaster this economy is in and all the other things on top of that, I do not condemn the president for having to choose some of these people who once were lobbyists if they are acceptable otherwise, after all with the transparency we can still evaluate what's going on. America is in the worse economic condition in decades, the president is walking through some tall cotton right now and we can't see the end of the row either. So let's get together and do what's right for this country.

 

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