Job Negotiations


Wynn Tests New Transparency Laws

Lame duck Rep. Al Wynn, recently defeated in a Democratic primary, announced that he would be retiring from Congress early to take a lobbying job with the law firm Dickstein Shapiro this June. Unlike previous members who have announced their retirement through the revolving door Wynn will remain in Congress, with a fully negotiated and signed contract to work at the firm, until June, giving him unparralleled access for a newly minted lobbyist. Dickstein Shapiro has already released a press release announcing the hire. Unlike Wynn, Trent Lott, Richard Baker, and Billy Tauzin all retired quickly upon announcing their completed lobbying job negotiations. This poses serious conflict of interest questions for Wynn but also serves as a true test of the Honest Leadership and Open Government Act and its provisions governing member job negotiations (a provision already filled with loopholes). The Point of Order blog explains:

No Disclosure on Departing Lawmakers’ Job Search

Written by Paul Blumenthal on March 31, 2008 - 1:41pm.
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Source Name

CQ Politics

Snippit

Democrats promised an unprecedented era of transparency and openness when they imposed new rules on colleagues who shop for their next jobs while still in Congress. But those new requirements are delivering little, if any, disclosure about who might be voting on an issue of interest to an employer-in-waiting.