According to the Hill, yesterday the Treasury Department released its rules regarding “Communications With Registered Lobbyists And Other Persons About Emergency Economic Stabalization Act Funds.”
The rules are available on Treasury’s web site, but there’s no press
release and no obvious hyperlink as of the time I am writing this
blogpost, nearly a day later.
In late August, I wrote
about the Special Inspector General’s report that dinged Treasury for
taking so long to release its rules for TARP (financial bailout)
lobbying. It took Treasury 226 days to release these rules, since
January 27th when the agency issued a self-laudatory press release
announcing its plan to “develop new rules to increase transparency and
curtail potential lobbyist influence.”
Having now (quickly) read the TARP lobbying rules, they pretty much
follow the Recovery Act lobbying rules initially promulgated on April 7
and revised on July 24.
Here are a few differences between the TARP lobbying rules and the final stimulus lobbying rules that I’ve noticed so far:
- The TARP lobbying rules permit communications regarding a specific project once it has received preliminary approval, whereas the stimulus lobbying rules don’t allow those communications until the project has been awarded.
Thus, the TARP rules leave open a window of opportunity for lobbying
between “preliminary” and “final” approval. I don’t have a sense of how
long that window is open or the “final” approval process.
- The TARP lobbying rules are a bit unclear (at C(iii)), but seem to
permit oral communications with Treasury employees regarding
applications for financial assistance that, instead of encompassing all
federal employees, encompass only federal executive agency officials.
The stimulus lobbying rules are much broader, and permit communications
with more federal and some state officials. Treasury’s closing these
exceptions may have the effect of reducing the amount of outside
pressure placed upon the agency to spend money. These rules have also
cut Members of Congress out of the lobbying picture — reducing the
ability of lobbyists/financial interests to get Members of Congress to
lobby for them. It is unclear (but unlikely) that doing so raises
Constitutional questions regarding Congress’ oversight powers.
- Both sets of rules allow oral communications regarding particular
projects right up until a formal application is filed, as contrasted
with the interim version of the recovery act lobbying rules that
stopped oral communications when the government official thought that a
proposal would be filed. As a result, both the final stimulus lobbying
rules and the TARP lobbying rules allow lobbying right up until the
last moment. This may allow more give and take between the government
and those engaged in lobbying, but may also increase the possibility of
undue influence.
Considering the nearly-identical nature of the TARP lobbying rules
with the stimulus lobbying rules, it is curious why it has taken so
long for Treasury to promulgate these rules, and why it seems to have
done so in such a quiet manner.
The similarities also cause me to wonder whether this iterative
process of producing lobbying rules may lend itself to creating
regulations that could ultimately have much broader applicability.