The Sunlight Foundation Blog
 
  • Finish Finding Out Who’s Gone from Congress to K Street

    POSTED BY
    Bill Allison

    Wow, that was fast. In less than a day, 21 citizen researchers completed the first part of the Where Are They Now?" distributed research project. They investigated 268 congressional staff members whose bosses resigned, retired or were voted out of office in 2006, and found 48 who have potentially gone through the revolving door to work for K Street. Thank you to all who participated–including the 30 researchers who signed up but didn’t get a chance to participate in the first part, but remember: There’s still more to be done.


    So far, only one of these potential revolvers has been verified. Here’s your chance to do some old fashioned, person-to-person reporting: Call up a lobbying firm and verify that we have indeed identified a former congressional insider who’s moved on to K Street. We give you a really simple script, and an easy way to record your efforts. Just click here to get started.

    0 Comments

    Posted: December 21st, 2007 Tags: , , ,
  • Find Out Who’s Gone from Congress to K Street

    POSTED BY
    Bill Allison

    Rep. Mike Oxley, the former chair of the powerful House Financial Services Committee, retired. So did Sen. Paul Sarbanes, the ranking minority member of the Senate Banking Committee. Rep. Harold Ford lost his bid for an open Senate seat, while Sen. Rick Santorum lost his bid for his own. Criminal investigations cost both Rep. Randy "Duke" Cunningham and Rep. Bob Ney their seats.

    When they left office, what happened to their former staffers? Did they go through Washington’s Revolving Door? Using the Sunlight Foundation’s new Where are they now? distributed research tool, you can find out who’s gone from Congress to K Street. The 109th Congress closed up shop nearly one year ago. For the top staff members whose bosses resigned, retired or were voted out of office, the one year "cooling off period" — during which they are not allowed to lobby their former colleagues on Capitol Hill — is coming to an end. Lower level staffers have been able to lobby their old colleagues on the Hill all year.

    Now you can find out what former aides are now lobbying on everything from S-Chip expansion to bridges to nowhere. Where are they now? also extends the distributed research model by allowing users, in addition to doing the preliminary research on potential revolvers, to verify information, resulting in a 100 percent-citizen-powered project. Where are they now? will thus take our experiments in citizen journalism to a new level—producing high quality, fact-checked facts that any citizen or journalist can quote and rely on.

    Using the tool is simple. Pick a lawmaker you want to research from the project’s home page, choose one their former aides from the the list taken from the September 2006 edition of the Congressional Directory, and look for any matches in the Senate Office of Public Records online database of lobbyist disclosures. If you do find a match, enter the firm’s name and contact info from the SOPR database, and you’re done with step one. If you want to verify the data, use the tool to keep track of your phone calls to the lobbying firm. And that’s it. A fun little diversion for the holiday season. (P.S. — For those curious, our friends at the Center for Responsive Politics maintain a pretty good list of former members of Congress who’ve gone through the revolving door–including those who left during the 109th Congress.)

    0 Comments

    Posted: December 20th, 2007 Tags: , , ,
  • Congress Facts: Everybody Hates Congress

    POSTED BY
    Paul Blumenthal

    In this second installment of Congress Facts let's take a look at some of the lowlights of Congress' recent history. Fewer days in session, fewer committee hearings, and fewer House members reelected.

    Follow below the fold.

    • Number of Days the House has been in session this year: 96[1]
    • Number of Days less than the 80th “Do-Nothing” Congress the House has been in Session: 12
    • Number of Committee Meetings in the House of Representatives in 1985: 2657
    • Number of Committee Meetings in the House of Representatives in 1995: 2017
    • Number of Committee Meetings in the House of Representatives in 2005: 1451
    • Number of Subpoenas Issued by the House Government Reform Committee to Baseball Players in 2005: 7
    • Number of Subpoenas Issued by the House Government Reform Committee to the Bush Administration since 2001: 3
    • Number of committee hearings classified as “oversight” from 1993-94: 135[2]
    • Number of committee hearings classified as “oversight” from 2003-4: 37[3]
    • Cost to Run a House Campaign in 1976 (in 2004 dollars): $239,019[4]
    • Cost to Run a House Campaign in 2006: $966,000[5]
    • Reelection Rate in the 2004 House Elections: 98%[6]
    • Reelection Rate in the 2006 House Elections: 94%[7]



    [2] Milligan, Susan. “Congress Reduces its Oversight Role,” Boston Globe, November 20, 2005.

    [3] Id.

    [4] Cantor, Joseph. “Congressional Campaign Spending: 1976-1996,” CRS Reports, August 19, 1997. (inflation calculated with Inflation Calculator)

    [5]Incumbents Linked to Corruption Lose, but Money Still Wins,” Open Secrets, November 10, 2006.

    [6] Id.

    [7] Id.

    0 Comments

The Site may contain links to Internet sites that are not operated by Sunlight Foundation. These links are provided as a service and do not imply any endorsement of the activities or content of these sites, nor any association with their operators. Sunlight Foundation does not control these Internet sites and is not responsible for their content, security, or privacy practices. We urge you to review the privacy policy posted on web sites you visit before using the site or providing personal information.


This work by Sunlight Foundation is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 United States License.