February 08, 2006,
7:44 a.m. EDITOR'S NOTE: This piece appears in the February 13, 2006, issue of National Review. Just days after the GOP announced a “lobbying reform” package meant to mitigate political damage from the Jack Abramoff scandal, the Democrats held a grandstanding press conference at the Library of Congress to announce their own lobbying-reform ideas. Even as Democrats accused the Republicans of not going far enough, their own plan came up short in one widely debated area. While the Republican plan would ban all privately funded travel for congressmen and congressional staff those “fact-finding missions” to any destination where the facts can be gathered lazily near a golf course or a beach the Democrats’ plan would leave a loophole open for nonprofits to sponsor trips. According to the New York Times, “Congressional aides said that House Democratic leaders were ready to jettison travel completely but ran into resistance from Senate Democrats who wanted to retain the ability to go on trips sponsored by educational foundations.” YOU CAN READ THE REST OF THIS ARTICLE IN THE CURRENT ISSUE OF THE DIGITAL VERSION OF NATIONAL REVIEW. IF YOU DO NOT HAVE A SUBSCRIPTION TO NR DIGITAL OR NATIONAL REVIEW, YOU CAN SIGN UP FOR A SUBSCRIPTION TO NATIONAL REVIEW here OR NATIONAL REVIEW DIGITAL here (a subscription to NR includes Digital access). | ||||||||
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http://www.nationalreview.com/spruiell/spruiell200602080744.asp
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