White House agrees to detail ethics
waivers
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[May 27, 2017]
By Pete Schroeder
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The White House will
comply with a request from the U.S. government's ethics agency to
provide information on which former lobbyists are working in the
administration, an administration official said on Friday.
Mick Mulvaney, director of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB),
said in a letter that the administration was not seeking to impede
efforts by the Office of Government Ethics to obtain that information,
despite earlier protests from Walter Shaub, the director of the Office
of Government Ethics (OGE).
"OMB shares the belief that the executive branch must uphold the highest
ethical standards in accordance with the law," Mulvaney wrote. "Our
concern was, and is, protecting the process related to the data call."
Shaub, an appointee under President Barack Obama in the final year of
five-year term, had requested in April copies of waivers the
administration of President Donald Trump granted to former lobbyists now
appointed to positions in the government. Those requests were sent to
agencies across the administration, seeking waivers that would allow
former lobbyists to work on issues they had been involved with as paid
advocates.
But OMB requested a stay of that request, prompting a fierce response
from Shaub. He called the request "highly unusual" and said his agency
has the authority to take "corrective action proceedings" against
agencies that refuse its requests.
In his Friday response, Mulvaney said the requested stay was not an
attempt to stifle OGE efforts but rather to provide more time to "ensure
sufficient consideration was given to legal questions."
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Office of Management and Budget Director Mick Mulvaney waits to
testify before a Senate Budget Committee hearing on FY2018 Budget
Proposals on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., May 25, 2017.
REUTERS/Yuri Gripas
"OMB has never sought to impede OGE," he wrote.
Mulvaney closed the letter by saying the OMB did not grant any lobbyist
waivers itself.
Shortly after taking office in January, Trump signed an executive order
barring lobbyists who joined the administration from working on issues
related to their prior work. But the administration has the power to
grant waivers to particular hires, exempting them from that restriction.
(Reporting by Pete Schroeder; Editing by Bill Trott)
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