June 18, 2006
The Revolving Door
Former Antiterror Officials Find Industry Pays Better
By ERIC LIPTON
WASHINGTON, June 17 Dozens of members of the Bush administration's domestic security team, assembled after the 2001 terrorist attacks, are now collecting bigger paychecks in different roles: working on behalf of companies that sell domestic security products, many directly to the federal agencies the officials once helped run.At least 90 officials at the Department of Homeland Security or the White House Office of Homeland Security including the department's former secretary, Tom Ridge; the former deputy secretary, Adm. James M. Loy; and the former under secretary, Asa Hutchinson are executives, consultants or lobbyists for companies that collectively do billions of dollars' worth of domestic security business.
More than two-thirds of the department's most senior executives in its first years have moved through the revolving door. That pattern raises questions for some former officials.
"People have a right to make a living," said Clark Kent Ervin, the former inspector general of the department, who now works at the Aspen Institute, a nonpartisan public policy research center. "But working virtually immediately for a company that is bidding for work in an area where you were just setting the policy that is too close. It is almost incestuous."
Federal law prohibits senior executive branch officials from lobbying former government colleagues or subordinates for at least a year after leaving public service. But by exploiting loopholes in the law including one provision drawn up by department executives to facilitate their entry into the business world it is often easy for former officials to do just that.
"Almost" incestuous? Huh? At what point does any doubt creep into this equation?
Posted by Melanie at June 18, 2006 12:48 PM | TrackBack

