Lobbying describes paid activity in which special interest groups hire well-connected professional advocates, often lawyers, to argue for specific legislation in decision-making bodies such as the United States Congress. Analysts estimate that there are over 100,000 working lobbyists in Washington D.C. who bring in a combined revenue of over $9 billion annually. In 2007 the U.S. Congress passed the “Honest Leadership and Open Government Act” which placed lobbying “cooling off” periods for members of Congress and their staff. Senators and their staff were now prohibited from registering as lobbyists for 1-2 years after they left office.
Narrow down the conversation to these participants:
Discussions from these authors are shown:
Voting for candidate:
Zipcode:
Don't have enough knowledge to provide an answer.
I am unsure. It would have to depend on the situation.
In the middle on this one.
@8RM959R4yrs4Y
No, but they should be required to lose all public service benefits.
I'm Neutral but I think it would depend on the lobbyist's actions while working for the government.
I don't have enough knowledge of this topic
There should have never been lobbyist in the first place
Not informed enough to form a full opinion.
@98XT2ML2yrs2Y
Yes, because it's banned for a reason.
@8KT9P534yrs4Y
No, the ban should be equivalent to whatever the term length in the office the politician was serving in.
I don't have much information.
Loading the political themes of users that engaged with this discussion
Loading data...
Join in on more popular conversations.