Cleaning up Sacto with a Toothbrush

Thomas D. EliasOP-EDLeave a Comment

Thomas D. Elias
Mr. Elias

The revolving door in Sacramento is decisively alive and well today, but a move is afoot to crimp it a little.

Nancy McFadden, chief of staff for Gov. Jerry Brown, is not the first to use the cycle that sends so-called public servants on a continuous and connected path between lobbying and government, but her case is the latest cause célèbre.

Ms. McFadden, an aide to Mr. Brown during the 1970s and early ’80s, also worked for ex-Gov. Gray Davis and was a Bill Clinton administration official in Washington, D.C., before going to work for Pacific Gas & Electric Co. There, she soon became senior vice president and senior advisor to the corporate chairman, representing the big utility in Sacramento.

After taking a $1.04 million golden handshake from PG&E, she went back to work for Brown when he returned to the governor’s office in 2010. She also held onto her PG&E shares and stock options for many months after getting back into government. She is a classic example of the revolving door, especially since her agreement to take the big parting gift from PG&E prohibited her doing anything detrimental to the company.

Then there is former Assemblyman Henry T. Perea, a Democrat who represented Fresno for five years before taking a lucrative Sacramento job lobbying for the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, better known as PhRMA. That is the main lobbying arm of drug companies often collectively called Big Pharma.

And there are former state Sen. Michael Rubio of Shafter, another Democrat, who moved to a job with Chevron Corp., and Bill Emmerson, a sometime Republican state senator from Riverside County now with the California Hospital Assn.

The recent ex-legislators play a different role than Ms. McFadden, who sits in an extremely strategic place for helping her ex-employer. The former lawmakers’ job is to influence their buddies and recent colleagues still serving as legislators. It’s not as direct a role as Ms. McFadden can play, but it still is the revolving door. The ex-lawmakers must wait one year before they can officially schmooze other legislators, but no one can prohibit them from playing golf together or watching televised sports or hoisting a drink near the state Capitol.

Until now, there has been no move against this sort of thing, which goes on even more frequently and flagrantly in Washington.

Small but Helpful Try

Now comes Republican state Sen. Andy Vidak of Hanford with an effort to at least delay influence peddling a bit. Even though it might be against the future financial interests of some of them, Democratic lawmakers ought not to give this effort the automatic heave-ho often inflicted upon GOP-sponsored bills in Sacramento.

Mr. Vidak, elected by a margin of almost 10 percent in a swing district in 2014, proposes a ban on ex-legislators lobbying their former co-workers and the governor until the end of the first legislative session beginning after the lawmaker leaves office. For statewide officials like the governor or secretary of state, he would extend an existing lobbying ban from one year to two.

For Mr. Perea, this would have forbidden formal lobbying until at least three years after his departure, as the first full legislative session after his resignation starts next January and lasts two years. That might have made him not quite as hot a property for Big Pharma, essentially adding two years to his present schmoozing moratorium.

This, said Mr. Vidak, could “discourage legislators from leaving office in the middle of their terms to take a lucrative…job, which often leads to a lucrative lobbying career.” He noted that special elections to replace departing lawmakers cost counties millions of dollars, “money that would be better spent on critical local programs such as public safety, transportation or health.”

Mr. Vidak notes that since term limits for legislators began in 1990, 58 special elections have been held for lawmakers who resigned in the midst of their terms. Many left after winning higher office. Some became lobbyists.

In terms of good government, no question Mr. Vidak’s bill represents improvement. As for financial futures of legislators who will vote it up or down, it is a downer — one good idea not likely to become reality but should.

Mr. Elias may be contacted at tdelias@aol.com. His book, “The Burzynski Breakthrough, the Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It,” is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net

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