POLITICAL PRESSURE ROW BUILDING IN USA
14 November 2008
Tennesee Democrat accuses top Bush adviser of
undue influence in Internet gambling issue
Political ethics and conflict of interest accusations
feature in a new political row over Internet gambling
brewing up in the United States last week. The
publication Politico reports that Tennesee Democrat
Representative Steve Cohen has accused a top Bush
Administration adviser of applying “considerable
political pressure” to benefit a former lobbying client.
Cohen has apparently asked White House Counsel Fred
Fielding to investigate William Wichterman, a top
political aide to President Bush, to ascertain whether
he disclosed his “potential conflict of interest” in
pushing the administration to implement new regulations
to enforce the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement
Act.
Politico reveals that as late as March, Wichterman was a
registered lobbyist with Covington & Burling, where he
represented the National Football League, a vigorous
opponent of Internet gambling, according to the Senate
lobbying disclosure database. In that role, he worked on
the Internet gaming laws, one of the league's top
legislative priorities.
The publication summarises moves this year to draft
regulations supporting the UIGEA, which was pushed
through a late session of the 2006 Congress by
Republican leader Bill Frist attached to an unrelated
but must-pass security bill (see previous InfoPowa
reports). Federal goverment drafters have struggled
since the Act was passed to come up with practical and
specific regulations, which the government expects the
US financial services industry to enforce.
The lack of practicality and precision in the Act and
the regulations - especially as regards what constitutes
"illegal Internet gambling", has triggered wide and
diverse critical debate, Congressional hearings,
legislative attempts to overturn or clarify the Act and
resistance from an already overburdened financial
services industry to its proposed role.
On October 21st this year, Treasury officials submitted
the latest draft of the proposed regulations to the US
government's Office of Management and Budget where it is
subject to a 60 day review period and presumably further
argument from interested parties.
Cohen's request for an investigation of Wichterman
highlights the efforts of the adviser and other White
House officials in trying to rush rules changes through
the administration’s normal approval process during the
final months of the Bush presidency, reports Politico.
Wichterman and other backers of the UIGEA, like
Arizona's Republican Sen. Jon Kyl, have been pushing the
administration to enact the regulations before November
17, in the narrow window before the new Obama
administration could reconsider or amend the
regulations, according to insiders.
The Department of the Treasury and the Federal Reserve
must sign off on the language of the law before the
administration can implement it. There is a 60-day
review process, so current administration officials want
their recommended language to take effect before the
next administration takes over.
In his letter to the White House, Cohen suggests
Wichterman “...has been a source of considerable
political pressure to speed this regulation through
finalization.”
As a former lobbyist with Covington & Burling,
Wichterman represented the NFL, which, says the letter,
“...has been among the most vocal advocates for the
proposed [UIGEA] rule and the underlying law.”
Opponents fear the OMB will push the regulatory changes
through, even though administration officials testified
before the Financial Services panel earlier this year
that the law is too vague.
OMB needs the Federal Reserve to sign off on the new
rules before the administration can implement them as
law, according to people familiar with the
implementation process.
Cohen asks Fielding whether Wichterman - who also worked
for UIGEA proposer Senator Bill Frist before becoming a
lobbyist - disclosed “to you or your office his
potential conflict of interest on this matter.”
“If so, was he nonetheless allowed by the White House to
work on this issue?” the Congressman asks, requesting
that the White House counsel spell out for him the Bush
administration’s policy on aides working in issue areas
they covered as paid lobbyists.
Congressman Cohen wants to know if “there is a defined
period during which employees who served as lawyers or
lobbyists in the private sector must recuse themselves
from matters affecting their former clients.”
The Tennessee Democrat also wants to know whether
Wichterman plans to return to the lobbying firm now that
the Bush administration is on the way out. He further
asks for a catalogue of contact between the White House
office of Public Liaison with Treasury, OMB and the
Federal Reserve.
The White House did not respond to a Politico request
for comment on the Cohen letter.
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
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