[Congressional Bills 111th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H. Res. 286 Laid on Table in House (LTH)]
111th CONGRESS
1st Session
H. RES. 286
Raising a question of the privileges of the House.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
March 25, 2009
Mr. Flake submitted the following resolution; which was laid on the
table
_______________________________________________________________________
RESOLUTION
Raising a question of the privileges of the House.
Whereas The Hill reported that a prominent lobbying firm specializing in
obtaining defense earmarks for its clients, the subject of a ``federal
investigation into potentially corrupt political contributions'', has
given $3.4 million in political donations to no less than 284 Members of
Congress;
Whereas multiple press reports have noted questions related to campaign
contributions made by or on behalf of the firm; including questions
related to ``straw man'' contributions, the reimbursement of employees
for political giving, pressure on clients to give, a suspicious pattern
of giving, and the timing of donations relative to legislative activity;
Whereas Roll Call has taken note of the timing of contributions from employees
of the firm and its clients when it reported that they ``have provided
thousands of dollars worth of campaign contributions to key Members in
close proximity to legislative activity, such as the deadline for
earmark request letters or passage of a spending bill.'';
Whereas CQ Today specifically noted a Member getting ``$25,000 in campaign
contribution money from [the founder of the firm] and his relatives
right after his subcommittee approved its spending bill in 2005.'';
Whereas the Associated Press also noted that Members received campaign
contributions from employees of the firm ``around the time they
requested'' earmarks for companies represented by the firm;
Whereas clients of the firm received at least $300 million worth of earmarks in
fiscal year 2009 appropriations legislation, including several that were
approved even after news of the FBI raid of the firm's offices and
Justice Department investigation into the firm was well known; and
Whereas the persistent media attention focused on questions about the nature and
timing of campaign contributions related to the firm, as well as reports
of the Justice Department conducting research on earmarks and campaign
contributions, raise concern about the integrity of Congressional
proceedings and the dignity of this institution: Now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That--
(1) the Committee on Standards of Official Conduct, or a
subcommittee of the committee designated by the committee and
its members appointed by the chairman and ranking member, shall
immediately begin an investigation into the relationship
between the source and timing of past contributions to Members
of the House related to the raided firm and earmark requests
made by Members of the House on behalf of clients of the raided
firm; and
(2) the Committee on Standards of Official Conduct shall
submit a report of its findings to the House of Representatives
within 2 months after the date of adoption of this resolution.
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