The
Tainted Reverse Revolving Door
By
Phil Mattera for the Dirt Diggers Digest
Given his own string of business controversies, it perhaps should come as no surprise that Donald Trump does not seem to worry much about the accountability track record of the companies from which he has recruited key members of his administration.
It’s
well known that he chose as his Secretary of State the chief executive of
environmental culprit Exxon Mobil, that he brought in a slew of people from
controversial investment house Goldman Sachs, that his Treasury Secretary had
operated a bank notorious for foreclosures, and that his first pick for Labor
Secretary had run a fast-food company with numerous wage and hour violations.
It’s
becoming increasingly clear that those were not anomalies. Research being
carried out in collaboration with independent investigator Don Wiener shows
that the administration also has a tendency in its second-tier White House and
subcabinet appointees to select people associated with companies that have a
checkered reputation.
When we initially embarked on this effort we expected to have to look into hundreds of names, primarily by checking their affiliated companies in our Violation Tracker.
So far, whether by design or disorganization, the Trump Administration has announced nominees for only a few dozen of the hundreds of positions in the various departments and agencies, though things have been moving somewhat faster for White House staffers who do not require Senate confirmation.
Within both of these groups there have been some questionable choices. Here are some initial examples; more will come in later posts.
Kenneth
Juster and Bridgepoint Education.
In February Trump chose Kenneth Juster, a partner at the private equity firm Warburg Pincus, to be Deputy Assistant to the President for International Economic Policy. Prior to his appointment Juster was a member of the board of directors of Bridgepoint Education, an operator of for-profit colleges.
He was a board representative for Warburg, which was an early backer of the company and which controls one-third of the firm’s shares.
In February Trump chose Kenneth Juster, a partner at the private equity firm Warburg Pincus, to be Deputy Assistant to the President for International Economic Policy. Prior to his appointment Juster was a member of the board of directors of Bridgepoint Education, an operator of for-profit colleges.
He was a board representative for Warburg, which was an early backer of the company and which controls one-third of the firm’s shares.
As shown in Violation Tracker, in 2016
the Consumer Financial Protection Board alleged that Bridgepoint deceived
students into taking out private loans that cost more than advertised. The
agency fined the company $8 million and ordered it to provide $23.5 million in
relief and refunds to clients.
Michael
Brown and Chesapeake Energy.
Brown, an executive assistant to Energy Secretary Rick Perry, previously worked for Chesapeake Energy, the controversial fracking company based in Oklahoma.
In 2013 the Environmental Protection Agency announced that a subsidiary of the company was being fined $3.2 million and would spend $6.5 million on site restoration to settle allegations that it violated the Clean Water Act through improper discharges into streams and wetlands.
Brown, an executive assistant to Energy Secretary Rick Perry, previously worked for Chesapeake Energy, the controversial fracking company based in Oklahoma.
In 2013 the Environmental Protection Agency announced that a subsidiary of the company was being fined $3.2 million and would spend $6.5 million on site restoration to settle allegations that it violated the Clean Water Act through improper discharges into streams and wetlands.
Drew
Maloney and Hess Corporation.
Maloney, chosen to be the Assistant Secretary for Legislative Affairs at the Treasury Department, previously worked at the oil company Hess.
In 2012 the EPA announced that Hess would pay a penalty of $850,000 and spend more than $45 million on pollution control equipment to settle Clean Air Act allegations at its refinery in New Jersey.
Maloney, chosen to be the Assistant Secretary for Legislative Affairs at the Treasury Department, previously worked at the oil company Hess.
In 2012 the EPA announced that Hess would pay a penalty of $850,000 and spend more than $45 million on pollution control equipment to settle Clean Air Act allegations at its refinery in New Jersey.
These
are but a few examples of the what might be called the tainted reverse
revolving door. The term “revolving door” is used to refer to the movement of
government officials into lobbying and other private sector jobs where they
exploit connections made in their public positions.
The reverse revolving door is the process by which private sector people take government posts in which they are likely to promote the priorities of their previous (and likely future) employers.
The reverse revolving door is the process by which private sector people take government posts in which they are likely to promote the priorities of their previous (and likely future) employers.
Not
only is Trump filling his administration with people with a business
background, but he’s selecting people from some of the worst companies the
private sector has to offer.