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Related: About this forum'This Is Gross': Republican Openly Brags About Staffer Leaving to Work for Wall Street
https://www.commondreams.org/news/2022/09/23/gross-republican-openly-brags-about-staffer-leaving-work-wall-street'This Is Gross': Republican Openly Brags About Staffer Leaving to Work for Wall Street
During a bank oversight hearing this week, Republican Rep. Trey Hollingsworth boasted that one of his staffers would soon be leaving Congress to work on Wall Street, offering a glimpse of the legalized corruption that permeates the highest levels of the U.S. political system.
Perhaps free to speak so candidly because he's not running for reelection, Hollingsworth (Ind.) happily announced that one of his top aides, Sruthi Prabhu, is departing his office next week to join Bank of America, a powerful institution whose CEO testified at Wednesday's House Financial Services Committee hearing alongside other top industry executives.
"She is very, very excited," said Hollingsworth, whose past campaigns were funded heavily by the finance and investment industries. "I hope you will take good care of her and know and recognize the talent she has shown already in our office. I'm sure she'll do the same at Bank of America."
"We will do that," responded Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan. "And her father already works for us."
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.), a member of the House Financial Services Committee, wrote in a Twitter post Thursday that she "was in the room when this happened and it was just as gross and wild in person as it is here."
"People rightly discuss conflicts of interest of members of Congress, but lobbying of senior staff (who move on behalf of members and committees) is a huge part of the problem too," Ocasio-Cortez noted.
Donald Sherman, chief counsel at Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, expressed a similar sentiment, writing, "This is gross."
The exchange between Hollingsworth and Bank of America's CEO provides a striking look at a phenomenon commonly known as the revolving door, which describes the seamless employment track from Congress to the industries lawmakers are tasked with regulating, and vice versa.
The revolving door between committees that oversee the nation's banks spins particularly fast: Many lawmakers and aides involved in craftingand watering downWall Street regulations in the wake of the 2008 financial crash went on to take jobs at large financial institutions.
Public Citizen has estimated that in the midst of the economic crisis, the financial services industry deployed more than 1,400 former federal employeesincluding ex-committee staffersto lobby Congress on banking issues.
Walter Shaub, a senior ethics fellow at the Project on Government Oversight and the former head of the Office of Government Ethics, called Hollingsworth's jovial back-and-forth with Bank of America's top executive "absolutely wild."
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'This Is Gross': Republican Openly Brags About Staffer Leaving to Work for Wall Street (Original Post)
cbabe
Sep 2022
OP
magicarpet
(16,518 posts)1. Corrupting and capturing the very over site governmental agencies,..
.... that were put in place to keep them honest and ethical. These shamefully corrupt practices were formerly done in darkness, but doing so in the glaring day light is not so uncommon any more.
The Republican Party just does not give a sweet fuck today. They wear their corruption on their sleeves,.. high five each other,.. pat themselves on the back, and brag about it - out in public for all too see.
The GQP runs the government like it was their private and exclusive elegant golf club or yacht club for well to do and well connected members only. Where they and their friends are catered to and all others are just the hired help expected to wait on them hand and foot while attending to their each and every need.
The glorious days of Feudalism are upon us once again. Three steps forward and ten step backwards. Trickle down seems not to be functioning as they promised it would.
Warpy
(113,130 posts)2. Well, they have to work somewhere
and this would seem to be a tacit admission there won't be a next Republican to work for.
Besides, BoA tends to eat its mid level executives for lunch, I have that on personal authority.