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Authors of GOP tax law disperse to lobby firms | TheHill

posted onMay 29, 2018
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Article snippet: Republican aides in Congress who were instrumental in writing the sweeping tax law last year are hitting the exits to take jobs in the lobbying industry.  At least a half dozen high-profile GOP staffers have departed or are departing Capitol Hill, swapping jobs in the legislative branch for plum postings at firms like Akin Gump and Squire Patton Boggs.  The exile from Congress includes top aides for the House Ways and Means Committee, Senate Finance Committee, and the offices of Sens. MORE (R-Pa.). Among the biggest departures is Mark Prater, who served as chief tax counsel and deputy staff director for Senate Finance Committee Republicans. Prater, who has not yet announced his next career move, worked for the committee for nearly 30 years. Prater cited Finance Committee Chairman MORE’s (R-Utah) retirement, the culmination of the tax-reform process and his accumulation of years on Capitol Hill as reasons for his departure.  “It just seemed like a good breaking point and a chance to do something different,” he said. Cashing in on K Street is a common move for congressional staffers in both parties, especially after major legislation is signed into law. Something similar happened after ObamaCare passed in 2010. In the two years after President Obama signed the Affordable Care Act, more than 30 former administration officials, lawmakers and congressional staffers that had worked on the law joined the K Street ranks. The numbers have likely grown since then.  What Ob... Link to the full article to read more

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