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THE TRANSITION TO GOVERNING PROJECT
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Home >  Research Areas >  Transition to Governing Project >  Ethics--The Revolving Door Rule
Ethics--The Revolving Door Rule
Print Mail
Transition to Governing Newsletter
Posted: Monday, January 1, 2001
ARTICLES
Publications Date: January 1, 2001

The Ethics in Government Act and the Codes of Professional Conduct of state bar associations present a complicated thicket through which both incoming and outgoing government officials, especially lawyers, must negotiate.

On February 14, the Transition to Governing Project and the Federalist Society presented a discussion by a group of distinguished panelists on the ethics rules governing political appointees and the application of those rules. The panels focused on the ramifications of the revolving door for outgoing and incoming government officials and on a case study of In Re Abraham D. Sofaer.

Panelists included Robert Cobb, associate counsel to the president; Amy Comstock, director, Office of Government Ethics; Stephen J. Csontos, ethics officer, Tax Division, Department of Justice; Lloyd Cutler, Wilmer, Cutler & Pickering and former White House counsel to Presidents Carter and Clinton; C. Boyden Gray, Wilmer, Cutler & Pickering and former White House counsel to President Bush; Thomas D. Morgan, George Washington University Law School; Richard W. Painter, University of Illinois College of Law; and Edwin D. Williamson, Sullivan & Cromwell and former legal adviser, Department of State.

Related Links
Transition to Governing Project


TGP Newsletter

Fall 1999
This issue covers the appointments process and think tanks.

Fall 2000
This issue covers Preparing to Be President, how Dick Cheney and Al Gore would govern, and the permanent campaign and its future.

Winter 2001
This issue assesses recent presidential transitions, new software for presidential appointees, and revolving door ethics.


The Overstretched FBI

Resident Scholar Norman J. Ornstein  
Norman J. Ornstein
 
The Washington Post

June 4, 2002

Ornstein discusses reforms to FBI checks to improve the presidential appointments process.


Read the "Hess Report on Campaign Coverage in Nightly Network News."

New software released to help presidential nominees with the appointments process.

Read an article from the May 2002 Journal of Politics, written by Matthew J. Dickinson of Middlebury College and Kathryn Dunn Tenpas of Brookings: "Explaining Increasing Turnover Rates among Presidential Advisers, 1929-1997."