WASHINGTON – It was one of the few issues on which President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden disagreed: how far to go in limiting the influence of lobbyists in government.
Biden privately complained that his boss' effort to slam shut the revolving door between K Street and the administration would deprive it of experienced talent, and he bristled when Obama's aides tried to block him from hiring a well-connected Washington operator who had lobbied for pharmaceutical and insurance companies, credit agencies and others.
Eight years later, that same confidant, Steve Ricchetti, is helping to run Biden's presidential campaign. Also involved to varying degrees are other advisers, operatives, fundraisers and allies with deep connections to Washington's lucrative lobbying, communications and strategic consulting industry.
That puts Biden at odds with powerful elements of his party's liberal base. Increasingly, they are expressing concern that the military contractors, Wall Street banks and other major corporations that paid members of Biden's inner circle while they were out of government could hold disproportionate power in a Biden administration.
Politically, it could limit Biden's ability to cast himself as the antidote to the anything-goes access peddling that has proliferated in President Donald Trump's administration. Under Trump, lobbyists and campaign donors have not only enjoyed access to the administration's highest levels but also have been tapped to lead Cabinet departments and have exerted remarkable influence over policies of intense interest to their former employers.
"It's worrisome, broadly speaking, that a Biden administration could end up abiding by the unfortunate bipartisan norms of putting people in posts where they oversee industries or employers they just left," said David Segal, co-founder of the group Demand Progress.
His organization was among those that sent a letter to the Biden and Trump campaigns this past week asking them not to appoint anyone to senior administration positions overseeing interests they served in the private sector. The letter called out Trump's administration for taking that dynamic "to new extremes," but Segal added that Biden's orbit includes "some folks with troubling track records."
Biden has pledged to "expand on and codify" the Obama administration's lobbying executive order — the same policy he had privately complained about. That plan would bar lobbyists from going to work for agencies they had tried to influence within the previous two years and bar departing officials from lobbying until the end of the administration.

