State Ethics Laws Include 'Revolving Door' Loopholes

Ethics Loophole Raises Concern

On October 26, 2011, the Illinois legislature passed a bill that authorized construction of a multi-billion-dollar smart grid and reshaped how utility companies seek approval for raising electricity rates. Consumer groups opposed the measure, saying it was a handout to utilities.

But the final blow for opponents came three months later when former state Rep. Kevin McCarthy, who had pushed the bill through the legislature only to resign after winning its passage, registered his own lobbying firm and signed his first clients. Prominent among them: Commonwealth Edison, one of the state's largest utilities.

"It's hard to believe that there wasn't a quid pro quo for this," said Scott Musser, an Illinois lobbyist for AARP, which opposed the bill.

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