President Donald Trump's executive order prohibiting top administration officials from ever lobbying the U.S. on behalf of a foreign government is still in effect more than three years later, meaning he's kept his promise to institute a lifetime ban on such efforts.
"I'm going to issue a lifetime ban against senior executive branch officials lobbying on behalf of a foreign government," Trump said in an October 2016 campaign speech.
Trump fulfilled his pledge shortly after entering the White House with a Jan. 28, 2017, executive order. The order established a multi-part ethics pledge that became applicable for all executive agency appointees appointed on or after Jan. 20, 2017.
The fourth paragraph under in section 1 of the executive order mentions the lifetime ban:
"I will not, at any time after the termination of my employment in the United States Government, engage in any activity on behalf of any foreign government or foreign political party which, were it undertaken on January 20, 2017, would require me to register under the Foreign Agents Registration Act of 1938, as amended."
Trump's executive order has not been repealed or altered, said Scott Amey, general counsel at the Project on Government Oversight.
But as we noted when we last updated this promise, the order also made room for several exceptions under section 3, where it said "the president or his designee may grant to any person a waiver of any restrictions contained in the pledge signed by such person."
Experts from government watchdog groups told us they aren't aware of any waivers the administration has issued to allow former appointees to lobby on behalf of foreign governments, although some experts said the administration hasn't been perfectly transparent.
Reports from the U.S. Office of Government Ethics show that while several ethics waivers were granted in 2017 and 2018, none pertained to the ban forbidding lobbying on behalf of foreign governments. The report covering 2019 has not yet been released.
There are also no paragraph 4 waivers listed in White House's disclosures covering ethics pledge waivers for the White House and vice president's office through April 27, nor are there any such waivers in the Office of Government Ethics' list for executive agencies.
Virginia Canter, chief ethics counsel at the Center for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington and a former White House associate counsel under Presidents Barack Obama and Bill Clinton, said certain senior officials are also dissuaded from foreign lobbying by a criminal statute that prohibits them from representing or advising foreign entities in their first year out of government.
"In order to get a waiver, they would have to either not be a senior employee covered by the one-year cooling-off period, or that one-year cooling-off period would have to expire," she said.
The classification of different positions has also given certain officials room to circumvent the ethics rules established by Trump's executive order, said Anna Massoglia, a researcher at the Center for Responsive Politics, which tracks foreign lobbying.
Trump's order "only explicitly covers full-time, non-career political appointees," Massoglia said. "But the Trump administration has brought in a number of 'special government employees' or 'special advisers' who are not subject to the same ethics rules."
Pam Bondi, for example, recently re-registered as a foreign agent working on behalf of the Qatari government after serving on Trump's impeachment defense legal team, Massoglia said. She rejoined Ballard Partners, a lobbying firm where she had previously worked.
Richard Hohlt, another example, was appointed to serve a part-time advisory role on Trump's Commission on White House Fellowships. He was simultaneously registered as a Saudi government foreign agent as part of a lobbying gig that he eventually quit, Massoglia said.
Trump's promise could fully unravel if he's voted out of office and he decides to scrap the executive order on his way out. Clinton rescinded his own ethics pledge before leaving the White House, and Obama's executive order was replaced by Trump's, Amey said.
We'll continue to watch for new waivers or post-election changes.
For now, Trump's promise stays at Promise Kept.
UPDATE, July 17, 2020: The U.S. Office of Government Ethics released its report covering 2019 in July 2020. The report also listed no paragraph 4 waivers. Our ruling remains the same.