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2018 Lobbying Disclosure: Observations on Lobbyists' Compliance with Disclosure Requirements [Reissued with revisions on Jun. 9, 2020.]

GAO-19-357 Published: Mar 29, 2019. Publicly Released: Mar 09, 2019.
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Fast Facts

We audited compliance with the Lobbyist Disclosure Act, which requires paid lobbyists to disclose their activities and report certain political contributions.

We examined a random sample of lobbying disclosure reports, interviewed the lobbyists responsible for them, sought documentation, and cross-checked the contributions reports.

We estimate that

A third of reports didn't disclose political contributions that should have been disclosed.

A fifth of reports didn't disclose the lobbyist's previous jobs in federal agencies or with Congress. Previous government employment must be reported.

 

Screenshot of the lobbying disclosure act online reporting portal

Screenshot of the lobbying disclosure act online reporting portal

Reissued with Revisions Jun 09, 2020
This report was revised on June 9, 2020, with changes to the highlights page and pages 18 and 19 to insert correct numbers of lobbyists that did not report political contributions.
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Highlights

What GAO Found

For the 2018 reporting period, most lobbyists provided documentation for key elements of their disclosure reports to demonstrate compliance with the Lobbying Disclosure Act of 1995, as amended (LDA). For lobbying disclosure (LD-2) reports and political contributions (LD-203) reports filed during the third and fourth quarter of 2017 and the first and second quarter of 2018, GAO estimates that

92 percent of lobbyists who filed new registrations also filed LD-2 reports as required for the quarter in which they first registered (the figure below describes the filing process and enforcement);

97 percent of all lobbyists who filed could provide documentation for lobbying income and expenses. However, an estimated 20 percent of these LD-2 reports were not properly rounded to the nearest $10,000; and

19 percent of all LD-2 reports did not properly disclose one or more previously held covered positions as required.

Except as noted above, these findings are generally consistent with prior reports GAO issued from 2010 through 2017.

Fig 01A-7-v1-102789

GAO continues to find that most lobbyists in the sample reported some level of ease in complying with disclosure requirements and in understanding the definitions of terms used in the reporting. However, some disclosure reports demonstrate compliance difficulties, such as failure to disclose covered positions or misreporting of income or expenses.

The U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Columbia (USAO) stated it has sufficient resources to enforce compliance. USAO continued its efforts to resolve noncompliance through filing reports or terminating registrations, as well as imposing civil and criminal penalties.

Why GAO Did This Study

The LDA, as amended, requires lobbyists to file quarterly disclosure reports and semiannual reports on certain political contributions. The law also includes a provision for GAO to annually audit lobbyists' compliance with the LDA. GAO's objectives were to (1) determine the extent to which lobbyists can demonstrate compliance with disclosure requirements; (2) identify any challenges or potential improvements to compliance that lobbyists report; and (3) describe the resources and authorities available to USAO in its role in enforcing LDA compliance. This is GAO's 12th annual report under the provision.

GAO reviewed a stratified random sample of 99 quarterly disclosure LD-2 reports filed for the third and fourth quarters of calendar year 2017, and the first and second quarters of calendar year 2018. GAO also reviewed two random samples totaling 160 LD-203 reports from year-end 2017 and midyear 2018. This methodology allowed GAO to generalize to the population of 49,918 disclosure reports with $5,000 or more in lobbying activity, and 29,798 reports of federal political campaign contributions. GAO also interviewed USAO officials.

GAO is not making any recommendations in this report. GAO provided a draft of this report to the Department of Justice for review and comment. The agency stated that it did not have comments.

For more information, contact Yvonne D. Jones, at (202) 512-2717 or jonesy@gao.gov.

Reissued with revisions on Jun. 9, 2020.

This report was revised on June 9, 2020, with changes to the highlights page and pages 18 and 19 to insert correct numbers of lobbyists that did not report political contributions.

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Topics

Compliance oversightDisclosure lawFinancial disclosureFines (penalties)Fines and penaltiesInterest groupsLobbyingLobbying activitiesLobbyistsPolitical contributionsReporting requirements