Financial Services Committee

 

Financial Industry Showers House Financial Services Chairman With Contributions

Last year House Financial Services Committee Chairman Spencer Bachus, R-Ala., stated his philosophy on how the relationship between Washington and Wall Street should proceed, "In Washington, the view is that the banks are to be regulated, and my view is that Washington and the regulators are there to serve the banks." According to first quarter campaign contribution filings due today the financial sector generously supports Chairman Bachus' philosophy.

Bachus raised over seventy percent of his total first quarter campaign contributions from the finance, insurance, and real estate sector (FIRE). This totaled $212,335 out of Bachus' haul of $299,439.

The majority of this money, $122,506, came from FIRE sector political action committees. This accounted for eighty-four percent of the total political action committee contributions Bachus received. Another $89,835--fifty-eight percent of all individual contributions to Bachus--was contributed by individuals who work in the FIRE sector.

Bachus is leading the charge against the implementation of a host of rules mandated by the Dodd-Frank law passed last year including those governing derivatives, consumer protection, and debit swipe fees. At the end of last year, Bachus stated that he would go "page by page . . . to identify job-killing provisions or lending-killing provisions."

A previous Sunlight Foundation study found that Bachus was the most reliant on contributions from the FIRE sector in 2010 having raised sixty-three percent of all contributions from the sector.

Political action committees contributing to Bachus this year include big banks, credit unions, real estate companies, and electronic payment networks. Below is a full list of FIRE PACs giving to Bachus and the dates of their contributions:

PACDateAmount
Affinity Federal Credit Union03/04/112500
America Institute of Certified Public Accountants02/10/111000
America Institute of Certified Public Accountants03/31/114000
American Express01/27/112500
American Financial Services Association01/27/115000
Bank of America01/18/111000
C.V. Starr & Company03/31/112500
C.V. Starr & Company03/31/112500
Capital One Financial Corp03/24/115000
Chicago Board Options Exchange03/04/115000
Coastal Federal Credit Union02/25/111000
Community Financial Services Association03/31/112000
Compass Banc02/10/111000
Credit Union Legislative Action Council03/12/115000
Crowe Horwath03/31/114000
Credit Union National Association Mutual Group03/04/111000
Deloitte & Touche03/31/114000
Ernst & Young"02/10/115000
Independent Community Bankers Association01/27/111000
Independent Community Bankers Association03/11/114000
Independent Community Bankers Association03/11/115000
Independent Insurance Agents of America03/24/111000
Insured Retirement Institute03/24/111000
IntercontinentalExchange02/03/111000
Investment Company Institute02/10/112500
JPMorgan Chase02/11/115000
JPMorgan Chase02/11/115000
KeyCorp01/27/111000
MetLife03/11/112500
Mortgage Bankers Association03/31/111000
National Association of Federal Credit Unions01/27/115000
National Association of Insurance and Financial Advisors02/03/111000
National Multi Housing Council01/27/115000
National Venture Capital Association01/07/112000
New York Life Insurance03/24/115000
QC Holdings03/04/114000
Security Service Federal Credity Union03/12/111000
The Northern Trust Company02/10/111000
Total System Services03/12/112500
UBS Americas03/08/115000
VISA01/27/115000

Another Revolving Door Problem

Most of our focus here at Sunlight on the revolving door relates to former government officials and lawmakers who leave office and become lobbyists, or non-lobbyist lobbyists. There is another problem that I think skirts the boundaries of reasonable regulation, but still raises serious policy concerns. That is lawyers who work on a particular issue and then return to represent clients, in a strictly legal, non-lobbying, fashion afterwords.

Take for example this press release put out by Hogan Lovells yesterday:

Hogan Lovells US LLP announced today that Daniel S. Meade has rejoined the Corporate practice as a partner in Washington, D.C., having completed his work as Senior Counsel to the U.S. House Committee on Financial Services.

As Senior Counsel to the U.S. House Committee on Financial Services, Meade served as an advisor to the Committee's Chairman, and was a principal draftsperson of substantial portions of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protections Act, and the Small Business Jobs Act of 2010. He also actively drafted and analyzed legislation and coordinated oversight functions within the Committee's jurisdiction, particularly with regard to bank, thrift and holding company safety and soundness, capital requirements, transactions with affiliates, industrial loan companies, deposit insurance, consumer protection, and the Community Reinvestment Act.

At Hogan Lovells, Meade will resume his practice representing financial services entities and other entities impacted by the regulation of those entities in connection with a broad range of regulatory and transactional matters, including issues related to the Dodd-Frank Act and all other financial regulatory matters, as well as mergers and acquisitions, anti-money laundering, financial privacy, and enforcement matters.

Here we have a lawyer who previously worked in the Hogan Lovells corporate practice go to work for the Financial Services Committee, help write the biggest rewrite of financial regulation in a decades, and then leave immediately to represent corporate clients and advise on those very regulations.

Regulation of the revolving door is designed to protect the legislative process from undue influence. Studies show that former staffers turned lobbyists have special influence while their former boss is still in office. What about using knowledge of a bill one helped to draft to help clients navigate the process?

I doubt that there is any behavior to regulate here, unless the former government employee uses their connections in a way that mimics lobbying. People should have the right to use their expertise to their career advantage, so long as they are not using their special access to influence the public realm. Are there any policy suggestions out there for lawyers revolving to firms when they don't become lobbyists?

New Financial Services Committee members raise money from finance sector

Eight of the twelve new members chosen to take seats on the House Financial Services Committee can count the finance, insurance and real estate sector as the top contributor to their election.

Incoming Rep. Robert Dold is the top recipient of money from the finance, insurance and real estate sector among all freshmen elected in November's midterm elections. Dold, who raised $554,024 from the sector, according to the Center for Responsive Politics, is one of ten freshmen appointed to the committee overseeing the financial sector.

Another new member of the committee, Rep.-elect Steve Stivers, previously worked as a lobbyist for Bank One, which is now owned by JPMorgan Chase. Stivers received $294,105 from the finance sector.

In July 2010, Stivers came to Washington for a fundraiser thrown by financial lobbyists in Washington and hosted by incoming Financial Services Committee chairman Spencer Bachus. Bachus received nearly 63% of his 2010 campaign contributions from financial interests.  Bachus recently stated his philosophy for governing the committee, "In Washington, the view is that the banks are to be regulated, and my view is that Washington and the regulators are there to serve the banks."

Bachus also hosted a fundraiser for incoming committee member Michael Fitzpatrick. Fitzpatrick, who this year reclaimed the Philadelphia suburbs seat he lost in 2006, raised $122,250 from the finance sector.

Two freshmen from the nation's financial capital, New York, were appointed to the committee as well. Rep.-elect Michael Grimm, who won election from Staten Island, raised $222,350 from the finance sector. This amounted to 24 percent of the total money that he raised for his campaign, the largest percentage from the finance sector of all newly appointed members. Grimm defeated Democrat Michael McMahon, who also sat on the Financial Services Committee. Rep.-elect Nan Hayworth, hailing from upstate New York, raised $204,215 from the finance sector.

The Financial Services Committee has always been a coveted spot for lawmakers facing tough reelection races in expensive districts. These lawmakers are in need of large campaign contributions and the finance sector is the biggest contributing industry of all. Since 1998 the finance sector has contributed nearly $2 billion to federal election campaigns.

Most recently, the Democrats appointed eleven of their "frontline" freshmen lawmakers to the committee to help them raise money for reelection. According to the Huffington Post's Ryan Grim and Arthur Delaney the committee is "known as a "money committee" because joining it makes fundraising, especially from donors with financial interests litigated by the panel, significantly easier."

Nearly all of the freshmen appointed to the committee are likely to face tough reelection races in either 2012 or 2014.

Dold's North Shore district went heavily for Barack Obama in 2008. Fitzpatrick's district is a classic swing district won by Barack Obama and John Kerry in recent elections. Sean Duffy represents a Wisconsin district that was held by Democrat David Obey for 40 years and won by both John Kerry and Barack Obama. Quico Canseco won by a small margin in a Texas border district that narrowly went for Barack Obama in 2008. Robert Hurt barely won election over freshman Democrat Tom Perriello in a Virginia district that John McCain won by a couple of points in 2008. Stivers, Hayworth and Grimm could all face challenges in a different climate come 2012.

See below for all new members and the amount raised from the finance, insurance and real estate (FIRE) sector. All data provided by the Center for Responsive Politics.

Lawmaker Total FIRE Total Raised FIRE rank as contributor
Robert Dold $554,024 $2,458,562 #1
Steve Stivers $294,105 $5,237,413 #1
Michael Grimm $222,350 $925,231 #1
Nan Hayworth $204,215 $1,762,048 #2
Steve Pearce $176,580 $2,235,263 #3
Blaine Luetkemeyer $170,735 $1,270,308 #1
Robert Hurt $127,200 $1,899,261 #3
Michael Fitzpatrick $122,250 $1,590,663 #1
Lynn Westmoreland $107,809 $703,253 #1
Fransisco Canseco $101,550 $1,227,610 #1
Sean Duffy $91,175 $1,620,447 #3
Bill Huizenga $68,250 $591,028 #1

Ethics broadens Waters probe to examine communications with key committee

The House Ethics Committee is said to have broadened its inquiry into Rep. Maxine Waters by examining whether the Financial Services Committee fully complied with requests to turn over documents. Waters was scheduled to go on trial last month for inappropriately using her position in Congress to aid a bank that her husband had an ownership stake in in receiving money from the government bank bailout fund. That trial was delayed due to the revelation of a new e-mail that could be used as corroborating evidence. The revelation of that e-mail has led to broader questions of whether there is other evidence being withheld.

The Washington Post reports:

Four officials, congressional staff members, and others familiar with the probe confirmed on Thursday that her trial was postponed two weeks ago in part to explore the delay in not turning over that e-mail and to examine whether other evidence was withheld.

Read more

Banks, Exchanges Seek to Influence Derivatives Reform

[caption id="attachment_14073" align="aligncenter" width="580" caption="Derivatives trading as featured in the 1983 movie "Trading Places.""][/caption]

The final piece of the financial regulatory reform puzzle is about to come into place as Sen. Blanche Lincoln released language last Friday that would impose rules on the unregulated world of over-the-counter derivatives trading. Lincoln's bill, the Wall Street Transparency and Accountability Act, is more far reaching than proposals from both the Obama administration and the House of Representatives. This comes as somewhat of a surprise from the moderate and previously bank-friendly senator who has benefited from finance industry contributions in her post as chair of the Senate Agriculture Committee.

The Agriculture Committee occupies a unique place in the oversight of the nation's financial markets. With legislative jurisdiction over the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC)--historically futures trading began as a trading mechanism for farmers--the committee maintains jurisdiction over futures and derivatives trading. This unique arrangement provides committee members the ability to pull campaign contributions from the most prolific giver of contributions, the financial sector.

What are derivatives?
Examples from the financial meltdown
How did some derivatives escape regulation?

In 2009, Lincoln raised $693,500 from the finance, insurance and real estate sector, according to data obtained from the Center for Responsive Politics. Those with a specific stake in derivatives reform did not begin contributing to her campaign until she ascended to the chairmanship of the committee after the death of Sen. Edward Kennedy caused a a shuffling of committee seats. Since ascending to the Agriculture Committee chair Lincoln raised $256,900 from the finance, insurance and real estate sector. She also raised over $44,000 from financial companies with a major stake in derivatives reform--almost twice as much as she raised in the previous eight months from similar companies.

In total these major derivatives players contributed approximately $70,000 to Lincoln's reelection campaign. These companies include fifteen members of the International Swaps and Derivatives Association (ISDA), an international trade association that writes the rules for derivatives trading that remains unregulated. Some of these contributors include  JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, Bank of America, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank and UBS.

Despite all of the money and lobbying power—Credit Suisse employs Lincoln's former chief of staff as a lobbyist—expended to deflect new regulations, Lincoln has unveiled unexpectedly tough regulations. (Click here to see Lincoln's reforms.) While these tougher rules will set up a fight in the Senate, they will assuredly create a massive industry showdown if they pass the Senate and move to conference with the House to reconcile the two bills.

Finance influence in the House

Unlike Lincoln's bill, which goes against the wishes of her financial sector fundraisers, the House bill is a reflection of the finance sector's enduring influence in Washington. Throughout the process, the derivatives section of the House bill was consistently amended in favor to the finance industry as efforts to toughen the bill were defeated.

The Obama administration has argued that the majority of over-the-counter derivatives be traded out in the open on exchanges or cleared through clearinghouses. The banks and others have argued for broad exemptions for which over-the-counter derivatives would be required to be traded in the open. The House bill, however, wound up riddled with exemptions.

The bill began under the control of Rep. Barney Frank, the chairman of the House Financial Services Committee. The Financial Services Committee is a cherished post for congressmen to raise money and for staffers to gain knowledge for a future lobbying job. Since 2000, nearly half of the 126 committee staff who left the committee became lobbyists, according to a report by The Huffington Post. The committee is also the chief conduit for financial sector campaign contributions with the 71 committee members, or 16% of the 435 member body of Congress, accounting for 33% of all financial sector campaign contributions to members of the House in 2009.

In October 2009, Bloomberg reported on the crucial role that members of the New Democrat caucus played in helping add exemptions and loosening regulations on over-the-counter derivatives. Many of these members, along with their ideological counterparts, the Blue Dog Democrats, received inordinate amounts of campaign contributions from the financial sector.

Financial Services Committee member Gregory Meeks pulled in over 50% of his 2009 campaign contributions from the financial sector. Rep. Melissa Bean, another committee New Dem, raked in over 47% of her contributions from the financial sector, as did Rep. Dennis Moore. Committee members Jime Himes and David Scott pulled in over 30% of their campaign haul from finance companies and Rep. Charlie Wilson and Ron Klein pulled in over 25% of their total contributions from finance.

A major point of contention is what kinds of exemptions should exist for the over-the-counter derivatives that will be pushed onto exchanges and into clearinghouses. Both the Financial Services Committee and the House Agriculture Committee carved out large exemptions for “end-users”--a wide-swath of companies that may include mutual funds, insurance companies, hedge funds and private-equity capital. The exemptions also aid the top five banks in the United States—Citi, JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs—which hold approximately 95% of the over-the-counter derivatives exposure among the top 25 banks, according to the Comptroller of the Currency.

CFTC Chairman Gary Gensler, speaking on behalf of the Obama administration, declared the exemptions in the House bill unacceptable, adding, “we should ensure that every transaction between Wall Street banks and their financial customers, such as hedge funds, insurance companies or leasing companies, be subject to a clearing requirement.”

The loosening of the derivatives language continued when the bill hit the floor. An amendment widening the “end-user” exemption offered by Rep. Scott Murphy, a recipient of $525,015 in campaign contributions from the financial sector in 2009, passed by a wide margin with 131 Democrats in support—87 of them were New Dems or Blue Dogs. The House also voted down three amendments that would have placed tougher regulations on derivatives trading. The regulations that would have been imposed by these three defeated amendments mirror regulations proposed by Sen. Lincoln in her derivatives reform bill.

A lot of industry players came away from the House debate moderately contented. The coming showdown between the House and Senate over derivatives will reignite their engines and push them to pressure their allies in the House. One industry, specifically one company, will emerge from this debate with a windfall in profits, no matter which version of the bill passes.

Clearing and exchange trading requirements

Intercontinental Exchange, Inc. (ICE) operates derivatives exchanges and owns the biggest over-the-counter derivatives clearinghouses in the country. (See here for an explanation of exchanges and clearinghouses.) Both the House bill and Lincoln's bill would increase the number and type of derivatives that would be required to be cleared by a clearinghouse like the one ICE operates. The House bill has a series of exemptions and loopholes governing clearing and reporting, while the Lincoln proposal contains a strict requirement for clearing. Either way, this will pump up ICE's bottom line. It also would be a boon for the big banks as well.

In 2008, ICE purchased The Clearing Corporation, an over-the-counter derivatives clearinghouse from its owners. The owners included a who's who of major banks including JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, Bank of America, Citi and Morgan Stanley. ICE turned The Clearing Corporation into ICE Trust, which in March of 2009 became the first clearinghouse approved by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to begin clearing over-the-counter derivatives. If over-the-counter derivatives have to go onto an exchange, there is little option outside of ICE Trust.

When ICE purchased The Clearing Corporation they entered into a detailed profit sharing agreement with their partners, the big banks. The banks and ICE have a 50-50 profit sharing agreement for all profits that come from trades that are cleared by ICE Trust. As previously mentioned, these big banks account for over 90% of the over-the-counter derivatives market. A requirement, especially with a series of exemptions that the banks can take advantage of themselves, would increase profits for both ICE and the big banks. In the nine months that ICE Trust was open for business it processed $3.1 billion in trades and received $30 million in fees.

In testimony before Sen. Lincoln's committee in December, ICE general counsel Johnathan Short stated ICE's support for an increase in transparency in the market, but also voiced opposition to a requirement that all over-the-counter derivatives trades be cleared or be made over an exchange, much in line with the position of the big banks.

The big banks have an incentive to create as many exemptions in the clearing and exchange trading requirement as possible.This may seem counter-intuitive as ICE would benefit handsomely if all trades had to be processed by their clearinghouse for a fee. But it would not benefit the big banks who are partners with ICE in ICE Trust. The big banks have an incentive to create as many exemptions in the clearing and exchange trading requirement as possible. Previously, if an airline or a manufacturer wanted to purchase a derivatives contract they had to do it through a big bank, as the big banks had good credit ratings and were seen as a safe place to make these trades. This allowed the big banks to charge both the user and the trader fees for making the contract. If all derivatives contracts are required to be traded on exchanges or cleared then the users and traders could simply make contracts with each other rather than relying on a bank as a go-between. With a wide-range of exemptions to clearing and exchange trading, derivatives contracts could still be made within the big banks and then contracts made by big banks could cleared through a clearinghouse like ICE Trust.

Over the past three years, ICE increased its lobbying operation in Washington. Last year, ICE spent nearly $700,000 to lobby Congress and the executive branch. In their pursuit of lobbying talent, ICE poached a top member of the House Financial Services Committee staff, Peter Roberson. ICE picked well. Roberson had a hand in crafting the House bill's derivatives language, including its many exemptions. Roberson's job switch infuriated his former boss Barney Frank, who subsequently banned committee staff from talking to Roberson while he remains chairman of the committee.

ICE's campaign contributions increased as well. Sen. Lincoln was the recipient of $12,300 in campaign contributions from ICE's employees and political action committee. The only member of Congress to receive more in 2009 is Banking Committee Chairman Chris Dodd, who is no longer running for reelection.

Revolving Door Staffer Rebuked, Permanently Banned From Talking to Committee Staff

Earlier this week, Peter Roberson, a top staffer on the House Financial Services Committee, jumped ship to lobby for Intercontinental Exchange, Inc., the owner of the largest credit-default swap house. Today, Financial Services Committee Chair Barney Frank issued a statement banning committee staff from talking to Roberson about financial regulation or financial matters until Frank is no longer chairman.

Roberson previously worked as a lobbyist for the financial services industry. From 2000 to 2006, Roberson worked for the Bond Market Association. In 2006, Roberson joined the Financial Services Committee as a senior advisor and worked as part of a team to draft rules in the financial reform bill to cover over-the-counter derivatives and credit-default swaps. Ryam Grim reported that the part of the bill that Roberson worked on "has been criticized as one of the weakest elements of the package. Since its passage, Frank has said that he would be pleased if the Senate is able to pass tighter derivatives regulation."

Roberson is one of the worst examples of the revolving door between government and the lobbying world. Both require expertise and those with that expertise can move in and out of either world to increase their market potential. Roberson began as a financial services lobbyist, went into Congress to write rules governing financial services companies and then left Congress to help a financial services company navigate and circumvent the very rules he helped write. There are fewer more striking examples of corruption than Roberson's spin through the revolving door.

Ratigan Waves Sunlight In Frank's Face

MSNBC's Dylan Ratigan flashes an infographic made by Sunlight's Kerry Mitchell detailing the percentage of contributions from the finance, insurance and real estate sector for top Financial Services Committee members while debating committee chair Barney Frank. Here's the original graphic and accompanying post. And the video:

Top Financial Services Committee Members Rely Heavily On Finance Campaign Contributions

One year after the biggest economic collapse since the Great Depression, Congress is still debating new financial regulations to protect consumers and prevent risk-taking in the financial sector. The House Committee on Financial Services is currently undertaking the important first step of writing, amending and voting on some of the pieces of the long-proposed financial regulatory reform. While debating these issues top committee members have been the recipients of disproportionate campaign contributions from the very industry that they are tasked with regulating.

Twenty-seven committee members have so far received over one-quarter of their contributions from the finance, insurance and real estate (FIRE) sector. This includes Chair Barney Frank, Ranking Member Spencer Bachus, four subcommittee chairs and four subcommittee ranking members. Of the twenty-seven, twelve committee members received over 35% of their contributions in 2009 from the FIRE sector. All contribution data was collected from the Center for Responsive Politics' OpenSecrets.org.

Ranking Member Bachus, a crucial decision maker on the committee, received 71% of his campaign contributions from the finance, insurance and real estate (FIRE) sector so far this year. (These numbers run from January 1-June 30.) For his career, the Alabama congressman receives 45% of his contributions from the FIRE sector. Bachus leads the committee in his reliance on FIRE sector campaign contributions. Bachus has taking a position in opposition to most of the regulatory reforms. Bachus recently stated in a hearing, "this is absolutely the wrong time to be creating a new government agency empowered not only to ration credit, but to design the financial products offered to consumers."

Top Recipients of FIRE Campaign Contributions by % (2009)
Name Party FIRE Contributions Total Contributions Percentage
Spencer Bachus R $161,200 $226,930 71.04%
Kenny Marchant R $25,000 $46,043 54.30%
Paul Kanjorski D $215,200 $397,215 54.18%
Greg Meeks D $114,900 $218,340 52.62%
Mike Castle R $104,000 $200,027 51.99%
Dennis Moore D $139,097 $275,480 50.49%
Mel Watt D $23,000 $50,696 45.37%
Melissa Bean D $269,800 $634,535 42.52%
Ed Royce R $200,635 $504,418 39.78%
Randy Neugebauer R $146,810 $384,205 38.21%
Jeb Hensarling R $140,660 $371,731 37.84%
Nydia Velazquez D $58,100 $164,750 35.27%
View the bar chart

Pennsylvania Rep. Paul Kanjorski is the Chair of the Subcommittee on Capital Markets, Insurance, and Government Sponsored Enterprises and is tasked with crafting many of the initial bills for the proposed financial regulatory reform. While undertaking this important work Kanjorski has had enough time to raise large sums for his reelection. Of the $397,215 that Kanjorski has raised in 2009, 54% of it comes from the FIRE sector. For his career, Kanjorski received 44% of his contributions from the FIRE sector. Of all Financial Services Committee members, only Kanjorski and Bachus receive over 40% of their career campaign contributions from the FIRE sector.

Kanjorski has stated that he will be watchful of the influence the finance and insurance companies hold in the committee, “"We must ensure that special interests do not weaken particular solutions to the point of becoming toothless.” Earlier this year, however, Kanjorski held a fundraiser that was thrown by lobbyists for financial services organizations. Kanjorski refused to release a list of attendees to the fundraiser.

Recently, Kanjorski has introduced a series of bills to reform the regulatory structure for the SEC, hedge funds and insurance. Many trade groups and companies that have donated to Kanjorski and other committee members are organizing to oppose large sections of the bills.

The industry has already had successes this year. Committee consideration of a bill to create a proposed Consumer Financial Protection Agency was delayed after industry trade groups sent a letter to the committee demanding they delay consideration. The bill was later changed to be narrower in focus than the original language.

A Bloomberg report also notes that the derivatives lobby, headed by large banks JPMorganChase, Goldman Sachs and Credit Suisse, worked the New Democrats, including Rep. Melissa Bean, to get changes made to a bill aimed at filling holes in derivative regulation. Officials in the Obama administration stated that the resulting bill, released as a discussion draft, "created too many loopholes and had the potential to exclude all hedge funds and corporate end-users from oversight." Bean received 42% of her $634,535 in campaign contributions in 2009 from the FIRE sector.

While top committee committee members are seeing the FIRE sector make it rain on their campaign committees, a number of less senior members are pulling in more modest sums. Thirty-five committee members receive 20% or less of their 2009 contributions from the FIRE sector. Ten of these thirty-five members received 12% or less from the FIRE sector so far in 2009, half of the 24% committee average.

These bottom twelve include Rep. Maxine Waters, who has received no money from the sector, and Rep. Ron Paul who has pulled in only $1,000 or 3% of his 2009 campaign haul. The other members in the bottom ten are Reps. Steve Driehaus (8%), Keith Ellison (8%), Mary Jo Kilroy (8%), Frank Lucas (9%), Carolyn McCarthy (11%), Alan Grayson (12%), Adam Putnam (12%) and Al Green (12%).

All campaign contribution data is courtesy of the Center for Responsive Politics (OpenSecrets.org) A CSV of the research is available. Feel free to use it, but please cite Sunlight and CRP/OpenSecrets.