Not draining the swamp, but spraying it
By Robert Faturechi, ProPublica, and Danielle Ivory, The New York Times
This story was
co-published with The New York Times.
At a private meeting
in September, congressional aides asked Rebeckah Adcock, a top official at the
Department of Agriculture, to reveal the identities of the people serving on
the deregulation team she leads at the agency.
Teams like Adcock’s,
created under an executive order by President Trump, had been taking heat from
Democratic lawmakers over their secrecy.
What little was publicly known suggested that some of the groups’ members had deep ties to the industries being regulated.
What little was publicly known suggested that some of the groups’ members had deep ties to the industries being regulated.
Adcock, a former
pesticide industry executive, brushed off the request, according to House aides
familiar with the exchange, who asked for anonymity because they were not
authorized to comment publicly. Making the names public, they recalled her
saying, would trigger a deluge of lobbyists.
In fact, interviews
and visitor logs at the Agriculture Department showed that Adcock had already
been meeting with lobbyists, including those from her former employer, the
pesticide industry’s main trade group, CropLife America, and its members.
CropLife pushes the agenda of pesticide makers in Washington, including easing
rules related to safety standards and clean water.











