Boehner Rents Apartment Owned by Lobbyist
in D.C.
Washington Post
By Thomas B. Edsall and Jonathan Weisman
Washington Post Staff Writers
Wednesday, February 8, 2006; Page A03
Rep. John A. Boehner (R-Ohio), who was elected House majority leader last
week, is renting his Capitol Hill apartment from a veteran lobbyist whose
clients have direct stakes in legislation Boehner has co-written and that he
has overseen as chairman of the Education and the Workforce Committee.
The relationship between Boehner, John D. Milne and Milne's wife, Debra R.
Anderson, underscores how intertwined senior lawmakers have become with the
lobbyists paid to influence legislation. Boehner's primary residence is in West
Chester, Ohio, but for $1,600 a month, he rents a two-bedroom basement
apartment near the House office buildings on Capitol Hill owned by Milne,
Boehner spokesman Don Seymour said yesterday. Boehner's monthly rent appears to
be similar to other rentals of two-bedroom English basement apartments close to
the House side of the Capitol in Southeast, based on a review of apartment
listings.
Milne's clients -- including restaurant chains and health insurance
companies -- hired him to lobby on issues at the heart of Boehner's work,
including minimum-wage increases, small-business tax breaks and tax-free
savings accounts to help cover insurance costs, congressional lobbying records
show.
In the weeks preceding last week's GOP leadership elections, Boehner
acknowledged his close ties to the lobbying community, but he assured
Republican lawmakers that all of his relationships were ethical and he
campaigned on a platform of change and reform. Seymour reiterated that message
last night.
"John Milne does not lobby John Boehner on any issue and has not lobbied him
on any issue during the time period in which John has been renting the
property," he said.
Seymour added that he does not know if other members of Milne's mCapitol
Management firm have lobbied Boehner. "We really have no idea on this one," he
said. "We'd have to know who else works for those firms, which we don't
offhand. It's possible the answer is yes, but we don't know."
House members may not accept anything from lobbyists worth more than $50. If
Boehner is paying market-rate rent, it would appear he is not violating that
rule.
Boehner's work closely coincides with the interests of Milne. In 2002, the
House approved the Economic Security and Worker Assistance Act, a tax measure
originally drafted by Boehner, Rep. Sam Johnson (R-Tex.) and Rep. Howard P.
"Buck" McKeon (R-Calif.) as the Back to Work Act. The measure eventually was
signed into law.
Lobbying disclosure forms indicate that one of Milne's clients, Fortis
Health Plans, hired him to lobby the Economic Security and Worker Assistance
Act.
Another client, the Buca di Beppo chain of Italian restaurants, hired Milne
to push the Small Business Tax Fairness Act, which would allow restaurants to
deduct the cost of investments at a faster pace. The measure was introduced by
Rep. Kay Granger (R-Tex.) in 2003, with Boehner as one of 15 co-sponsors. Many
of its provisions have since become law.
Fortis, now called Assurant Health, also asked Milne to push Health Savings
Accounts, the tax-free savings accounts established by Congress to help with
health care costs not covered by high-deductible plans. Boehner is a proponent
of such accounts, which President Bush is targeting for a major expansion.
Buca di Beppo and another restaurant chain, Parasole Restaurant Holdings
Inc., also hired Milne to lobby on the minimum wage and tax credits for tips,
issues directly under the Education and the Workforce Committee's purview.
The restaurant industry has long fought minimum-wage increases, seeking
instead to augment restaurant wages with tips that become more valuable if they
can avoid taxation. Despite numerous attempts by Democrats and some pro-labor
Republicans, the minimum wage has not been raised since 1997, when it was
lifted from $4.75 to $5.15. Since then, inflation has eroded its value to
near-record lows.
That such companies would hire Milne is no mystery. His firm overtly
promotes its connections to influential lawmakers.
"At mCapitol Management, we specialize in leveraging relationships on our
clients' behalf. Our bipartisan team's unique resources allow our clients
unparalleled access at the international, federal, state and local level," the
firm's Web site boasts.
Milne could not be reached by phone or e-mail. His wife, Anderson, who is on
the advisory board of mCapitol, said she and her husband have been friends with
Boehner and his wife for years. After buying the house in 2004, she said, she
mentioned at a social gathering that they had a place to rent, and Boehner said
he was interested.
Anderson described Boehner as an "excellent tenant" who pays his rent on
time.
Seymour said Boehner originally met Anderson in the early 1990s, when she
worked in the administration of President George H.W. Bush.
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