HR-6106-119
Referred to the Committee on Foreign Affairs, and in addition to the Committees on the Judiciary, and Rules, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned.
Sponsored by August Pfluger (R-TX)
What it does
This bill would amend federal criminal law (18 U.S.C. § 207) to permanently prohibit any person who held a Senate-confirmed executive branch position from representing, aiding, or advising a foreign government of a designated "country of concern" before U.S. officials with intent to influence their decisions. The restriction would apply for life — with no time limit — to covered officials appointed after the bill's enactment, and would sunset after five years (meaning no new officials would become subject to it after that point). It also creates a congressional approval mechanism requiring a joint resolution before the Secretary of State can add or remove countries from the "country of concern" list.
Who benefits
The general public and national security interests, to the extent the bill reduces foreign adversary influence over U.S. policy. Current and future government employees who compete for post-government jobs against former officials with foreign government connections. Domestic lobbying and consulting firms that do not work for foreign adversaries. Whistleblowers and watchdog organizations focused on government ethics. Congress, which gains a formal role in approving changes to the "country of concern" list.
Who is hurt
Former and future Senate-confirmed officials (cabinet secretaries, agency heads, ambassadors, and others) who would permanently lose the ability to represent designated foreign governments in any advisory or advocacy capacity before U.S. officials. Law firms and consulting firms that currently employ former senior officials for foreign government work. Countries currently on the "country of concern" list that rely on U.S.-based former officials for diplomatic or policy engagement. Attorneys who provide legal advice to foreign governments may be indirectly affected, though the bill explicitly exempts licensed attorneys providing legal advice or representation in a legal capacity.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that existing post-employment "revolving door" restrictions — which typically last only one to two years — are inadequate to prevent senior officials from leveraging classified knowledge and high-level relationships on behalf of foreign adversaries indefinitely. They contend that a Senate-confirmed official's access to the most sensitive national security information, interagency relationships, and decision-making processes creates a permanent asymmetry that a time-limited cooling-off period cannot address. The bipartisan sponsorship (Pfluger and Crow) suggests the concern transcends party lines, and the bill's five-year sunset and congressional approval mechanism for expanding the country list provide structural safeguards against overreach.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that a lifetime ban on post-government employment activity is a severe and potentially unconstitutional restriction on the occupational liberty of former officials who have already served the public. They contend that the bill's breadth — covering all Senate-confirmed positions regardless of whether the official's role had any connection to the relevant foreign country — sweeps far more broadly than necessary, potentially deterring qualified candidates from accepting Senate-confirmed positions in the first place. Critics may also argue that delegating the "country of concern" definition to a joint resolution process creates a politicized mechanism that could be weaponized against countries for reasons unrelated to genuine national security threats.