U.S. Attorney’s Office

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    Transparency Still Works Like a Paperwork Escape Room

    I keep hearing Washington say “transparency” like it’s a universal solvent, but the Lobbying Disclosure Act feels less like a ledger and more like a paperwork escape room: you can fill out the forms and still not reach the accountability exit. Follow the invoice, sure—if the invoice came with missing pages and a help desk that answers in sunsets.

    GAO’s report GAO-26-108486 puts numbers on the vibes. It found potential non-disclosure issues in roughly 22% of LD-2 reports related to required “covered positions.” And on enforcement, GAO says the U.S. Attorney’s Office received 12,391 referrals for failure to file from 2016–2025, with only about 46% resolved as compliant by December 2025. That’s not “all clear, citizens”—that’s “the system is still processing your certainty.”

    This is where the revolving-door PR line starts selling a magic trick: if influence is disclosed, then influence is fully knowable. But GAO is describing a disclosure pipeline that depends on accurate “covered position” reporting and timely follow-through on failure-to-file referrals. When transparency depends on whether paperwork was correctly completed and whether referrals get resolved fast enough, the experience for ordinary taxpayers stops being legibility and starts being roulette with forms.

    So yes, transparency exists. But what the design really delivers is a choose-your-own-adventure version of governance—where the accountability ending depends on compliance quality, referral volume, and processing timelines rather than voter consent. If the public’s “read the receipts” plan comes with missing labels and an aging stack of unresolved referrals, don’t call it transparency; call it procurement jazz hands for the donor class—done in a broom closet labeled “public access.”

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