Consumer Database Foe Draws Backing from Billionaire Koch Brothers

The recent opposition in the House of Representatives to a new product safety database — a system designed to let consumers search past complaints about an item before making a buying decision — has a key leader: Kansas Republican Mike Pompeo.

As The Sunlight Foundation reports, Pompeo in turn has crucial ties to one of the database’s staunchest and most deep-pocketed corporate opponents, Koch Industries, a consortium headed by the billionaire brothers David and Charles Koch.

The Kochs have long been generous donors to conservative and libertarian causes and politicians, among them Pompeo himself. According to the Center for Responsive Politics, Koch Industries’ political action committee and employees donated $79,500 to Pompeo’s November election campaign, nearly five times more than anyone else gave the freshman Congressman.

And when Pompeo last month succeeded in passing an appropriations amendment to defund the database, which was to be launched March 11 by the Consumer Product Safety Commission, the Kochs likely were among those celebrating. Two years ago, when the bill creating the database was before Congress, Koch Industries spent $220,000 to lobby against it.

Pompeo’s links to anti-database circles go beyond campaign contributions. His chief of staff, Mark Chenoweth, previously was a lawyer for Koch industries and also was chief counsel to Ann Northup, a Republican CPSC commissioner who has steadfastly opposed the database.

Personal ties notwithstanding, Pompeo’s office says the lawmaker’s stance on the database is strictly a matter of his political philosophy. “Congressman Pompeo was inspired to propose this amendment by his deep belief in economic freedom, his mission to create sound regulatory policy and a desire to make sure that consumers are not harmed by poor quality data being provided on a government sponsored website,” said Rachel Bauer Taylor, Pompeo’s communications director.

As The Washington Post has reported, consumer advocates are now scrambling to save the database. It would make public the thousands of complaints received by the CPSC every year about products ranging from table lamps to baby strollers.

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