Press "Enter" to skip to content

PR Eric Greitens’ Mission to Clean Up Jefferson City

St. Louis, MO – Today, Navy SEAL and conservative outsider for Governor Eric Greitens announced his ethics package in his mission to clean up Jefferson City. This plan comes at a time when watered-down ethics reform is being considered without any real or meaningful leadership from Governor Nixon.

Eric Greitens’ plan includes:

Discussing his mission, Greitens stated, “The first step to a more vibrant and hopeful Missouri, full of great jobs, and providing every child with a world-class education is creating an open, honest, and ethical environment in Jefferson City. Career politicians have taken us in the opposite direction. When I’m governor, with this ethics package, we will change the course!”

The details of Eric’s full mission to bring real reform to Jefferson City is below:

#1: Term Limits for Every Statewide Office Holder

Every statewide office in Missouri should be subject to term limits. This includes the offices of Lieutenant Governor, Secretary of State, Attorney General, and State Auditor. Missouri needs proven leaders, not career politicians. 

#2: Ban all Gifts from Lobbyists

The culture of corruption in Jefferson City must end. Since 2004, politicians in Missouri have taken approximately $10.9 million in gifts from lobbyists. This game of trading lavish gifts and high-dollar steak dinners for special favors must end. Today in Missouri, legislators dine out, and when it comes time to pay the bill, they call in the credit card of a lobbyist. Public office is about service. Not free meals. Not free tickets. Not free trips. When I am governor we will ban all gifts from lobbyists. 

#3: Close the Revolving Door Between Legislators and Special Interests

To end the culture of corruption, the revolving door between legislators and special interests needs to be nailed shut. Too many politicians try to “cash in” by becoming lobbyists as soon as they leave office. When I’m Governor, we’ll end the culture of cashing in with a simple rule: for every year you serve in office, you have to wait a year before you can do paid lobbying in Missouri. If you serve one year, you have to wait one year before you can lobby. Serve two, then you wait two. And if you’re a career politician who has been in office for twenty years, then you wait twenty years before you can engage in paid lobbying. 

#4: End Campaign Contributions while the Legislature is in Session

Today, Missouri’s elected officials accept campaign contributions while the legislature is in session. This means that dollars flow from special interests to politicians, at the very time that legislators are considering passing laws to benefit these contributors. When I’m Governor, we’ll establish a level and clean playing field, so that no state elected official or candidate for elected office will be able to solicit or accept campaign contributions while the legislature is in session.

#5: Stop Politicians from Pocketing Campaign Money

Today in Missouri, a politician can raise money to run for office, drop out of the race, and keep the money. They can then turn around and use that money to fund a career as a lobbyist or a “consultant.” When I’m Governor, we’ll make it law that if a candidate for office decides not to run, they have to return all money to their donors within 30 days. 

#6: Report All Government Handouts

When I’m Governor, all candidates and elected officials will report every penny of government tax credits, contracts, salaries, and special interest handouts that they, their companies, and their families have received from the Federal and State government. Missouri is the Show-Me state. It’s time for politicians to be transparent with the people. If a candidate is in the business of taking special interest tax credits and contracts, then the people should know about it.

#7: End Donations from Companies Under Investigation

Our Attorney General takes money from the very companies that he is investigating. It’s a sad game. The companies contribute and the Attorney General does them favors. The companies and the politicians win; the people lose. When I’m Governor, no company that is subject to a state lawsuit or investigation will be able to make campaign contributions to any officeholder or candidate for office. 

#8: Stronger Ethics Enforcement

The Missouri Ethics Commission should have more robust power to conduct independent investigations. There will be a prosecutor in the Ethics Commission with the authority to impose stiff penalties for knowing, willing ethics violations, and harsher consequences when public trust is breached.