Constraints Imposed by 18 U.S.C. § 1913 on
Lobbying Efforts
The Anti-Lobbying A ct prohibits substantial “grass roots” lobbying campaigns o f telegrams,
letters, and other private forms o f com m unication designed to encourage members o f
the pu blic to pressure Members o f Congress to support Administration or Department
legislative o r appropriations proposals.
The Anti-Lobbying A ct d o e s not prohibit (1) direct com m unications between Department o f
Justice officials and Members o f Congress and their staffs; (2) public speeches, appear
ances, and writings; (3) private com m unications designed to inform the public about
Administration positions or to prom ote those positions, as long as there is no significant
expenditure o f appropriated funds; (4) the traditional activities o f Department com p o
nents w h o se duties historically h ave included com m unicating the Department’s views
to Congress, the media, or the pu blic; or (5) com m unications or activities unrelated to
legislation o r appropriations, s u ch as lobbying Congress or the public to support
Administration nominees.
September 28, 1989
M e m o r a n d u m O p in io n f o r t h e A t t o r n e y G e n e r a l
I. Introduction
You have requested our guidance concerning the extent to which the
Anti-Lobbying Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1913 (the “Act”), imposes constraints on
activities by executive branch employees that relate to legislative mat
ters. Section 1913, which has not been the basis o f a single prosecution
since its enactment in 1919, prohibits the use o f appropriated funds for
activities designed to influence Members of Congress concerning any
legislation or appropriation.
To summarize our analysis o f this statute, we offer the following guide
lines for you and the Department as to what lobbying activities are
permitted and prohibited.
Permitted activities:
1. The Act does not apply to direct communications between Department
o f Justice officials and Members of Congress and their staffs. Consequently,
there is no restriction on Department officials directly lobbying Members of
Congress and their staffs in support o f Administration or Department
positions.
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2. The Act does not apply to public speeches, appearances and writ
ings. Consequently, Department officials are free to publicly advance
Administration and Department positions, even to the extent o f calling on
the public to encourage Members of Congress to support Administration
positions.
3. The Act does not apply to private communications designed to
inform the public o f Administration positions or to promote those posi
tions. Thus, there is no restriction on private communications with mem
bers of the public as long as there is not a significant expenditure o f
appropriated funds to solicit pressure on Congress.
4. The Act does not circumscribe the traditional activities of Depart
ment components whose duties historically have included responsibility
for communicating the Department’s views to Members o f Congress, the
media, or the public.
5. By its terms, the Act is inapplicable to communications or activities
unrelated to legislation or appropriations. Consequently, there is no
restriction on Department officials lobbying Congress or the public to
support Administration nominees.
Prohibited activities:
The Act may prohibit substantial “grass roots” lobbying campaigns of
telegrams, letters and other private forms o f communication designed
to encourage members o f the public to pressure Members o f Congress
to support Administration or Department legislative or appropriations
proposals.
If a question should arise with respect to any activity not listed here,
we would be happy to analyze whether the statute applies to it.
II. Discussion
Section 1913 o f title 18 provides:
No part o f the money appropriated by any enactment of
Congress shall, in the absence of express authorization by
Congress, be used directly or indirectly to pay for any per
sonal service, advertisement, telegram, telephone, letter,
printed or written matter, or other device, intended or
designed to influence in any manner a Member o f Congress,
to favor or oppose, by vote or otherwise, any legislation or
appropriation by Congress, whether before or after the
introduction o f any bill or resolution proposing such legis
lation or appropriation; but this shall not prevent officers or
employees o f the United States or o f its departments or
agencies from communicating to Members o f Congress on
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the request o f any Member or to Congress, through the
proper official channels, requests for legislation or appro
priations which they deem necessary for the efficient con
duct o f the public business.
Whoever, being an officer or employee o f the United
States or o f any department or agency thereof, violates or
attempts to violate this section, shall be fined not more
than $500 or imprisoned not more than one year, or both;
and after notice and hearing by the superior officer vested
with the power of removing him, shall be removed from
office or employment.
Several limitations on the otherwise expansive scope o f this provision
appear from the statute’s face.
First, the statute applies only to activities “intended or designed to
influence ... legislation or appropriations.” Thus, lobbying activities related
to other matters, such as nominations and treaties, are not subject to the
statute.
Second, the statute prohibits only lobbying that is conducted in the
form o f the provision of a personal service or advertisement, that is pre
sented in written form, or that is communicated by telephone or “other
device.” Read in context, the prohibition on other “device[s]” does not
appear to prohibit speeches or other verbal communications that are not
relayed by telephone. Thus, we do not believe that the statute prohibits
public speeches by executive branch employees aimed at generating
public support for Administration policies and legislative proposals.
Third, the statute makes clear that it does not prohibit government
officials from communicating “to Members of Congress on the request of
any Member or to Congress, through the proper official channels” on
matters those officials “deem necessary for the efficient conduct o f the
public business.”1 Thus, the statute does not bar contacts between
Administration officials and Congress that are initiated by Members of
Congress or that relate to requests for legislation or appropriations that
the executive branch employee in the fulfillment o f his official duties
deems necessary to conduct the public business. Consistent with this
provision, this Office and the Criminal Division previously have con
cluded that section 1913 does not apply to the lobbying activities of
executive branch officials whose positions typically and historically
entail an active effort to secure public support for the Administration’s
1 Congressman Good, who introduced the bill, was asked whether the bill was “intended .. to prevent
the employees or officers o f the Government from communicating directly with their Representatives in
Congress.” He replied, “No, that is expressly reserved.... They have, o f course, the nght to communicate,
just as before, with their Members of C ongress" 58 Cong. Rec. 404 (1919)
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legislative program.2 Such officials include presidential aides, appointees,
and their delegees in areas within their official responsibility.3
This construction o f section 1913 is strongly supported by the statute’s
exemption o f lobbying activities that are conducted pursuant to an
“express authorization by Congress.” We believe that Congress’ contin
ued appropriation o f funds for positions held by executive branch offi
cials whose duties historically have included seeking support for the
Administration’s legislative program constitutes “express authorization
by Congress” for the lobbying activities o f these officials, and thus, that
their activities are exempt from section 1913.4 Officials whose activities
are covered by this “express authorization” exception to section 1913
include the President, his aides and assistants within the Executive
Office of the President, Cabinet members within their areas o f responsi
bility, and persons to whom the Cabinet official traditionally has assigned
such responsibilities.5
The legislative history to section 1913 sheds additional light on the type
of activities that Congress intended to bar. Representative Good, who
introduced the bill, described the statute’s purpose as follows:
[I]t will prohibit a practice that has been indulged in so
often, without regard to what administration is in power —
the practice o f a bureau chief or the head o f a department
writing letters throughout the country, sending telegrams
throughout the country, for this organization, for this man,
for that company to write his Congressman, to wire his
Congressman, in behalf o f this or that legislation. The gen
tleman from Kentucky, Mr. Sherley, former chairman o f this
committee, during the closing days of the last Congress was
greatly worried because he had on his desk thousands upon
thousands of telegrams that had been started right here in
Washington by some official wiring out for people to write
Congressman Sherley for this appropriation and for that.
2Sec Memorandum for Arthur B Culvahouse, Jr, Counsel to the President, from Charles J Cooper,
Assistant Attorney General, Office o f Legal Counsel, Re Applicability o f 18 U.S.C 1913 to Lobbying
Efforts in Support o f Ratification o f INF Treaty at, 6 n 7 (Dec. 31, 1987) ( “Culvahouse Memo”);
Memorandum for John R Bolton, Assistant Attorney General, Office o f Legislative Affairs, from Charles
J Cooper, Assistant Attorney General, Office o f Legal Counsel, Re. Applicability of 18 U S.C. 1913 to
Contracts Between United States Attorneys and Members of Congress m Support of Pending
Legislation at 5-6 (Oct. 27, 1987) ( “Bolton Memo”), Memorandum for Paul Michel, Acting Deputy
Attorney General, from John M Harmon, Assistant Attorney General, Office o f Legal Counsel, Re: Alleged
Violations o f 18 U S C 1913 at 2, 3-4 (Feb 20, 1980) (“Michel Memo"), Memorandum for Philip B
Ileymann, Assistant Attorney General, Criminal Division, from Thomas H Henderson, Jr, Chief, Public
Integnty Section, Criminal Division at 8-10 (Oct. 15, 1979) ( “Henderson Memo”)
3See Michel Memo at 3.
4Culvahouse Memo at 6 n.7; Bolton Memo at 5-6, Henderson Memo at 8-10; Michel Memo at 2, 3-4
5 We caution, however, against these officials engaging in “grass-roots” campaigns o f the type men
tioned in the legislative history to section 1913 See infra pp 303-04.
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Now, they use the contingent fund for that purpose, and I
have no doubt that the telegrams sent for that purpose cost
the Government more than $7,500. Now, it was never the
intention o f Congress to appropriate money for this pur
pose, and section 5 o f the bill will absolutely put a stop to
that sort o f thing.
58 Cong. Rec. 403 (1919). These remarks demonstrate that Congress
was concerned about the use o f appropriated funds to implement
“grass roots”6 mass mailing campaigns at great expense.7 Based on this
legislative history, this Office consistently has concluded that the
statute was enacted to restrict the use o f appropriated funds for large-
scale, high-expenditure campaigns specifically urging private recipi
ents to contact Members o f Congress about pending legislative matters
on behalf o f an Administration position. See, e.g., Michael Memo at 5
(section 1913 was intended to “prohibit the Executive from using
appropriated funds to create artificially the impression that there is a
ground swell o f public support for the Executive’s position on a given
piece o f legislation”).8 Accordingly, we do not believe the statute
should be construed to prohibit the President or executive branch
agencies from engaging in a general open dialogue with the public on
the Administration’s programs and policies. Nor do we believe the
statute should be construed to prohibit public speeches and writings
designed to generate support for the Administration’s policies and leg
islative proposals.
Because section 1913 imposes criminal penalties, it is appropriate that
it be construed narrowly. Under the widely recognized “rule of lenity,”
criminal provisions subject to more than one reasonable construction
should be interpreted narrowly, and ambiguity should be resolved in
favor o f lenience. See, e.g., Bifulco v. United States, 447 U.S. 381 (1980);
3 Sutherland, Statutory Construction §§ 59.03-59.06 (4th ed. 1973). In
addition, a narrow construction of section 1913 is necessary to avoid the
constitutional issues that would arise if the section were interpreted as
0 By “grass roots” lobbying we mean communications by executive officials directed to members o f the
public at large, or particular segments o f the general public, intended to persuade them in turn to
communicate with their elected representatives on some issue o f concern to the executive. This type of
activity is to be distinguished from communications by executive officials aimed directly at the elected
representatives themselves, no matter how much incidental publicity those communications may receive
in the normal course o f press coverage See Memorandum for Robert J Lipshutz, Counsel to the
President, from John M. Harmon, Assistant Attorney General, Office o f Legal Counsel, Re- Anti-Lobbying
Laws at 10 (Nov 29, 1977) (“ 1977 Harmon M emo") ( “As long as a federal official limits himself to pub
lic forums and relies upon normal workings o f the press, he may say anything he wishes without fear of
violating section 1913.").
7Our calculations indicate that an expenditure o f $7500 in 1919 would be roughly equivalent to one of
$50,000 today.
8Culvahouse Memo at 6 n.7; Bolton M emo at 5; 1977 Harmon Memo at 10-14.
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imposing a broader ban.9 In previous analyses o f this statute, we have
identified at least three serious constitutional problems that would arise
if section 1913 were construed as a blanket prohibition on executive
branch activities relating to legislation or appropriations.
First, construing section 1913 broadly to restrict executive branch con
tacts with Members of Congress would interfere with the President’s con
stitutionally mandated role in the legislative process. Article II, Section 3,
Clause 1 o f the Constitution provides that the President “shall from time
to time give to the Congress Information o f the State of the Union, and
recommend to their Consideration such Measures as he shall judge nec
essary and expedient.” This Clause imposes on the President a responsi
bility to recommend measures to Congress and constitutes a formcil basis
for the President’s role in influencing the legislative process.10 The
President cannot be deprived o f this capacity to explain why he believes
particular measures are “necessary and expedient.”
Second, legislation curtailing the President’s ability to implement his
legislative program through communications with Congress and the
American people would infringe upon his constitutional obligation to
“take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed.” U.S. Const, art. II, § 3.11
It would be impossible for the President to fulfill this constitutional
responsibility if he could not communicate freely with those who make
the laws, as well as with those whose actions are governed by them.
Third, section 1913, if construed broadly, would weaken the constitu
tional framework established in Article II, which in general imposes on
the President the duty to communicate with the American people. The
President, o f course, “is a representative o f the people, just as the mem
bers of the Senate and o f the House are.” Myers v. United States, 272 U.S.
52, 123 (1926). Indeed, “on some subjects ... the President, elected by all
the people, is rather more representative o f them all than are the mem
bers o f either body o f the Legislature, whose constituencies are local and
not country wide.” Id. Because o f his unique position as the only elected
9See 1977 Harmon Memo, supra note 6 See also Letter for Leo Krulitz, Solicitor, Department o f the
Intenor, from John M. Harmon, Assistant Attorney General, Office o f Legal Counsel (July 18, 1978);
Memorandum for Assistant Attorney General McConnell, from Deputy Assistant Attorney General
Simms (Oct. 5, 1982) (forwarding a proposed draft report on S 1969, a bill to “prohibit the use o f appro
priations for the payment o f certain lobbying costs").
10See Edward S Corwin, The Constitution of the United States 536 (2d ed. 1973) The early Presidents,
Washington, Jefferson and Jackson among them, took an active role in their relations with Congress.
“Today there is no subject on which the President may not appropriately communicate with Congress, in
as precise terms as he chooses, his conception o f its duty ” Id at 537.
11 Supreme Court precedent establishes that Congress may not interfere with the President’s ability to
carry out his constitutional prerogatives. See, for example, Hart v. United States, 118 U.S. 62 (1886), and
United States v. Klein, 80 U S (13 Wall.) 128 (1872), invalidating congressional attempts to interfere with
the President’s pardon power. Even where, as here, Congress acts pursuant to its appropriations power,
its authonty is not absolute Congress may not, for example, use its appropnations power to establish a
religion, Flast v. Cohen, 392 U.S. 83, 104-05 (1968), or to diminish the compensation o f federal judges.
United States v. Will, 449 U.S 200(1980).
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official with a truly “‘national’ perspective,” INS v. Chadha, 462 U.S. 919,
948 (1983), it is necessary to the independent power of the executive
branch that the President be able to communicate freely with the citizens
o f the United States, including on matters that relate to legislative affairs.
Thus, reading section 1913 broadly to restrict all communications with
the public with respect to legislation or appropriations would interfere
with the executive’s ability to perform his constitutionally imposed
responsibilities.12
III. Conclusion
We conclude that section 1913 prohibits large-scale publicity cam
paigns to generate citizen contacts with Congress on behalf o f an
Administration position with respect to legislation or appropriations. It
does not proscribe lobbying activities with respect to other matters, such
as nominations or treaties. It does not prohibit speeches or other com
munications designed to inform the public generally about Adminis
tration policies and proposals or to encourage general public support for
Administration positions. In addition, the statute does not prohibit con
tacts between executive branch officials and Members o f Congress that
either were initiated by the Member o f Congress, or that relate to a
request for legislation or appropriations that the employee deems “nec
essary for the efficient conduct of the public business.” Finally, the
statute does not prohibit lobbying activities expressly authorized by
Congress, such as activities by executive branch employees whose offi
cial duties historically have included lobbying functions, for whose posi
tions Congress has continued to appropriate funds.
WILLIAM P. BARR
Assistant Attorney General
Office o f Legal Counsel
12 To discharge these responsibilities effectively, the President must be permitted to employ the ser
vices o f his political aides, appointees and other officials Any restrictions on the ability o f such officials
to assist the President necessarily undermines the President’s ability to fulfill his constitutional respon
sibilities and amount to restrictions on the President himself. See Memorandum for Steve Markman,
Assistant Attorney General, Office o f Legal Policy, from John 0 McGinnis, Acting Deputy Assistant
Attorney General, Office o f Legal Counsel, Re. H R. 3400 - Application of Hatch Act to Senior Political
Appointees and Presidential Aides (Oct. 19, 1987) (Congress may not restrict the President’s ability to
communicate with the public by restricting those the President has chosen to assist him in this regard).
In particular, the President must be permitted to employ the services o f his political appointees and aides
necessary to effectuate his constitutionally protected ability to communicate with his constituency con
cerning the decisions for which the President, as the politically accountable head o f the executive
branch, is alone responsible For these reasons, section 1913 must be construed narrowly as it relates to
the ability o f executive branch employees to communicate with the public on legislative matters
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