It was widely reported this week that the 12 congressional members of the deficit-fixing so-called super-committee have received at least $41 million in campaign contributions from financiers over the years. And super-committee members have more than two dozen current or former aides who have represented Wall Street as lobbyists.
It was widely reported this week that the 12 congressional members of the deficit-fixing so-called super-committee have received at least $41 million in campaign contributions from financiers over the years. And super-committee members have more than two dozen current or former aides who have represented Wall Street as lobbyists.
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