You may have heard this phrase: “You can’t get something for nothing.”

Or you surely have heard this one: “There’s no such thing as a free lunch.”

And there’s no such thing as a free, privately funded trip for our members of Congress.

Congressional travel became a hot topic with the Jack Abramoff scandal, in which the lobbyist plied congressmen with trips, gifts and meals in exchange for political favors. After Abramoff, in 2007, Congress passed a new ethics rule that says its members can’t accept trips that last more than one day from organizations that retain lobbyists.

But that rule has been subverted by another phrase: “Where there’s a will, there’s a way.”

Organizations are still paying for congressional trips but have separate but affiliated lobbying organizations. And members of Congress are still going on trips.

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Members of Congress, or their mouthpieces, say these types of trips are educational. And probably, they are. But they’re intended to educate the trip-takers on the organization’s point of view.

There really is no such thing as a free lunch. The thing is, we’re paying for it, too, when our representatives are getting their “education” from these organizations.

— The Post-Crescent,

Appleton, Wis., March 18

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