milwaukee journal

More

Ron Kind joins D.C. law firm as senior policy adviser following retirement from Congress

  • March 11, 2023
U.S. Rep. Ron Kind of La Crosse, speaking at the 2016 Democratic Party of Wisconsin State Convention in Green Bay, did not run for reelection in 2022 after representing the western part of the state for 26 years.

U.S. Rep. Ron Kind of La Crosse, speaking at the 2016 Democratic Party of Wisconsin State Convention in Green Bay, did not run for reelection in 2022 after representing the western part of the state for 26 years.

WASHINGTON – Former U.S. Rep. Ron Kind isn’t cutting ties with D.C. following his retirement from Congress at the end of last year.

The Wisconsin Democrat is joining the Washington-based law firm Arnold & Porter as a senior policy advisor with the firm’s legislative and public policy practice, the group told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.

Kind will counsel the firm’s clients dealing with the government on issues ranging from tax and trade regulations to health care and retirement security issues. Some of that work could involve helping clients navigate recent legislation passed through Congress.

“It’s a good fit because it checks all the right boxes for me,” Kind told the Journal Sentinel. “It’ll be fun to be able to continue working in those areas that I’ve devoted so much of my life to already.”

Kind, who represented Wisconsin’s 3rd Congressional District since his election in 1996, served on the House Ways and Means Committee, a powerful panel that is effectively Congress’ chief tax-writing body, carving out a role on Capitol Hill as a pro-trade Democrat. He focused throughout his career, in part, on health care-related issues and was largely recognized as one of the more bipartisan members of Congress during his 26 year tenure.

His move into the D.C. policy world is not unusual for lawmakers after they retire from Congress. Former Connecticut Democratic U.S. Sen. Christopher Dodd serves as senior legal counsel for Arnold & Porter.

In an interview, Kind, who received a law degree from the University of Minnesota and was previously a district attorney in Wisconsin, said he is

Read the rest