Lobbying Relationship

Client

The Aaron's Company, Inc.

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Lobbying firm

Invariant LLC

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  • Monitor congressional proposals and deliberation on short-term lease ownership models; monitor developments in environmental, social, and corporate governance (ESG) federal rulemaking. Educate about the company's business model.
  • Monitor legislation impacting manufacturing supply chains and labor market.
  • Monitor privacy proposals, including H.R.1165, the Data Privacy Act of 2023.

Duration: to

General Issues: Financial Institutions/Investments/Securities, Manufacturing, Computer Industry, Consumer Issues/Safety/Protection, Trade (Domestic & Foreign)

Spending: about $660,000 (But it's complicated. Here's why.)

Agencies lobbied since 2022: U.S. Senate, House of Representatives, Housing & Urban Development - Dept of (HUD), Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC), Securities & Exchange Commission (SEC)

Affiliated organizations: Aaron's, LLC

Bills mentioned

H.R.1165: Data Privacy Act of 2023

Sponsor: Patrick T. McHenry (R-N.C.)

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Lobbyists

Lobbyists named here were listed on a filing related to this lobbying engagement. They may not be working on it now. Occasionally, a single lobbyist whose name is spelled two different ways on filings may be represented twice here.

Lobbyist Covered positions?
Nicole Venable Leg. Asst/Fellow, Rep. Lee Hamilton (1992-1993); Leg. Asst, Sen. Chuck Robb (1993-1996); Congressional Affairs Liaison, USTR (1996-1998); Sr Policy Adv, Rep. William J. Jefferson (1998-02); Chief of Staff, Rep. William J. Jefferson (2004-2005)
Carolyn Coda Special Assistant, Office of Legislative Affairs, US Department of the Treasury (2006-2008)
Joseph Vaughan Senior Diversity and Inclusion Policy Advisor and Designee, House Financial Services Subcommittee on Diversity and Inclusion (2020-2021)
Matt Russell Legislative Assistant, Committee on Ways and Means (2016-2018)
Quincy Enoch n/a
Jennifer Jacoby n/a

Disclosures Filed

Once a lobbying engagement begins, the lobbyist or firm is required to file updates four times a year. Those updates sometimes change which lobbyists are involved or add new issues being discussed. When lobbyists stop working for a client, the firm is also supposed to file a report disclosing the end of the relationship.

Q1 Report
Q4 Report
Q3 Report
Q2 Report
Q1 Report
Q4 Report
Q3 Report
Q2 Report
Q1 Report
Registration

Source: Clerk of the U.S. House of Representatives and Secretary of the Senate

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