We hope it does not surprise you to hear that since taking office, Donald Trump has failed to follow through on a vast array of promises he made on the campaign trail. Mexico, of course, has not paid for the Wall. Obamacare has been neither repealed nor replaced. Sweeping tax reform looks, at best, as though it’ll just be a massive tax cut that, rather than help the middle class, will disproportionately benefit the ultra-rich. And—you may want to sit down for this one—Trump’s signature pledge to “drain the swamp” seems to have fallen flat as well.

Politico reports that, despite rolling out a five-point plan last year showing the exact steps it would take to crack down on Washington lobbying, the Trump administration has only implemented one: an executive order banning executive-branch employees from lobbying on behalf of foreign governments and political parties abroad after they leave the administration. (Beyond signing the E.O., it is unclear how the rule will actually be enforced.)

Meanwhile, the promise to ban ex-executive branch officials from lobbying for five years was drastically narrowed—instead, they're barred only from lobbying for agencies where they've worked (and there has been no movement in Congress to turn that ban into law). The administration’s additional promises—to extend the amount of time former lawmakers are barred from lobbying; to ban anyone lobbying on behalf of foreign interests from making political contributions; and to broaden the actual definition of lobbying—have received less attention from Trump than the people of Puerto Rico.

Even when lawmakers have taken the lead, they’ve been met with radio silence from the White House. Representative David Trott introduced legislation that would ban lawmakers from lobbying after leaving office for a period of five years, but he has heard nary a peep from the West Wing, Politico reports. Same goes for Senators Michael Bennett, Al Franken, and Cory Gardner, who put forth a bill to increase the amount of time former congressional staffers would be barred from lobbying, and would ban former members of Congress from lobbying for life.

In fact, rather than being cut off at the knees, the lobbying business seems to be flourishing under the Donald. In the first half of 2017, spending hit nearly $1.7 billion, the highest since 2012. “I don’t think that anything’s really changed,” Republican lobbyist Brian Wild told Politico. “If anything, the lobbying business is booming right now.”