(CNN) In a shot at former Rep. Blake Farenthold, a bill is scheduled to be introduced Wednesday in the House of Representatives -- appropriately named the BLAKE Act -- that would bar any former member of Congress from lobbying Congress if they have not paid back taxpayer money used in sexual harassment settlements.

Farenthold, a Texas Republican, has not paid back the $84,000 of taxpayer money he used to pay the settlement of a former aide who accused him of sexual harassment and improper conduct -- money that he once promised to repay. After resigning last year, Farenthold raised eyebrows months later when he was back on Capitol Hill lobbying for the Calhoun Port Authority. Farenthold is not lobbying at this time.

Republican Rep. Mark Walker of North Carolina will introduce the bill Wednesday morning. The formal name of the bill -- the "Bad Lawmakers Accountability and Key Emends Act" -- spells out BLAKE and, according to Walker's Communications Director Jack Minor, is "ironically directed" at Farenthold.

Reached on the phone by CNN, Farenthold declined to comment.

If passed into law, the measure could not force Farenthold and other members with outstanding settlements to pay them back, given that it will not be retroactive. But if the bill progresses, Walker would ask House leaders to enforce it retroactively.

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