Mulvaney under fire for remarks about meeting with lobbyists as a lawmaker

OMB Director Mick Mulvaney stirred controversy with recent remarks to bankers.

Mulvaney, however, then added that constituents from his South Carolina home district would be granted access first and foremost.

“If you came from back home and sat in my lobby, I talk to you without exception, regardless of the financial contributions,” he said.

ABC News independently obtained a transcript of remarks reported first by the New York Times Tuesday evening.

While in Congress, Mulvaney was a vocal opponent of the CFPB and advocated for its elimination, but while he has moved to scale back the agency's oversight functions deemed by conservatives as over burdensome, he has insisted he would not do so in a way that would violate the law.

Explaining the context of the remarks, Mulvaney’s senior advisor John Czwartacki told ABC News that those who have attacked Mulvaney's remarks are not considering the overall context.

“As you can see he was praising people who come to town to participate in the democratic process and saying how being from back home was more important than being a lobbyist or having contributed cash," Czwartacki said. "Very different than others seem to be sharing and saying.”

“They will never know as much about your industry as you do,” Mulvaney says of lawmakers. “They will never know as much about your issues as you do. And they will not know that it is as important to you as it is until you tell them.”