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Wikipedia

Lobbying in the United States

Lobbying in the United States describes paid activity in which special interest groups hire well-connected professional advocates, often lawyers, to argue for specific legislation in decision-making bodies such as the United States Congress. It is often perceived negatively by journalists and the American public; critics consider it to be a form of bribery, influence peddling, and/or extortion.[1][2] Lobbying is subject to complex rules which, if not followed, can lead to penalties including jail. Lobbying has been interpreted by court rulings as free speech protected by the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Since the 1970s, the numbers of lobbyists and the size of lobbying budgets has grown and become the focus of criticism of American governance.

K Street in Washington, D.C., has become a metonym for the American lobbying industry.

Lobbying takes place at every level of government: federal, state, county, municipal, and local governments. In Washington, D.C., lobbyists usually target members of Congress, although there have been efforts to influence executive agency officials as well as Supreme Court appointees. Lobbying can have a strong influence on the political system; for example, a study in 2014 suggested that special interest lobbying enhanced the power of elite groups and was a factor shifting the nation's political structure toward an oligarchy in which average citizens have "little or no independent influence".[3]

The number of lobbyists in Washington is estimated to be over 12,000, but most lobbying (in terms of expenditures), is handled by fewer than 300 firms.[4] A report in The Nation in 2014 suggested that while the number of registered lobbyists in 2013 (12,281) decreased compared to 2002, lobbying activity was increasing and "going underground" as lobbyists use "increasingly sophisticated strategies" to obscure their activity.[5] Analyst James A. Thurber estimated that the actual number of working lobbyists was close to 100,000 and that the industry brings in $9 billion annually, mostly from corporations.[5] Wall Street spent a record $2 billion trying to influence the 2016 United States presidential election.[6][7]

Overview Edit

Political scientist Thomas R. Dye said that politics is about battling over scarce governmental resources: who gets them, where, when, why and how.[8] Since government makes the rules in a complex economy such as the United States, various organizations, businesses, individuals, nonprofits, trade groups, religions, charities and others—which are affected by these rules—will exert as much influence as they can to have rulings favorable to their cause.

 
The lobby of the House of Commons. Painting 1886 by Liborio Prosperi.

The term lobby has etymological roots in the physical structure of the British Parliament, in which there was an intermediary covered room outside the main hall. People pushing an agenda would try to meet with members of Parliament in this room, and they came to be known, by metonymy, as lobbyists, although one account in 1890 suggested that the application of the word "lobby" is American and that the term is not used as much in Britain.[9] The Willard Hotel, 2 blocks from the White House at 1401 Pennsylvania Avenue, claims the term originated there: "It was in the Willard lobby that Ulysses S. Grant popularized the term “lobbyist.” Often bothered by self-promoters as he sat in the lobby and enjoyed his cigar and brandy, he referred to these individuals as "lobbyists."[10]

The term lobbying suggests advocacy, advertising, or promoting a cause. A person who writes a letter to a congressperson, or even questions a candidate at a political meeting, could be construed as being a lobbyist.[11]

The term "lobbying" generally means a paid activity with the purpose of attempting to "influence or sway" a public official – including bureaucrats and elected officials – towards a desired specific action often relating to specific legislation.[12] If advocacy is disseminating information, then lobbying is when this activity becomes focused on specific legislation, either in support or in opposition.[12]

Lobbyists are intermediaries between client organizations and lawmakers: they explain to legislators what their organizations want, and they explain to their clients what obstacles elected officials face. Some lobbyists work for advocacy groups, trade associations, companies, and state and local governments.[13] A lobbyist may put together a diverse coalition of organizations and people, sometimes including lawmakers and corporations, and the whole effort may be considered to be a lobby; for example, in the abortion issue, there is a "pro-choice lobby" and an "anti-choice lobby".

Most federal lobbyists are based in Washington, DC;[14] an estimate from 2018 suggested that the count of registered lobbyists who actually lobbied that year was 11,656.[15] The Washington D.C. lobbying industry is an exclusive one, with serious barriers to entry, since it requires them to have been "roaming the halls of Congress for years and years."[4]

It is possible for foreign nations to influence the foreign policy of the United States through lobbying or by supporting lobbying organizations directly or indirectly.

Different types of lobbying Edit

The focus of lobbying efforts Edit

 
Lobbying depends on cultivating personal relationships over many years. Photo: Lobbyist Tony Podesta (left) with former Senator Kay Hagan (center) and her husband.

Generally, lobbyists focus on trying to persuade decision-makers: Congress, executive branch agencies such as the Treasury Department and the Securities and Exchange Commission,[16] the Supreme Court,[17] and state governments (including governors). Federal agencies are targeted by lobbyists because they write industry-specific rules; accordingly, interest groups spend "massive sums of money" trying to persuade them to make so-called "carve-outs" or try to block specific provisions from being enacted.[18] A large fraction of overall lobbying is focused on only a few sets of issues, according to one report.[19] It is possible for one level of government to lobby another level; for example, the District of Columbia has been lobbying Congress and the President for greater power, including possible statehood or voting representation in Congress; one assessment in 2011 suggested that the district needed to rethink its lobbying strategy, since its past efforts have only had "mixed results".[20] Many executive branch agencies have the power to write specific rules and are a target of lobbying. Federal agencies such as the State Department make rules such as giving aid money to countries such as Egypt, and in one example, an Egyptian-American businessman named Kais Menoufy organized a lobby to try to halt U.S. aid to Egypt.[21]

Lobbyists represent their clients' or organizations' interests in state capitols. An example is a former school superintendent who has been lobbying state legislatures in California, Michigan and Nevada to overhaul teacher evaluations, and trying to end the "Last In, First Out" teacher hiring process.[22] State governments can be lobbied by groups which represent other governments within the state, such as a city authority; for example, the cities of Tallahassee[23] and St. Petersburg[24] lobbied the Florida legislature using paid lobbyists to represent the city's interests. There is lobbying activity at the county[25] and municipal levels, especially in larger cities and populous counties. For example, some Chicago aldermen became lobbyists after serving in municipal government, following a one-year period required by city ethics rules to abstain from lobbying.[26]

Edit

While the bulk of lobbying happens by business and professional interests who hire paid professionals, some lobbyists represent non-profits pro-bono for issues in which they are personally interested. Pro bono publico clients offer activities to meet and socialize with local legislators at events like fundraisers and awards ceremonies.

Single issue versus multiple issue lobbying Edit

Lobbies which push for a single issue have grown in importance during the past twenty years.[11] Corporations generally would be considered as single issue lobbies. If a corporation wishes to change public policy, or to influence legislation which impacts its success as a business, it may use lobbying as a "primary avenue" for this purpose.[27] Lobbies which represent groups such as labor unions, business organizations, and trade associations may be considered multiple issue lobbies, and be willing to accept compromise.[11]

Inside versus outside lobbying Edit

  • Inside lobbying, or sometimes called direct lobbying, describes efforts by lobbyists to influence legislation or rule-making directly by contacting legislators and their assistants, sometimes called staffers or aides.
  • Outside lobbying, sometimes called indirect lobbying or grassroots lobbying, includes attempts by interest group leaders to mobilize citizens outside the policymaking community, perhaps by public relations methods or advertising, to prompt them to pressure public officials within the policymaking community.[28] One example of an outside lobbying effort is a film entitled InJustice, made by a group promoting lawsuit reform.[29] Some lobbyists are now using social media to reduce the cost of traditional campaigns, and to more precisely target public officials with political messages.[30]

Taxpayer-funded lobbying Edit

Taxpayer-funded lobbying is when one taxpayer-funded entity lobbies another taxpayer-funded entity, usually for more taxpayer-funds. In the United States this typically takes place in the form of State-level agencies or municipalities devoting part of their budget to lobby the State government for a larger budget.[31][32][33]

History of lobbying Edit

 
The Federalist Papers, in which Framers Madison, Hamilton and Jay strove to sway public opinion, could be considered according to current usage as an outside lobbying effort.

The Constitution was crafted in part to solve the problem of special interests, today usually represented by lobbies, by having these factions compete. James Madison identified a faction as "a number of citizens, whether amounting to a minority or majority of the whole, who are united and actuated by some common impulse of passion, or of interest, adverse to the rights of other citizens, or to the permanent and aggregate interests of the community",[1] and Madison argued in Federalist No. 10 that there was less risk of injury by a narrowly focused faction in a large republic if any negative influence was counteracted by other factions.[2][3] In addition, the Constitution protected free speech, including the right to petition the government,[11][34] and these rights have been used by lobbying interests throughout the nation's history. There has been lobbying at every level of government, particularly in state governments[35] during the nineteenth century, but increasingly directed towards the federal government in the twentieth century. The last few decades have been marked by an exponential increase in lobbying activity and expenditures.[36]

Lobbying as a business Edit

Key players Edit

Lobbyists Edit

The number of registered Washington lobbyists is substantial. In 2009, The Washington Post estimated that there were 13,700 registered lobbyists, describing the nation's Capitol as "teeming with lobbyists.".[4] In 2011, The Guardian estimated that in addition to the approximately 13,000 registered lobbyists, thousands more unregistered lobbyists could exist in Washington.[37] The ratio of lobbyists employed by the healthcare industry, compared with every elected politician, was six to one, according to one account.[37] Nevertheless, the numbers of lobbyists actively engaged in lobbying is considerably less, and the ones occupied with lobbying full-time and making significant money is even less.

  • Law firms: Several law firms, including Patton Boggs, Akin Gump and Holland & Knight, had sizable departments devoted to so-called "government relations".[38] One account suggested that the lobbying arms of these law firms were not held as separate subsidiaries, but that the law practices involved in government lobbying were integrated into the overall framework of the law firm.[38] A benefit to an integrated arrangement was that the law firm and the lobbying department could "share and refer clients back and forth".[38] Holland & Knight earned $13.9 million from lobbying revenue in 2011.[39] One law firm employs so-called "power brokers" including former Treasury department officials such as Marti Thomas, and former presidential advisers such as Daniel Meyer.[40] There was a report that two law firms were treating their lobbying groups as separate business units, and giving the non-lawyer lobbyists an equity stake in the firm.[38]
 
Defense contractors such as Boeing and Lockheed Martin sell extensively to the government and must, of necessity, engage in lobbying to win contracts.

Corporations Edit

Corporations which lobby actively tend to be few in number, large, and often sell to the government. Most corporations do not hire lobbyists.[4] One study found that the actual number of firms which do lobbying regularly is fewer than 300, and that the percent of firms engaged in lobbying was 10% from 1998 to 2006,[27] and that they were "mainly large, rich firms getting in on the fun."[4] These firms hired lobbyists year after year, and there was not much evidence of other large firms taking much interest in lobbying.[4] Corporations considering lobbying run into substantial barriers to entry: corporations have to research the relevant laws about lobbying, hire lobbying firms, and cultivate influential people and make connections.[4][41][42][43] When an issue regarding a change in immigration policy arose, large corporations currently lobbying switched focus somewhat to take account of the new regulatory world, but new corporations—even ones likely to be affected by any possible rulings on immigration—stayed out of the lobbying fray, according to the study.[27]

Still, of all the entities doing lobbying in Washington, the biggest overall spenders are, in fact, corporations. In the first decade of the 2000s, the most lucrative clients for Gerald Cassidy's lobbying firm were corporations, displacing fees from the appropriations business.[36] Wall Street lobbyists and the financial industry spent upwards of $100 million in one year to "court regulators and lawmakers", particularly since they were "finalizing new regulations for lending, trading and debit card fees."[44] One academic analysis in 1987 found that firms were more likely to spend on lobbying if they were both large and concerned about "adverse financial statement consequences" if they did not lobby.[45] Big banks were "prolific spenders" on lobbying; JPMorgan Chase has an in-house team of lobbyists who spent $3.3 million in 2010;[44] the American Bankers Association spent $4.6 million on lobbying;[44] an organization representing 100 of the nation's largest financial firms called the Financial Services Roundtable spent heavily as well.[44] A trade group representing Hedge Funds spent more than $1 million in one quarter trying to influence the government about financial regulations, including an effort to try to change a rule that might demand greater disclosure requirements for funds.[16] Amazon.com spent $450,000 in one quarter lobbying about a possible online sales tax as well as rules about data protection and privacy.[46] Corporations which sell substantially to the government tend to be active lobbiers. For example, aircraft manufacturer Boeing, which has sizeable defense contracts, pours "millions into lobbying":[47]

Boeing Co. is one of the most influential companies in airline manufacturing and has continually shown its influence in lobbying Congress ... Between January and September, Boeing spent a total of $12 million lobbying according to research by OpenSecrets. Additionally, Boeing has its own political action committee, which donated more than $2.2 million to federal candidates during the 2010 election cycle. Of that sum, 53 percent went to Democrats. ...Through September, Boeing's PAC has donated $748,000 to federal politicians.

In the spring of 2017, there was a fierce lobbying effort by Internet service providers (ISPs) such as Comcast and AT&T, and tech firms such as Google and Facebook, to undo regulations protecting consumer privacy.[48] Rules passed by the Obama administration in 2016 required ISPs to get "explicit consent" from consumers before gathering browsing histories, locations of businesses visited and applications used, but trade groups wanted to be able to sell this information for profit without consent.[48] Lobbyists connected with Republican senator Jeff Flake and Republican representative Marsha Blackburn to sponsor legislation to dismantle Internet privacy rules; Flake received $22,700 in donations and Blackburn received $20,500 in donations from these trade groups.[48] On March 23, 2017, abolition of privacy restrictions passed on a narrow party-line vote, and the lobbying effort achieved its result.[48] In 2017, credit reporting agency Equifax lobbied Congress extensively, spending $1.1 million in 2016 and $500,000 in 2017, seeking rules to limit damage from lawsuits and less regulatory oversight; in August 2017, Equifax's databases were breached and the confidential data of millions of Americans was stolen by hackers and identity thieves, potentially opening up the firm to numerous class action lawsuits.[49]

Major American corporations spent $345 million lobbying for just three pro-immigration bills between 2006 and 2008.[50] Internet service providers in the United States have spent more than $1.2 billion on lobbying since 1998, and 2018 was the biggest year so far with a total spend of more than $80 million.[51]

From a review in 2020, major food and beverage corporations spent $38.2 million on lobbying to strengthen and maintain big food influence in Washington, D.C.[52]

Unions Edit

One report suggested the United Food & Commercial Workers International Union spent $80,000 lobbying the federal government on issues relating to "the tax code, food safety, immigration reform and other issues."[53]

Other players Edit

Other possible players in the lobbying arena are those who might influence legislation: House & Senate colleagues, public opinion in the district, the White House, party leaders, union leaders, and other influential persons and groups.[28] Interest groups are often thought of as "nonparty organizations" which regularly try to change or influence government decision-making.[28]

Lobbying methods and techniques Edit

Lobbying has much in common with highly people-intensive businesses such as management consulting and public relations, but with a political and legal sensibility. Like lawmakers, many lobbyists are lawyers, and the persons they are trying to influence have the duty of writing laws. That the disciplines of law and lobbying are intertwined could be seen in the case of a Texas lawyer who had been seeking compensation for his unfairly imprisoned client; since his exonerated-prisoner client had trouble paying the legal expenses, the lawyer lobbied the Texas state legislature to raise the state's payment for unfairly imprisoned prisoners from $50,000 per year to $80,000 per year; it succeeded, making it possible for his newly freed client to pay the lawyer's fees.[54]

 
Connections count: Congressman Tom Perriello with lobbyist Heather Podesta at an inauguration party for Barack Obama.

Well-connected lobbyists work in Washington for years, know the issues, are highly skilled advocates,[55] and have cultivated close connections with members of Congress, regulators, specialists, and others. They understand strategy and have excellent communication skills; many are well suited to be able to choose which clients they would like to represent.[55] Lobbyists patiently cultivate networks of powerful people, over many years, trying to build trust and maintain confidence and friendships. When a client hires them to push a specific issue or agenda, they usually form coalitions to exert political pressure.[11] Lobbying, as a result, depends on trying to be flexible to new opportunities, but at the same time, to act as an agent for a client. As one lobbyist put it:

It's my job to advance the interests of my association or client. Period. — comment by a lobbyist[55]

Access is important and often means a one-on-one meeting with a legislator.[56] Getting access can sometimes be difficult, but there are various avenues: email, personal letters, phone calls, face-to-face meetings, meals, get-togethers, and even chasing after congresspersons in the Capitol building:

My style of lobbying is not to have big formal meetings, but to catch members on the fly as they're walking between the House and the office buildings. — a lobbyist commenting on access[55]

When getting access is difficult, there are ways to wear down the walls surrounding a legislator. Jack Abramoff explained:

Access is vital in lobbying. If you can't get in your door, you can't make your case. Here we had a hostile senator, whose staff was hostile, and we had to get in. So that's the lobbyist safe-cracker method: throw fundraisers, raise money, and become a big donor. — Lobbyist Jack Abramoff in 2011[57]

Lobbyists often assist congresspersons with campaign finance[55] by arranging fundraisers, assembling PACs,[27][36] and seeking donations from other clients. Many lobbyists become campaign treasurers and fundraisers for congresspersons. This helps incumbent members cope with the substantial amounts of time required to raise money for reelection bids; one estimate was that congresspersons had to spend a third of their working hours on fundraising activity.[36] PACs are fairly easy to set up; it requires a lawyer and about $300, roughly.[11] An even steeper possible reward which can be used in exchange for favors is the lure of a high-paying job as a lobbyist; according to Jack Abramoff, one of the best ways to "get what he wanted" was to offer a high-ranking congressional aide a high-paying job after they decided to leave public office.[58] When such a promise of future employment was accepted, according to Abramoff, "we owned them".[58] This helped the lobbying firm exert influence on that particular congressperson by going through the staff member or aide. At the same time, it is hard for outside observers to argue that a particular decision, such as hiring a former staffer into a lobbying position, was purely as a reward for some past political decision, since staffers often have valuable connections and policy experience needed by lobbying firms.[59] Research economist Mirko Draca suggested that hiring a staffer was an ideal way for a lobbying firm to try to sway their old bosses—a congressperson—in the future.[59]

In a one-on-one meeting with a lobbyist, it helps to understand precisely what goal is wanted.[11] A lobbyist wants action on a bill; a legislator wants to be re-elected.[56] The idea is to persuade a legislator that what the lobbyist wants is good public policy.[28] Lobbyists often urge lawmakers to try to persuade other lawmakers to approve a bill.[56]

Still, persuasion is a subtle business.[28] In one instance of a public relations reversal, a lobbying initiative by the Cassidy firm which targeted Senator Robert C. Byrd blew up when the Cassidy-Byrd connection was published in The Washington Post; this resulted in a furious Byrd reversing his previous pro-Cassidy position and throwing a "theatrical temper tantrum" regarding an $18 million facility. Byrd denounced "lobbyists who collect exorbitant fees to create projects and have them earmarked in appropriation bills... for the benefit of their clients."[60]

Since it often takes a long time to build the network of relationships within the lobbying industry, ethical interpersonal dealings are important. A maxim in the industry is for lobbyists to be truthful with people they are trying to persuade; one lobbyist described it this way: "what you've basically got is your word and reputation".[55] An untruth, a lie is too risky to the successful development of a long-term relationship and the potential gain is not worth the risk.[55] One report suggested that below-the-belt tactics generally do not work.[11] One account suggest that groping for "personal dirt" on opponents was counterproductive since it would undermine respect for the lobbyist and their clients.[11] And, by reverse logic, if an untruth is told by an opponent or opposing lobby, then it makes sense to publicize it.[11] But the general code among lobbyists is that unsubstantiated claims are bad business.[11] Even worse is planting an informant in an opponent's camp, since if this subterfuge is ever discovered, it will boomerang negatively in a hundred ways, and credibility will drop to zero.[11] The importance of personal relationships in lobbying can be seen in the state of Illinois, in which father-son ties helped push a smart-grid energy bill, although there were accusations of favoritism.[61] And there is anecdotal evidence that a business firm seeking to profitably influence legislation has to pay particular attention to which lobbyist it hires.[62]

Strategic considerations for lobbyists, trying to influence legislation, include "locating a power base" or a constituency logically predisposed to support a given policy.[56] Timing, as well, is usually important, in the sense of knowing when to propose a certain action and having a big-picture view of the possible sequence of desired actions.[28] Strategic lobbying tries to estimate the possible responses of different groups to a possible lobby approach; one study suggested that the "expectations of opposition from other interests" was a key factor helping to determine how a lobby should operate.[63]

Increasingly, lobbyists seek to put together coalitions and use outside lobbying by swaying public opinion.[28] Bigger, more diverse and deep pocketed coalitions tend to be more effective in outside lobbying, and the "strength in numbers" principle often applies.[64] Interest groups try to build "sustainable coalitions of similarly situated individual organizations in pursuit of like-minded goals".[12] According to one study, it is often difficult for a lobbyist to influence a staff member in Congress directly, since staffers tend to be well-informed and subject to views from competing interests. As an indirect tactic, lobbyists can try to manipulate public opinion which, in turn, can sometimes exert pressure on congresspersons.[55] Activities for these purposes include trying to use the mass media, cultivating contacts with reporters and editors, encouraging them to write editorials and cover stories to influence public opinion, which may have the secondary effect of influencing Congress.[55] According to analyst Ken Kollman, it is easier to sway public opinion than a congressional staff member since it is possible to bombard the public with "half-truths, distortion, scare tactics, and misinformation."[55] Kollman suggests there should be two goals: (1) communicate that there is public support behind an issue to policymakers and (2) increase public support for the issue among constituents.[28] Kollman suggested outside lobbying was a "powerful tool" for interest group leaders.[28] In a sense, using these criteria, one could consider James Madison as having engaged in outside lobbying, since after the Constitution was proposed, he wrote many of the 85 newspaper editorials arguing for people to support the Constitution, and these writings later became the Federalist Papers.[8] As a result of this "lobbying" effort, the Constitution was ratified, although there were narrow margins of victory in four of the state legislatures. Lobbying today generally requires mounting a coordinated campaign, using targeted blitzes of telephone calls, letters, emails to congressional lawmakers, marches down the National Mall, bus caravans, and such, and these are often put together by lobbyists who coordinate a variety of interest group leaders to unite behind a hopefully simple easy-to-grasp and persuasive message.[28]

It is important for lobbyists to follow rules governing lobbying behavior. These can be difficult and complex, take time to learn, require full disclosure,[55] and mistakes can land a lobbyist in serious legal trouble.

Gifts for congresspersons and staffers can be problematic, since anything of sizeable value must be disclosed and generally such gifts are illegal.[58] Failure to observe gift restrictions was one factor which caused lobbyist Jack Abramoff to eventually plead guilty to a "raft of federal corruption charges" and led to convictions for 20 lobbyists and public officials, including congressperson Bob Ney and Bush deputy interior secretary Stephen Griles.[58] Generally gifts to congresspersons or their staffs or federal officials are not allowed, but with a few exceptions: books are permitted, provided that the inside cover is inscribed with the congressperson's name and the name of one's organization.[11] Gifts under $5 are allowed.[11] Another exception is awards, so it is permitted to give a congressperson a plaque thanking him or her for support on a given issue.[11] Cash gifts payable by check can only be made to campaign committees, not to a candidate personally or to staff; it is not permitted to give cash or stock.[11]

Wealthy lobbyists often encourage other lobbying clients to donate to a particular cause, in the hope that favors will be returned at a later date. Lobbyist Gerald Cassidy encouraged other clients to give for causes dear to a particular client engaged in a current lobbying effort.[60] Some lobbyists give their own money: Cassidy reportedly donated a million dollars on one project, according to one report, which noted that Cassidy's firm received "many times that much in fees from their clients" paid in monthly retainers.[60] And their clients, in turn, had received "hundreds of millions in earmarked appropriations" and benefits worth "hundreds of millions more".[60]

 
Jack Abramoff was at the center of an extensive corruption investigation

The dynamics of the lobbying world make it fairly easy for a semi-skilled operator to defraud a client. This is essentially what happened in the Jack Abramoff Indian lobbying scandal. There was a concerned client—in this case, an Indian casino—worried about possible ill-effects of legislation on its gambling business; and there were lobbyists such as Jack Abramoff who knew how to exploit these fears. The lobbyists actively lobbied against their own casino-client as a way to ratchet up their fears of adverse legislation as well as stoke possible future contributions; the lobbyists committed other violations such as grossly overbilling their clients as well as violating rules about giving gifts to congresspersons. Numerous persons went to jail after the scandal. The following are factors which can make fraud a fairly easy-to-do activity: that lobbyists are paid only to try to influence decision-makers, and may or may not succeed, making it hard to tell if a lobbyist did actual work;[55] that much of what happens regarding interpersonal relations is obscure despite rather strict disclosure and transparency requirements; that there are sizable monies involved—factors such as these almost guarantee that there will be future scandals involving fraudulent lobbying activity, according to one assessment. A fraud similar to Abramoff's was perpetrated in Maryland by lobbyist Gerard E. Evans, who was convicted of mail and wire fraud in 2000 in a case involving falsely creating a "fictitious legislative threat" against a client, and then billing the client to work against this supposed threat.[65]

Lobbyists routinely monitor how congressional officials vote, sometimes checking the past voting records of congresspersons.[11] One report suggested that reforms requiring "publicly recorded committee votes" led to more information about how congresspersons voted, but instead of becoming a valuable resource for the news media or voters, the information helped lobbyists monitor congressional voting patterns.[66] As a general rule, lawmakers must vote as a particular interest group wishes them to vote, or risk losing support.[11]

Strategy usually dictates targeting specific office holders. On the state level, one study suggested that much of the lobbying activity targeted the offices of governors as well as state-level executive bureaucrats; state lobbying was an "intensely personal game" with face-to-face contact being required for important decisions.[67]

Lobbying can be a counteractive response to the lobbying efforts of others. One study suggested this was particularly true for battles surrounding possible decisions by the Supreme Court which is considered as a "battleground for public policy" in which differing groups try to "etch their policy preferences into law".[17] Sometimes there are lobbying efforts to slow or derail other legislative processes; for example, when the FDA began considering a cheaper generic version of the costly anti-clotting drug Lovenox, the French pharmaceutical firm Sanofi "sprang into action to try and slow the process."[68] Lobbyists are often assembled in anticipation of a potential takeover bid, particularly when there are large high-profile companies, or a large foreign company involved, and substantial concern that the takeover may be blocked by regulatory authorities.[40]

An example may illustrate. The company Tyco had learned that there had been discussion about a possible new tax provision that might have cost it $4 billion overall.[57] So the firm hired Jack Abramoff and paid him a retainer of $100,000 a month.[57] He assembled dozens of lobbyists with connections to key congressional committees with the ultimate objective being to influence powerful Senator Charles Grassley.[57] Abramoff began with a fundraising effort to round up "every check" possible.[57] He sought funds from his other lobbying clients:

I had my clients understand that just as other clients who had nothing to do with them, would step up and give contributions to congressmen they needed to have some sway with, so similarly they needed to do the same. I went to every client I could, and rounded up every check we could for him.

— Lobbyist Jack Abramoff in 2011[57]

Lobbyists as educators and advisors Edit

"Government has grown so complex that it is a virtual certainty that more than one agency would be affected by any piece of legislation," according to one view.[11] Lobbyists, therefore, spend considerable time learning the ins and outs of issues, and can use their expertise to educate lawmakers[69] and help them cope with difficult issues.[12] Lobbyists' knowledge has been considered to be an intellectual subsidy for lawmakers.[69][70] Some lobbyists become specialists with expertise in a particular set of issues, although one study suggested that of two competing criteria for lobbyists—expertise or access—that access was far more important.[27][71][72]

Lobby groups and their members sometimes also write legislation and whip bills, and in these instances, it is helpful to have lawyers skilled in writing legislation to assist with these efforts.[11] Lobbyists may write the actual text of the proposed law, and hire lawyers to "get the language down pat"—an omission in wording or an unclear phrase may open up a loophole for opponents to wrangle over for years.[11] Lobbyists can often advise a lawmaker on how to navigate the approval process.[69]

Lobbying firms can serve as mentors and guides. For example, after months of protesting by the Occupy Wall Street, one lobbying firm prepared a memo to its clients warning that Republicans may "turn on big banks, at least in public" which may have the effect of "altering the political ground for years to come."[73] Here are parts of the memo which were broadcast on the MSNBC network.

Leading Democratic party strategists have begun to openly discuss the benefits of embracing the growing and increasingly organized Occupy Wall Street (OWS) movement ... This would mean more than just short-term discomfort for Wall Street firms. If vilifying the leading companies of this sector is allowed to become an unchallenged centerpiece of a coordinated Democratic campaign, it has the potential to have very long-lasting political, policy and financial impacts on the companies in the center of the bullseye. ... the bigger concern should be that Republicans will no longer defend Wall Street companies...

— Clark, Lytle, Geduldig, Cranford, law/lobbying firm, to a Wall Street client[73]

A growing billion dollar business Edit

Top lobbying sectors 1998–2010[74][75]
Client Amount Spent %
1 Finance, Insurance & Real Estate $4,274,060,331 15%
2 Health $4,222,427,808 15%
3 Misc Business $4,149,842,571 14%
4 Communications/Electronics $3,497,881,399 12%
5 Energy & Natural Resources $3,104,104,518 11%
6 Transportation $2,245,118,222 8%
7 Other $2,207,772,363 7%
8 Ideological/Single-Issue $1,477,294,241 5%
9 Agribusiness $1,280,824,983 4%
10 Defense $1,216,469,173 4%
11 Construction $480,363,108 2%
12 Labor $427,355,408 1%
13 Lawyers & Lobbyists themselves $336,170,306 1%
Total $28,919,684,431 99%[76]
Note: Amounts do not include
campaign contributions.
[77][78]

Since the 1970s, there has been explosive growth in the lobbying industry, particularly in Washington D.C. By 2011, one estimate of overall lobbying spending nationally was $30+ billion dollars.[78] An estimate of lobbying expenses in the federal arena was $3.5 billion in 2010, while it had been only $1.4 billion in 1998.[37] And there is prodigious data since firms are required to disclose lobbying expenditures on a quarterly basis.

The industry, however, is not immune to economic downturns. If Congress is gridlocked, such as during the summer and early fall of 2011, lobbying activity dipped considerably, according to The Washington Post.[79] Lobbying firm Patton Boggs reported drops in revenue during that year, from $12 million in 2010 to $11 million in 2011.[79] To cope with the downturn, some law firms compensated by increasing activity in litigation, regulatory work, and representing clients in congressional investigations.[79]

A sea-change in government, such as a shift in control of the legislature from one political party to the other, can affect the lobbying business profoundly. For example, the primarily Democratic-serving lobbying firm Cassidy & Associates learned that control of Congress would change hands from Democrats to Republicans in 1994, and the firm acquired Republican lobbyists before the congressional handover of power, and the move helped the lobbying firm stay on top of the new political realities.[36]

Examples of lobbying Edit

There are numerous examples of lobbying activity reported by the media. One report chronicled a somewhat unusual alliance of consumer advocates and industry groups to boost funding for the Food and Drug Administration; the general pattern of lobbying efforts had been to try to reduce the regulatory oversight of such an agency. In this case, however, lobbying groups wanted the federal watchdog agency to have tougher policing authority to avert expensive problems when oversight was lax; in this case, industry and consumer groups were in harmony, and lobbyists were able to persuade officials that higher FDA budgets were in the public interest.[80] Religious consortiums, according to one report, have engaged in a $400 million lobbying effort on such issues as the relation between church and state, civil rights for religious minorities, bioethics issues including abortion and capital punishment and end-of-life issues, and family issues.[81]

Lobbying as a career Edit

While national-level lobbyists working in Washington have the highest salaries, many lobbyists operating at the state level can earn substantial salaries. The table shows the top lobbyists in one state—Maryland—in 2011.

Top Maryland lobbyists (2011)
Lobbyist Income
Gerard E. Evans $1,232,000
Timothy A. Perry $1,217,793
Joel D. Rozner $1,215,161
Robin F. Shaivitz $1,156,368
Gregory S. Proctor Jr. $1,107,144
John R. Stierhoff $1,059,766
Michael V. Johansen $1,050,234
Nicholas G. Manis $1,016,250
D. Robert Enten $863,193
Lisa Harris Jones $857,000
Source:
State Ethics
Commission
[82]

Top power-brokers such as Gerald Cassidy have made fortunes from lobbying:

Cassidy's reaction to his own wealth has been complicated. He lives large, riding around town in his chauffeured car, spending thousands on custom-made clothes, investing big money in, for example, the Charlie Palmer Steak restaurant at the foot of Capitol Hill just for the fun of it. He has fashioned a wine cellar of more than 7,000 bottles. He loves to go to England and live like a gentleman of the kind his Irish antecedents would have considered an anathema.

— journalist Robert G. Kaiser in 2007 in The Washington Post[36]

Effectiveness of lobbying Edit

 
There is general agreement that money is a key variable in lobbying.

The consensus is that lobbying generally works overall in achieving sought-after results for clients, particularly since it has become so prevalent with substantial and growing budgets, although there are dissenting views. A study by the investment-research firm Strategas which was cited in The Economist and The Washington Post compared the 50 firms that spent the most on lobbying relative to their assets, and compared their financial performance against that of the S&P 500 in the stock market; the study concluded that spending on lobbying was a "spectacular investment" yielding "blistering" returns comparable to a high-flying hedge fund, even despite the financial downturn of the past few years.[62] A 2009 study by University of Kansas professor Raquel Meyer Alexander suggested that lobbying brought a substantial return on investment.[83] A 2011 meta-analysis of previous research findings found a positive correlation between corporate political activity and firm performance.[84] There are numerous reports that the National Rifle Association or NRA successfully influenced 45 senators to block a proposed rule to regulate assault weapons, despite strong public support for gun control.[85][86] The NRA spends heavily to influence gun policy; it gives $3 million annually to the re-election campaigns of congresspersons directly, and gives additional money to PACs and others to influence legislation indirectly, according to the BBC in 2016.[87]

There is widespread agreement that a key ingredient in effective lobbying is money.[88] This view is shared by players in the lobbying industry.

Deep pockets speak; the money trumps it all.

— Anonymous lobbyist, 2002[55]

Still, effectiveness can vary depending on the situational context. One view is that large multiple-issue lobbies tend to be effective in getting results for their clients if they are sophisticated, managed by a legislative director familiar with the art of compromise, and play "political hardball".[11] But if such lobbies became too big, such as large industrial trade organizations, they became harder to control, often leading to lackluster results.[11] A study in 2001 which compared lobbying activity in US-style congressional against European-style parliamentary systems, found that in congressional systems there was an advantage favoring the "agenda-setters", but that in both systems, "lobbying has a marked effect on policies".[89] One report suggested that the 1,000 registered lobbyists in California were highly influential such that they were called the Third House.[90]

Studies of lobbying by academics in previous decades painted a picture of lobbying being an ineffectual activity, although many of these studies were done before lobbying became prevalent in American politics. A study in 1963 by Bauer, Pool, & Dexter suggested lobbyists were mostly "impotent" in exerting influence.[28] Studies in the early 1990s suggested that lobbying exerted influence only "marginally", although it suggested that when lobbying activity did achieve political impacts, that the results of the political choices were sufficient to justify the expenditure on lobbying.[28] A fairly recent study in 2009 is that Washington lobbies are "far less influential than political rhetoric suggests", and that most lobbying campaigns do not change any views and that there was a strong entrenchment of the status quo.[19] But it depends on what is seen as "effective", since many lobbying battles result in a stalemate, since powerful interests battle, and in many cases, merely keeping the "status quo" could be seen as a victory of sorts. What happens often is that varying coalitions find themselves in "diametrical opposition to each other" and that stalemates result.[12][91]

There is anecdotal evidence from numerous newspaper accounts of different groups battling that lobbying activity usually achieves results. For example, the Obama administration pledged to stop for-profit colleges from "luring students with false promises", but with this threat, the lobbying industry sprang into action with a $16 million campaign, and their efforts succeeded in watering down the proposed restrictions.[92] How did the lobbying campaign succeed? Actions taken included:

  1. spent $16 million[92]
  2. hired "all-star list" of prominent players including Democrats and Republicans with White House ties[92]
  3. plotted strategy[92]
  4. worked with "fund-raising bundler" Jamie Rubin, a former Obama communications director[92]
  5. won support from influential people including congressperson-turned-lobbyist Dick Gephardt, senator-turned-lobbyist John Breaux, lobbyist Tony Podesta, Washington Post CEO Donald E. Graham, education entrepreneur and University of Phoenix founder John Sperling, others[92]
  6. key leaders made "impassioned appeals"[92]
  7. mobilization effort produced 90,000 public documents to the Education department advocating against changes[92]

And sometimes merely keeping the status quo could be seen as a victory. When gridlock led to the supposed supercommittee solution, numerous lobbyists from all parts of the political spectrum worked hard, and a stalemate resulted, but with each side defended their own special interests.[93] And while money is an important variable, it is one among many variables, and there have been instances in which huge sums have been spent on lobbying only to have the result backfire. One report suggested that the communications firm AT&T failed to achieve substantial results from its lobbying efforts in 2011, since government antitrust officials rejected its plan to acquire rival T-Mobile.[94]

Lobbying is a practical necessity for firms that "live and die" by government decisions, such as large government contractors such as Boeing. A study done in 2006 by Bloomberg News suggested that lobbying was a "sound money-making strategy" for the 20 largest federal contractors. The largest contractor, Lockheed Martin Corporation, received almost $40 billion in federal contracts in 2003–4, and spent $16 million on lobbying expenses and campaign donations.[62] For each dollar of lobbying investment, the firm received $2,517 in revenues, according to the report.[62] When the lobbying firm Cassidy & Associates began achieving results with earmarks for colleges and universities and medical centers, new lobbying firms rose to compete with them to win "earmarks of their own", a clear sign that the lobbying was exceedingly effective.[36]

Lobbying controversies Edit

Lobbying has been the subject of much debate and discussion. There is general consensus that lobbying has been a significant corrupting influence in American politics, although criticism is not universal, and there have been arguments put forward to suggest that the system is working properly.

Unfavorable image Edit

 
"The Bosses of the Senate", corporate interests as giant money bags looming over senators.[95]

Generally the image of lobbyists and lobbying in the public sphere is not a positive one, although this is not a universal sentiment. Lobbyists have been described as a "hired gun" without principles or positions.[55] Scandals involving lobbying have helped taint the image of the profession, such as ones involving lobbyist Jack Abramoff, and congressmen Randy "Duke" Cunningham, and Bob Ney and others, and which featured words such as "bribery", "lobbyist", "member of Congress" and "prison" tending to appear together in the same articles.[8][96] Negative publicity can sully lobbying's image to a great extent: high-profile cases of lobbying fraud such as Abramoff's;[8] dubious father-son exchange-of-favors ties;[61] public officials such as Newt Gingrich being accused and then denying accusations of having done lobbying and earning $1.6 million from "strategic advice".[97] There are a variety of reasons why lobbying has acquired a negative image in public consciousness. While there is much disclosure, much of it happens in hard-to-disclose personal meetings, and the resulting secrecy and confidentiality can serve to lower lobbying's status.[11]

Revolving door Edit

 
The image of a revolving door has been used to describe the relation between working in government and for lobbyists.

Since the 1980s, congresspersons and staffers have been "going downtown"—becoming lobbyists—and the big draw is money.[98] The "lucrative world of K Street" means that former congresspersons with even "modest seniority" can move into jobs paying $1 million or more annually, without including bonuses for bringing in new clients.[98] The general concern of this revolving-door activity is that elected officials—persons who were supposed to represent the interests of citizens[99]—have instead become entangled with the big-money interests of for-profit corporations and interest groups with narrow concerns, and that public officials have been taken over by private interests.[66]

In July 2005, Public Citizen published a report entitled "The Journey from Congress to K Street": the report analyzed hundreds of lobbyist registration documents filed in compliance with the Lobbying Disclosure Act and the Foreign Agents Registration Act among other sources. It found that since 1998, 43 percent of the 198 members of Congress who left government to join private life have registered to lobby. A similar report from OpenSecrets found 370 former members were in the "influence-peddling business", with 285 officially registered as federal lobbyists, and 85 others who were described as providing "strategic advice" or "public relations" to corporate clients.[98] The Washington Post described these results as reflecting the "sea change that has occurred in lawmakers' attitudes toward lobbying in recent years." The report included a case study of one particularly successful lobbyist, Bob Livingston, who stepped down as Speaker-elect and resigned his seat in 1999. In the six years since his resignation, The Livingston Group grew into the 12th largest non-law lobbying firm, earning nearly $40 million by the end of 2004. During roughly the same time period, Livingston, his wife, and his two political action committees (PACs) contributed over $500,000 to the campaign funds of various candidates. The percentage of former members of Congress who become lobbyists has continued to increase. A 2019 study found that 59% of representatives who leave Congress to work in the private sector are working for lobbying or political consulting firms, trade groups or business groups tasked with influencing federal government policy.[100]

Numerous reports chronicle the revolving door phenomenon.[55] A 2011 estimate suggested that nearly 5,400 former congressional staffers had become federal lobbyists over a ten-year period, and 400 lawmakers made a similar jump.[59] It is a "symbiotic relationship" in the sense that lobbying firms can exploit the "experience and connections gleaned from working inside the legislative process", and lawmakers find a "ready pool of experienced talent."[59] There is movement in the other direction as well: one report found that 605 former lobbyists had taken jobs working for lawmakers over a ten-year period.[59] A study by the London School of Economics found 1,113 lobbyists who had formerly worked in lawmakers' offices.[59] The lobbying option is a way for staffers and lawmakers to "cash in on their experience", according to one view.[36] Before the 1980s, staffers and aides worked many years for congresspersons, sometimes decades, and tended to stay in their jobs; now, with the lure of higher-paying lobbying jobs, many would quit their posts after a few years at most to "go downtown."[36]

 
Lawmaker turned lobbyist: Democratic congressperson Dick Gephardt switched to lobbying and has been making millions annually working for clients such as Goldman Sachs.

And it is not just staffers, but lawmakers as well, including high-profile ones such as congressperson Richard Gephardt. He represented a "working-class" district in Missouri for many years but after leaving Congress, he became a lobbyist.[98] In 2007, he began his own lobbying firm called "Gephardt Government Affairs Group" and in 2010 it was earning close to $7 million in revenues with clients including Goldman Sachs, Boeing, Visa Inc., Ameren Corporation, and Waste Management Inc.[98] Senators Robert Bennett and Byron Dorgan became lobbyists too.[101] Mississippi governor Haley Barbour became a lobbyist.[102] In 2010, former representative Billy Tauzin earned $11 million running the drug industry's lobbying organization, called Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA).[98] His bill to provide prescription drug access to Medicare recipients gave major concessions to the pharmaceutical industry: (1) Medicare was prevented from negotiating lower costs for prescription drugs (2) the reimportation of drugs from first world countries was not allowed (3) Medicare D was undermined by a policy of Medigap D. After the bill passed a few months later, Tauzin retired from Congress and took an executive position at PhRMA to earn an annual salary of $2 million.[103] Many former representatives earned over $1 million in one year, including James Greenwood and Daniel Glickman.[98]

Insider's game Edit

 
Occupy Wall Street protesters have been critical of lobbying in government.

A similar concern voiced by critics of lobbying is that Washington politics has become dominated by elites, and that it is an "insider's game" excluding regular citizens[55] and which favors entrenched firms.[104] Individuals generally can not afford to lobby, and critics question whether corporations with "deeper pockets" should have greater power than voters. In this view, the system favors the rich, such that the "rich have gotten richer, the weak weaker", admits lobbyist Gerald Cassidy.[36] Those having more money and better political connections can exert more influence than others. There is so much money that it has been described as a "flood" that has a "corrupting influence",[37] so that the United States appears to be "awash" in interest groups.[8] If coalitions of different forces battle in the political arena for favorable treatment and better rules and tax breaks, it can be seen as fair if both sides have equal resources and try to fight for their interests as best they can.[40][105] Gerald Cassidy said:

In a lot of areas, the stakes are between big companies, and it's hard to argue that one solution is better than another solution with regard to the consumer's interest ... The issue ... is whether Company A's solution, or Company B's solution, based on their technology or their footprint, is the right one.

— Lobbyist Gerald Cassidy[36]

A related but slightly different criticism is that the problem with lobbying as it exists today is that it creates an "inequity of access to the decision-making process".[12] As a result, important needs get left out of the political evaluation, such that there are no anti-hunger lobbies or lobbies seeking serious solutions to the problem of poverty.[36] Nonprofit advocacy has been "conspicuously absent" from lobbying efforts, according to one view.[12] Critics suggest that when a powerful coalition battles a less powerful one, or one which is poorly connected or underfunded, the result may be seen as unfair and potentially harmful for the entire society. The increasing number of former lawmakers becoming lobbyists has led Senator Russ Feingold (D-WI) to propose[when?] paring back the many Capitol Hill privileges enjoyed by former senators and representatives. His plan[citation needed] would deprive lawmakers-turned-lobbyists of privileges such as unfettered access to otherwise "members only" areas such as the House and Senate floors and the House gym.

Choice-making problems Edit

 
Studies have linked problems in the housing industry with lobbying efforts.

A concern among many critics is that influence peddling hurts overall decision making, according to this criticism. Proposals with merit are dropped in favor of proposals backed by political expediency.[12] An example cited in the media is the recent battling between food industry lobbyists and healthcare lobbyists regarding school lunches. A group supported by the United States Department of Agriculture proposed healthier lunches as a way to combat childhood obesity by limiting the number of potatoes served, limiting salty foods, and adding more fresh vegetables, but this group was countered by a strong food lobby backed by Coca-Cola, Del Monte, and makers of frozen pizza.[106] The food lobbyists succeeded in blocking the proposed reforms, even writing rules suggesting that the tomato paste on a pizza qualified as a vegetable,[37] but overall, according to critics, this case appeared to be an example where business interests won out over health concerns.[106] Critics use examples such as these to suggest that lobbying distorts sound governance.[106] A study by IMF economists found that the "heaviest lobbying came from lenders making riskier loans and expanding their mortgage business most rapidly during the housing boom," and that there were indications that heavy-lobbying lenders were more likely to receive bailout funds.[104][107][108] The study found a correlation between lobbying by financial institutions and excessive risk-taking during 2000–2007, and the authors concluded that "politically active lenders played a role in accumulation of risks and thus contributed to the financial crisis".[108] Another study suggested that governments tend to protect domestic industries, and have a habit of shunting monies to ailing sectors; the study suggested that "it is not that government policy picks losers, it is that losers pick government policy."[109] One critic suggested that the financial industry has successfully blocked attempts at regulation in the aftermath of the 2008 financial collapse.[110]

Governmental focus Edit

 
Lobbyists collided over school lunches. Pizza can be served to schoolchildren since tomato paste can be considered as a vegetable and part of a healthy meal.

Critics have contended that when lawmakers are drawn into battles to determine issues such as the composition over school lunches or how much an ATM fee should be,[111] more serious issues such as deficit reduction or global warming or social security are neglected.[37][66] It leads to legislative inertia.[112] The concern is that the preoccupation with what are seen as superficial issues prevents attention to long-term problems. Critics suggested that the 2011 Congress spent more time discussing per-transaction debit-card fees while neglecting issues seen as more pressing.[66][113]

Methodological problems Edit

In this line of reasoning, critics contend that lobbying, in and of itself, is not the sole problem, but only one aspect of a larger problem with American governance. Critics point to an interplay of factors: citizens being uninvolved politically;[55] congresspersons needing huge sums of money for expensive television advertising campaigns; increased complexity in terms of technologies; congresspersons spending three days of every week raising money;[113] and so forth. Given these temptations, lobbying came along as a logical response to meet the needs of congresspersons seeking campaign funds and staffers seeking personal enrichment. In a sense, in competitive politics, the common good gets lost:

I know what my client wants; no one knows what the common good is.

— Anonymous lobbyist[55]

A lobbyist can identify a client's needs. But it is hard for a single individual to say what is best for the whole group. The intent of the Constitution's Framers was to have built-in constitutional protections to protect the common good, but according to these critics, these protections do not seem to be working well:

The structure of representative government, elected by the people, was to be our system's built-in protection of the whole of us—fairly elected officeholders were to represent their constituent groups, free from any obligations to special interests. Unfortunately, money has corrupted the system and compromised both the fairness of the electoral process as well as the independence and impartiality of elected officials.

— Barry Hessenius in Hardball Lobbying for Nonprofits, 2007[12]
 
Former convicted lobbyist Jack Abramoff (left) listens to Harvard law professor Lawrence Lessig in 2011.

Lawrence Lessig, a professor at Harvard Law School and author of Republic, Lost, suggested that the moneyed persuasive power of special interests has insinuated itself between the people and the lawmakers.[114][115][116] He quoted congressperson Jim Cooper who remarked that Congress had become a "Farm League for K Street" in the sense that congresspersons were focused on lucrative lobbying careers after Congress rather than on serving the public interest while in office.[117] In a speech, Lessig suggested the structure of incentives was such that legislators were tempted to propose unnecessary regulations as a way to further lobbying industry activity.[118] According to one view, major legislation such as proposed Wall Street reforms have spurred demand for "participating in the regulatory process."[79] Lessig suggested the possibility that it was not corporations deciding to take up lobbying, but Congress choosing to debate less-than-important issues to bring well-heeled corporations into the political fray as lobbyists. As a result of his concerns, Lessig has called on state governments to summon a Second Constitutional Convention to propose substantive reform.[116] Lessig believes that a constitutional amendment should be written to limit political contributions from non-citizens, including corporations, anonymous organizations, and foreign nationals.[119]

Our current tax system with all its complexities is in part designed to make it easier for candidates, in particular congressmen, to raise money to get back to congress ... All sorts of special exceptions which expire after a limited period of time are just a reason to pick up the phone and call somebody and say 'Your exception is about to expire, here’s a good reason for you to help us fight to get it to extend.' And that gives them the opportunity to practice what is really a type of extortion – shaking the trees of money in the private sector into their campaign coffers so that they can run for congress again.

Scholars such as Richard Labunski, Sanford Levinson, Glenn Reynolds,[120] Larry Sabato,[121] as well as newspaper columnist William Safire,[122] and activists such as John Booth of RestoringFreedom.org have called for constitutional changes that would curb the powerful role of money in politics.[117]

Expansion of lobbying Edit

Law in the United States is generally made by Congress, but as the federal government has expanded during much of the twentieth century, there are a sizeable number of federal agencies, generally under the control of the president. These agencies write often industry-specific rules and regulations regarding such things as automobile safety and air quality.[121] Unlike elected congresspersons who are constantly seeking campaign funds, these appointed officials are harder to influence, generally. However, there are indications that lobbyists seek to expand their influence from the halls of Congress deeper into the federal bureaucracy.[69][123]

President Obama pledged during the election campaign to rein in lobbying. As president in January 2009, he signed two executive orders and three presidential memoranda[124] to help ensure his administration would be more open, transparent, and accountable. These documents attempted to bring increased accountability to federal spending and limit the influence of special interests, and included a lobbyist gift ban and a revolving door ban. In May 2009, the Recovery Act Lobbying Rules.[125] The Executive Branch Reform Act, H.R. 985, was a bill which would have required over 8,000 Executive Branch officials to report into a public database nearly any "significant contact" from any "private party." The purpose was to identify lobbying activity.[126] The bill was supported by proponents as an expansion of "government in the sunshine" including groups such as Public Citizen.[126]

 
The National Association of Realtors is a special interest representing home-selling agents. Photo: its Washington headquarters.

But the proposals ran into serious opposition from various groups including the lobbying industry itself.[126] Opponents argued that the proposed reporting rules would have infringed on the right to petition, making it difficult not just for lobbyists, but for regular citizens to communicate their views on controversial issues without having their names and viewpoints entered into a government database.[127] Opposition groups suggested that although the proposed rules were promoted as a way to regulate "lobbyists," persons described as a "private party" could be practically anybody, and that anybody contacting a federal official might be deemed to be a "lobbyist". The U.S. Department of Justice raised constitutional and other objections to the bill.[128] Opponents mobilized over 450 groups including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and National Association of Realtors with letter writing campaigns against the proposed restrictions. Lobbyist Howard Marlowe argued in a "stern letter"[69] that the restriction on gift-giving to federal employees would create "fear of retribution for political donations":

Since your announcement to seek the Presidency you have consistently attacked the honorable profession of lobbying ... Lobbyists play an important role in the legislative process, serving as educators to elected officials. It is in the best interest to government to have informed individuals who serve as experts in every arena of public policy. Our ability to access and navigate the legislative process and push issues forward through a bureaucratic cluster is a vital service to the nation. The Draft Order would inhibit one of the most vital tools in the advocate's arsenal by creating fear of retribution for political donations. Making this kind of disclosure a part of the bidding process tarnishes a competition based on qualifications, adds an unneeded level of bureaucracy, and endangers the protection of free speech afforded to all Americans by the First Amendment of the Constitution...

— Howard Marlowe, president of the All American League of Lobbyists, in a letter to President Obama, May 31, 2011[69][123]

In 2011, there were efforts to "shift regulatory power from the executive branch to Congress" by requiring that any "major rule" which may cost the economy more than $100 million must be decided by Congress with an up-or-down vote.[18] But skeptics think that such a move proposed by Republican lawmakers could "usher in a lobbying bonanza from industry and other special-interest groups" to use campaign contributions to reshape the regulatory milieu.[18]

Potential for reform Edit

Critics suggest that Congress has the power to fix itself, but is reluctant to sacrifice money and power. One report suggested that those in control had an "unbroken record of finding ways to navigate around reform laws or turn regulatory standards to their own advantage."[66]

Arguments for lobbying Edit

According to the Madisonian view of politics—in which factions were supposed to compete with other factions—the system is working exactly as it should. Sometimes powerful financial interests lose the battle.

Since lobbyists often become highly knowledgeable about a specific issue by studying it in depth over years, they can bring considerable expertise to help legislators avoid errors as well as grasp the nuances of complex issues. It has been argued that lobbyists can help Congress by possibly raising "red flags" about proposed rulings.[129]

Another argument in support of lobbying is that different interest groups and lobbyists, while trying to build coalitions and win support, often amend or soften or change their positions in this process, and that interest groups and lobbyists regulate each other, in a sense.[129]

But a more general sentiment supporting the lobbying arrangement is that every citizen can be construed as being "represented" by dozens of special interests:[11]

Every citizen is a special interest... Blacks, consumers, teachers, pro-choicers, gun control advocates, handicapped people, aliens, exporters, and salesmen – are all special interests... There is not an American today who is not represented (whether he or she knows it or not) by at least a dozen special interest groups. ... One person's special interest is another person's despotism...

— Donald E. deKieffer, author of The Citizen's Guide to Lobbying Congress, 2007[11]
 
This is what users saw when they tried to access the English Wikipedia on January 18, 2012. It participated in a lobbying campaign by blacking out the encyclopedia for a day, and encouraged users to contact congresspersons to support positions it favored as part of an outside lobbying effort.

If powerful groups such as the oil industry succeed in winning a battle in government, consumers who drive gas-powered cars can benefit a bit, according to this view. Even readers of Wikipedia could be conceived as being a special interest and represented by various lobbies. For example, opponents of the Stop Online Piracy Act believed that the act might restrict sites such as Wikipedia; on January 18, 2012, as a form of protest and as a way to encourage readers and contributors of English Wikipedia to write their congresspersons, the online encyclopedia was "blacked out for a day as part of an effort to lobby the government.[130][131]

Another view in support of lobbying is that it serves a helpful purpose as helping guard against extremism. According to this view, lobbying adds "built-in delays" and permits and encourages opposing lobbies to battle. In the battling, possibly damaging decrees and incorrect decisions are stymied by seemingly unhelpful delays and waits.[11]

A slightly different view is that lobbying is no different from other professions:

Lobbying is no more perfect than is the practice of law or the practice of medicine.

— Lobbyist Gerald S. J. Cassidy, 2007[36]

The regulatory environment Edit

Disclosure and domestic regulations Edit

Generally, the United States requires systematic disclosure of lobbying, and it may be one of the few countries to have such extensive requirements.[27] Disclosure in one sense allows lobbyists and public officials to justify their actions under the banner of openness and with full compliance of the law.[132] The rules often specify how much a lobbyist can spend on specific activities, and how to report expenses; many of the laws and guidelines are specified in the Lobbying Disclosure Act of 1995. Transparency and disclosure requirements mean that there are volumes of statistics available for all kinds of analyses—by journalists, by the public, by rival lobbying efforts. Researchers can subdivide lobbying expenditures by numerous breakdowns, such as by contributions from energy companies.[133]

Sometimes defining clearly who is a "lobbyist" and what precisely are lobbying activities can be difficult. According to the Lobbying Disclosure Act, several authorized definitions include:

  • Lobbying activities means "lobbying contacts and efforts in support of such contacts, including preparation and planning activities, research and other background work that is intended, at the time it is performed, for use in contacts, and coordination with the lobbying activities of others."[27]
  • Lobbying contact means "any oral or written communication (including an electronic communication) to a covered executive branch official or a covered legislative branch official".[27]

Still, distinguishing lobbyists from a strategic adviser can be difficult, since the duties of each can often overlap and are hard to define precisely.[98] There have been issues raised about what constitutes the difference between a lobbyist and a bundler; one report described bundlers as "supporters who contribute their own money to his campaign and solicit it from others", and there was a question whether such persons were really lobbyists involved with raising campaign monies for the election of Barack Obama, and whether Obama had broken his own pledge not to receive money from lobbyists.[134] The legal ramifications of lobbying are further intertangled with aspects of campaign finance reform, since lobbyists often spend time seeking donations for the reelection efforts of congresspersons; sorting out these issues can pose ethical challenges.[55]

There are numerous regulations governing the practice of lobbying, often ones requiring transparency and disclosure. People paid to lobby must register with the secretary of the Senate and the clerk of the House of Representatives within 45 days of contacting a legislator for the first time, or 45 days after being employed.[11] An exception is that lobbyists who earn less than $3,000 per client for each fiscal quarter, or whose total lobbying expenses are less than $11,500 each quarter, do not need to register. Part-time lobbyists are exempt from registering unless they spend more than 20% of their working hours doing lobbying activities in any quarter. If lobbyists have two or more contacts with a legislator as a lobbyist, then they must register.[11] Generally, nonprofit organizations, other than churches, are exempt from registering if they hire an outside lobbying firm.

States are moving in the direction of greater disclosure and transparency regarding lobbying activities. California has an online database called Cal-Access although there were reports that it has been underfunded.[135][136] Money collected from registration fees are often used to pay for the disclosure services such as Cal-Access.[137] There were complaints in Illinois that the disclosure requirements were often not rigorous enough and allowed lobbyists to work "without public notice" and with possible "conflicts of interest".[132] Many local municipalities are requiring legislative agents register as lobbyists to represent the interests of clients to local city council members such as in the swing state of Ohio cities such as Columbus and Cincinnati.[citation needed]

Laws requiring disclosure have been more prevalent in the twentieth century. In 1946, there was a so-called "sunshine law" requiring lobbyists to disclose what they were doing, on whose behalf, and how much they received in payment.[11][138] The resulting Federal Regulation of Lobbying Act of 1946 governed lobbying rules up until 1995 when the Lobbying Disclosure Act replaced it.[11] The Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971, later amended in 2002 as the McCain Feingold Act, had rules governing campaign contributions.[11] Each branch of Congress has rules as well.[11] Legislation generally requires reports containing an accounting of major expenditures as well as legislation that was influenced; the wording of some of the pertinent laws can be found in 2 U.S.C. ch. 26.[139]

 
The American Bar Association published a book about lobbying regulations.

Lobbying law is a constantly evolving field; the American Bar Association published a book of guidelines in 2009 with over 800 pages.[140] The laws are often rather specific, and when not observed, can lead to serious trouble.[60] Failing to file a quarterly report, or knowingly filing an incorrect report, or failing to correct an incorrect report, can lead to fines up to $200,000 and imprisonment up to five years. Penalties can apply to lobbyists who fail to list gifts made to a legislator.[60] In other situations, the punishment can be light: for example, Congressional aide-turned-lobbyist Fraser Verrusio spent a few hours in jail after pleading guilty to taking a client to a World Series baseball game and failing to report it.[141] Tax rules can apply to lobbying. In one situation, the charity Hawaii Family Forum risked losing its tax-exempt status after it had engaged in lobbying activity; federal tax law requires charities such as that one to limit their lobbying to 20% of their overall expenditures or else be eligible for being taxed like a for-profit corporation.[142]

Lobbyists sometimes support rules requiring greater transparency and disclosure:

Our profession is at a critical point where we can either embrace the constructive changes and reforms by Congress or we can seek out loopholes and continue the slippery slide into history along side the ranks of snake oil salesmen.

— Lobbyist Gerald S. J. Cassidy, 2007[36]

Scandals can spur impetus towards greater regulation as well. The Jack Abramoff Indian lobbying scandal, which started in the 1990s and led to a guilty plea in 2006, inspired the Legislative Transparency and Accountability Act of 2006 (S. 2349). According to Time Magazine the Senate bill:

  1. barred lobbyists themselves from buying gifts and meals for legislators, but left a loophole in which firms and organizations represented by those lobbyists could still dole out gifts and perks;
  2. allowed privately funded trips if lawmakers got prior approval from a commissioned ethics committee;
  3. required lobbyists to file frequent and detailed activity reports and have them posted publicly. The bill was approved in 2006 by a 90–8 vote.

In 1995, the 104th Congress tried to reform Lobbying by passing the Lobbying Disclosure Act of 1995 which defines and requires lobbyists who are compensated for their actions to register with congressional officials. The legislation was later amended by the Lobbying Disclosure Technical Amendments Act of 1998. There were subsequent modifications leading to the Honest Leadership and Open Government Act of 2007.[27] The Lobbying Transparency and Accountability Act of 2006 (H.R. 4975) legislation modified Senate rules, although some senators and a coalition of good-government groups assailed the bill as being too weak.[143] The Honest Leadership and Open Government Act of 2007 was a comprehensive ethics and lobbying reform bill, (H.R. 2316), which passed in 2007 in the House and Congress by a large majority.[144] A parallel Senate version of the legislation, (S. 1), passed in 2007 by a nearly unanimous vote.[145] After the House & Senate resolved their differences and passed an amended revision, President Bush signed the enrolled bill into law (Pub. L.Tooltip Public Law (United States) 110–81 (text) (PDF)).

Some states have considered banning government employees permanently from lobbying on issues they had worked on. For example, there was a proposal along these lines to prevent county employees in Maryland from ever lobbying on issues they had worked on. The proposal insisted that county officials post financial disclosures as well as prohibit gifts from contractors.[25]

Jack Abramoff, emerging from prison, has spoken publicly about lobbying. In his view, regulations designed to rein in the excesses of lobbying have not been effective, and reforms and regulations have not cleaned up the system "at all". Abramoff said lobbyists could "find a way around just about any reform Congress enacted", and gave an example:

You can't take a congressman to lunch for $25 and buy him a hamburger or a steak or something like that ... But you can take him to a fund-raising lunch and not only buy him that steak, but give him $25,000 extra and call it a fund-raiser – and have all the same access and all the same interactions with that congressman.

— Jack Abramoff, commenting on 60 Minutes, according to CNN[58]

A similar view suggested that lobbying reform efforts have been "fought tooth and nail to prevent its passage" since the people with the power to reform would curtail their own powers and income flows.[12]

Foreign lobbying Edit

Since commerce worldwide is becoming more integrated, with firms headquartered in one country increasingly doing business in many other countries, it is logical to expect that lobbying efforts will reflect the increasing globalization. Sometimes foreign-owned corporations will want to lobby the United States government, and in such instances, new rules can apply, since it can be particularly thorny resolving whether national security interests are at stake and how they might be affected.

In 1938, the Foreign Agents Registration Act[146] required an explicit listing of all political activities undertaken by a lobbyist on behalf of any foreign principal.[11] There were serious concerns about lobbying firms representing foreign entities – and potentially values opposed to American principles – after Axis power agitprop was planted in American soils during World War II[147] through the efforts of public-relations specialist Ivy Lee's proxy firm "German Dye Trust".[148] As a result, in 1938, the Foreign Agents Registration Act or FARA was passed by Congress, and this law required foreign lobbyists to share information about their contracts with the Justice Department.[148] FARA's mandate was to disclose to policymakers the sources of information that influenced public opinions, policies, and law.[149] However, the goal was not to restrict the speech of the lobbyist or the content of the lobbying.[150] Nonetheless, it was estimated that less than half of foreign lobbyists who should have registered under FARA actually did so.[148]

By the 1960s, perceived failures in FARA's enforcement led to public outcry against lobbying excesses, while revelations of foreign bribery circulated regularly well into the early 1970s.[151] This prompted legislation proposed to reduce the autonomy of foreign firms, most of which was not ratified for concerns over a lack of constitutionality.[151] While the House of Representatives passed a rule[152] to increase public scrutiny of foreign lobbying, one estimate was that about 75% of lobbyists were exempt from a registration requirement, including individuals representing foreign interests.[153]

 
Saudi Arabia spent at least $7.5 million lobbying against the Justice Against Sponsors of Terrorism Act.[154]

A general trend is that the number of lobbyists representing foreign companies is rising.[155] The case of Washington's APCO Worldwide, a firm which represented the dictatorship of General Sani Abacha of Nigeria in 1995 whose regime had hanged nine pro-democracy activists, attracted negative publicity.[148] While current law forbids foreign nations from contributing to federal, state, or local elections, loopholes allow American subsidiaries of foreign corporations to establish so-called separated segregated funds or SSFs to raise money.[156] According to one view, the definition of which firms are defined as "foreign" was unclear, and the lack of clarity undermines the ability to regulate their activity. Foreign-funded lobbying efforts include those of Israel, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Egypt, Pakistan, Libya, and China lobbies. In 2010, foreign governments spent approximately $460 million on lobbying Congress and the U.S. Government.[157] Between 2015 and 2017, the Saudi Arabia paid $18 million to 145 registered lobbyists to influence the U.S. government.[158]

While Congress has tried to quell criticisms against the leverage of domestic lobbying firms by updating domestic lobbying legislation – such as the revision of the Lobbyist Disclosure Act in 1997)[159]—there was a report that its inaction in rectifying loopholes in foreign lobbying regulation has led to scandals.[159] There was a report of an upsurge of lobbying by foreign-owned U.S. subsidiaries against Democratic efforts to limit campaign spending in early 2010.[160] The proposed was to restrict lobbying by U.S. subsidiaries of foreign firms.[160] In 2011, the Chinese firm Alibaba hired a lobbying firm in Washington when it began contemplating a purchase of the U.S. firm Yahoo!.[40] There was a case in which a lobbying effort described as "extraordinary" was trying to change the designation of a fringe Iranian opposition group from being a terrorist organization to being a benign organization.[161] Lobbyists seeking to downgrade the designation hired influential foreign affairs officials, including former CIA directors, a former FBI director, and others to advocate for the change of designation.[161] But there have been others accused of illegally lobbying for foreign nations[162] or who failed to register as a foreign agent[163] who may face prison time as a result.

See also Edit

References Edit

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Notes Edit

  1. ^ Federalist No. 10. p. 56 of the Dawson edition at Wikisource.
  2. ^ Federalist No. 10. p. 58 of the Dawson edition at Wikisource.
  3. ^ Federalist No. 10. p. 60 of the Dawson edition at Wikisource.

Further reading Edit

  • Balogh, Brian (2009). "Mirrors of Desires": Interest Groups, Elections, and the Targeted Style in Twentieth-Century America". The Democratic Experiment. pp. 222–249. doi:10.1515/9781400825820.222. ISBN 9781400825820.
  • Baumgartner, Frank R., and Beth L. Leech. Basic Interests: The Importance of Groups in Politics and in Political Science (1998), 64–82, reviews the political science literature on interest groups ISBN 9780691059150
  • Blanes i Vidal, Jordi; Mirko Draca and Christian Fons-Rosen: Revolving Door Lobbyists, 5th Annual Conference on Empirical Legal Studies Paper, July 2010
  • Clemens, Elisabeth S. The People's Lobby: Organizational Innovation and the Rise of Interest-Group Politics in the United States, 1890–1925 (1997) ISBN 9780226109930
  • Hansen, John M. Gaining Access: Congress and the Farm Lobby, 1919–1981 (1991).
  • Kaiser, Robert G. (2010). So Damn Much Money: The Triumph of Lobbying and the Corrosion of American Government. ISBN 9780307385888.
  • Loomis, Christopher M. (2009). "The Politics of Uncertainty: Lobbyists and Propaganda in Early Twentieth-Century America". Journal of Policy History. 21 (2): 187–213. doi:10.1017/S0898030609090083. S2CID 154647291.
  • Lux, Sean; Crook, T. Russell; Woehr, David J. (2011). "Mixing Business with Politics: A Meta-Analysis of the Antecedents and Outcomes of Corporate Political Activity". Journal of Management. 37: 223–247. doi:10.1177/0149206310392233. S2CID 144560276.
  • Stokes, Leah Cardamore (2020). Short Circuiting Policy: Interest Groups and the Battle Over Clean Energy and Climate Policy in the American States. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/oso/9780190074258.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-007425-8.
  • Thompson, Margaret S. The "Spider Web": Congress and Lobbying in the Age of Grant (1985) on 1870s
  • Tichenor, Daniel J.; Harris, Richard A. (2002). "Organized Interests and American Political Development". Political Science Quarterly. 117 (4): 587–612. doi:10.2307/798136. JSTOR 798136.
  • Zelizer, Julian E. Arsenal of Democracy: The Politics of National Security – From World War II to the War on Terrorism (2009) excerpt and text search

External links Edit

  • Lobbying Database from OpenSecrets
  • Government Accountability Groups (from "500 Leading U.S. Progressive Organizations by Category")
  • SourceWatch
  • Lobbyists.info database of lobbyists and government relations professionals
  • Lawrence Lessig TED talk on lobbying
  • Sunlight Foundation
  • US Senate Lobbying-Database Search December 1, 2020, at the Wayback Machine
  • US House of Representatives-Lobby Contributions Search October 7, 2015, at the Wayback Machine

lobbying, united, states, describes, paid, activity, which, special, interest, groups, hire, well, connected, professional, advocates, often, lawyers, argue, specific, legislation, decision, making, bodies, such, united, states, congress, often, perceived, neg. Lobbying in the United States describes paid activity in which special interest groups hire well connected professional advocates often lawyers to argue for specific legislation in decision making bodies such as the United States Congress It is often perceived negatively by journalists and the American public critics consider it to be a form of bribery influence peddling and or extortion 1 2 Lobbying is subject to complex rules which if not followed can lead to penalties including jail Lobbying has been interpreted by court rulings as free speech protected by the First Amendment to the U S Constitution Since the 1970s the numbers of lobbyists and the size of lobbying budgets has grown and become the focus of criticism of American governance K Street in Washington D C has become a metonym for the American lobbying industry Lobbying takes place at every level of government federal state county municipal and local governments In Washington D C lobbyists usually target members of Congress although there have been efforts to influence executive agency officials as well as Supreme Court appointees Lobbying can have a strong influence on the political system for example a study in 2014 suggested that special interest lobbying enhanced the power of elite groups and was a factor shifting the nation s political structure toward an oligarchy in which average citizens have little or no independent influence 3 The number of lobbyists in Washington is estimated to be over 12 000 but most lobbying in terms of expenditures is handled by fewer than 300 firms 4 A report in The Nation in 2014 suggested that while the number of registered lobbyists in 2013 12 281 decreased compared to 2002 lobbying activity was increasing and going underground as lobbyists use increasingly sophisticated strategies to obscure their activity 5 Analyst James A Thurber estimated that the actual number of working lobbyists was close to 100 000 and that the industry brings in 9 billion annually mostly from corporations 5 Wall Street spent a record 2 billion trying to influence the 2016 United States presidential election 6 7 Contents 1 Overview 2 Different types of lobbying 2 1 The focus of lobbying efforts 2 2 Paid versus free lobbying 2 3 Single issue versus multiple issue lobbying 2 4 Inside versus outside lobbying 2 5 Taxpayer funded lobbying 3 History of lobbying 4 Lobbying as a business 4 1 Key players 4 1 1 Lobbyists 4 1 2 Corporations 4 1 3 Unions 4 1 4 Other players 4 2 Lobbying methods and techniques 4 3 Lobbyists as educators and advisors 4 4 A growing billion dollar business 4 5 Examples of lobbying 4 6 Lobbying as a career 4 7 Effectiveness of lobbying 5 Lobbying controversies 5 1 Unfavorable image 5 2 Revolving door 5 3 Insider s game 5 4 Choice making problems 5 5 Governmental focus 5 6 Methodological problems 5 7 Expansion of lobbying 5 8 Potential for reform 5 9 Arguments for lobbying 6 The regulatory environment 6 1 Disclosure and domestic regulations 6 2 Foreign lobbying 7 See also 8 References 9 Notes 10 Further reading 11 External linksOverview EditPolitical scientist Thomas R Dye said that politics is about battling over scarce governmental resources who gets them where when why and how 8 Since government makes the rules in a complex economy such as the United States various organizations businesses individuals nonprofits trade groups religions charities and others which are affected by these rules will exert as much influence as they can to have rulings favorable to their cause nbsp The lobby of the House of Commons Painting 1886 by Liborio Prosperi The term lobby has etymological roots in the physical structure of the British Parliament in which there was an intermediary covered room outside the main hall People pushing an agenda would try to meet with members of Parliament in this room and they came to be known by metonymy as lobbyists although one account in 1890 suggested that the application of the word lobby is American and that the term is not used as much in Britain 9 The Willard Hotel 2 blocks from the White House at 1401 Pennsylvania Avenue claims the term originated there It was in the Willard lobby that Ulysses S Grant popularized the term lobbyist Often bothered by self promoters as he sat in the lobby and enjoyed his cigar and brandy he referred to these individuals as lobbyists 10 The term lobbying suggests advocacy advertising or promoting a cause A person who writes a letter to a congressperson or even questions a candidate at a political meeting could be construed as being a lobbyist 11 The term lobbying generally means a paid activity with the purpose of attempting to influence or sway a public official including bureaucrats and elected officials towards a desired specific action often relating to specific legislation 12 If advocacy is disseminating information then lobbying is when this activity becomes focused on specific legislation either in support or in opposition 12 Lobbyists are intermediaries between client organizations and lawmakers they explain to legislators what their organizations want and they explain to their clients what obstacles elected officials face Some lobbyists work for advocacy groups trade associations companies and state and local governments 13 A lobbyist may put together a diverse coalition of organizations and people sometimes including lawmakers and corporations and the whole effort may be considered to be a lobby for example in the abortion issue there is a pro choice lobby and an anti choice lobby Most federal lobbyists are based in Washington DC 14 an estimate from 2018 suggested that the count of registered lobbyists who actually lobbied that year was 11 656 15 The Washington D C lobbying industry is an exclusive one with serious barriers to entry since it requires them to have been roaming the halls of Congress for years and years 4 It is possible for foreign nations to influence the foreign policy of the United States through lobbying or by supporting lobbying organizations directly or indirectly Different types of lobbying EditThe focus of lobbying efforts Edit nbsp Lobbying depends on cultivating personal relationships over many years Photo Lobbyist Tony Podesta left with former Senator Kay Hagan center and her husband Generally lobbyists focus on trying to persuade decision makers Congress executive branch agencies such as the Treasury Department and the Securities and Exchange Commission 16 the Supreme Court 17 and state governments including governors Federal agencies are targeted by lobbyists because they write industry specific rules accordingly interest groups spend massive sums of money trying to persuade them to make so called carve outs or try to block specific provisions from being enacted 18 A large fraction of overall lobbying is focused on only a few sets of issues according to one report 19 It is possible for one level of government to lobby another level for example the District of Columbia has been lobbying Congress and the President for greater power including possible statehood or voting representation in Congress one assessment in 2011 suggested that the district needed to rethink its lobbying strategy since its past efforts have only had mixed results 20 Many executive branch agencies have the power to write specific rules and are a target of lobbying Federal agencies such as the State Department make rules such as giving aid money to countries such as Egypt and in one example an Egyptian American businessman named Kais Menoufy organized a lobby to try to halt U S aid to Egypt 21 Lobbyists represent their clients or organizations interests in state capitols An example is a former school superintendent who has been lobbying state legislatures in California Michigan and Nevada to overhaul teacher evaluations and trying to end the Last In First Out teacher hiring process 22 State governments can be lobbied by groups which represent other governments within the state such as a city authority for example the cities of Tallahassee 23 and St Petersburg 24 lobbied the Florida legislature using paid lobbyists to represent the city s interests There is lobbying activity at the county 25 and municipal levels especially in larger cities and populous counties For example some Chicago aldermen became lobbyists after serving in municipal government following a one year period required by city ethics rules to abstain from lobbying 26 Paid versus free lobbying Edit While the bulk of lobbying happens by business and professional interests who hire paid professionals some lobbyists represent non profits pro bono for issues in which they are personally interested Pro bono publico clients offer activities to meet and socialize with local legislators at events like fundraisers and awards ceremonies Single issue versus multiple issue lobbying Edit Lobbies which push for a single issue have grown in importance during the past twenty years 11 Corporations generally would be considered as single issue lobbies If a corporation wishes to change public policy or to influence legislation which impacts its success as a business it may use lobbying as a primary avenue for this purpose 27 Lobbies which represent groups such as labor unions business organizations and trade associations may be considered multiple issue lobbies and be willing to accept compromise 11 Inside versus outside lobbying Edit Inside lobbying or sometimes called direct lobbying describes efforts by lobbyists to influence legislation or rule making directly by contacting legislators and their assistants sometimes called staffers or aides Outside lobbying sometimes called indirect lobbying or grassroots lobbying includes attempts by interest group leaders to mobilize citizens outside the policymaking community perhaps by public relations methods or advertising to prompt them to pressure public officials within the policymaking community 28 One example of an outside lobbying effort is a film entitled InJustice made by a group promoting lawsuit reform 29 Some lobbyists are now using social media to reduce the cost of traditional campaigns and to more precisely target public officials with political messages 30 Taxpayer funded lobbying Edit Main article Taxpayer funded lobbying Taxpayer funded lobbying is when one taxpayer funded entity lobbies another taxpayer funded entity usually for more taxpayer funds In the United States this typically takes place in the form of State level agencies or municipalities devoting part of their budget to lobby the State government for a larger budget 31 32 33 History of lobbying EditMain article History of lobbying in the United States nbsp The Federalist Papers in which Framers Madison Hamilton and Jay strove to sway public opinion could be considered according to current usage as an outside lobbying effort The Constitution was crafted in part to solve the problem of special interests today usually represented by lobbies by having these factions compete James Madison identified a faction as a number of citizens whether amounting to a minority or majority of the whole who are united and actuated by some common impulse of passion or of interest adverse to the rights of other citizens or to the permanent and aggregate interests of the community 1 and Madison argued in Federalist No 10 that there was less risk of injury by a narrowly focused faction in a large republic if any negative influence was counteracted by other factions 2 3 In addition the Constitution protected free speech including the right to petition the government 11 34 and these rights have been used by lobbying interests throughout the nation s history There has been lobbying at every level of government particularly in state governments 35 during the nineteenth century but increasingly directed towards the federal government in the twentieth century The last few decades have been marked by an exponential increase in lobbying activity and expenditures 36 Lobbying as a business EditKey players Edit Lobbyists Edit The number of registered Washington lobbyists is substantial In 2009 The Washington Post estimated that there were 13 700 registered lobbyists describing the nation s Capitol as teeming with lobbyists 4 In 2011 The Guardian estimated that in addition to the approximately 13 000 registered lobbyists thousands more unregistered lobbyists could exist in Washington 37 The ratio of lobbyists employed by the healthcare industry compared with every elected politician was six to one according to one account 37 Nevertheless the numbers of lobbyists actively engaged in lobbying is considerably less and the ones occupied with lobbying full time and making significant money is even less Law firms Several law firms including Patton Boggs Akin Gump and Holland amp Knight had sizable departments devoted to so called government relations 38 One account suggested that the lobbying arms of these law firms were not held as separate subsidiaries but that the law practices involved in government lobbying were integrated into the overall framework of the law firm 38 A benefit to an integrated arrangement was that the law firm and the lobbying department could share and refer clients back and forth 38 Holland amp Knight earned 13 9 million from lobbying revenue in 2011 39 One law firm employs so called power brokers including former Treasury department officials such as Marti Thomas and former presidential advisers such as Daniel Meyer 40 There was a report that two law firms were treating their lobbying groups as separate business units and giving the non lawyer lobbyists an equity stake in the firm 38 nbsp Defense contractors such as Boeing and Lockheed Martin sell extensively to the government and must of necessity engage in lobbying to win contracts Corporations Edit Corporations which lobby actively tend to be few in number large and often sell to the government Most corporations do not hire lobbyists 4 One study found that the actual number of firms which do lobbying regularly is fewer than 300 and that the percent of firms engaged in lobbying was 10 from 1998 to 2006 27 and that they were mainly large rich firms getting in on the fun 4 These firms hired lobbyists year after year and there was not much evidence of other large firms taking much interest in lobbying 4 Corporations considering lobbying run into substantial barriers to entry corporations have to research the relevant laws about lobbying hire lobbying firms and cultivate influential people and make connections 4 41 42 43 When an issue regarding a change in immigration policy arose large corporations currently lobbying switched focus somewhat to take account of the new regulatory world but new corporations even ones likely to be affected by any possible rulings on immigration stayed out of the lobbying fray according to the study 27 Still of all the entities doing lobbying in Washington the biggest overall spenders are in fact corporations In the first decade of the 2000s the most lucrative clients for Gerald Cassidy s lobbying firm were corporations displacing fees from the appropriations business 36 Wall Street lobbyists and the financial industry spent upwards of 100 million in one year to court regulators and lawmakers particularly since they were finalizing new regulations for lending trading and debit card fees 44 One academic analysis in 1987 found that firms were more likely to spend on lobbying if they were both large and concerned about adverse financial statement consequences if they did not lobby 45 Big banks were prolific spenders on lobbying JPMorgan Chase has an in house team of lobbyists who spent 3 3 million in 2010 44 the American Bankers Association spent 4 6 million on lobbying 44 an organization representing 100 of the nation s largest financial firms called the Financial Services Roundtable spent heavily as well 44 A trade group representing Hedge Funds spent more than 1 million in one quarter trying to influence the government about financial regulations including an effort to try to change a rule that might demand greater disclosure requirements for funds 16 Amazon com spent 450 000 in one quarter lobbying about a possible online sales tax as well as rules about data protection and privacy 46 Corporations which sell substantially to the government tend to be active lobbiers For example aircraft manufacturer Boeing which has sizeable defense contracts pours millions into lobbying 47 Boeing Co is one of the most influential companies in airline manufacturing and has continually shown its influence in lobbying Congress Between January and September Boeing spent a total of 12 million lobbying according to research by OpenSecrets Additionally Boeing has its own political action committee which donated more than 2 2 million to federal candidates during the 2010 election cycle Of that sum 53 percent went to Democrats Through September Boeing s PAC has donated 748 000 to federal politicians Chicago Sun Times quoting OpenSecrets org 2011 47 In the spring of 2017 there was a fierce lobbying effort by Internet service providers ISPs such as Comcast and AT amp T and tech firms such as Google and Facebook to undo regulations protecting consumer privacy 48 Rules passed by the Obama administration in 2016 required ISPs to get explicit consent from consumers before gathering browsing histories locations of businesses visited and applications used but trade groups wanted to be able to sell this information for profit without consent 48 Lobbyists connected with Republican senator Jeff Flake and Republican representative Marsha Blackburn to sponsor legislation to dismantle Internet privacy rules Flake received 22 700 in donations and Blackburn received 20 500 in donations from these trade groups 48 On March 23 2017 abolition of privacy restrictions passed on a narrow party line vote and the lobbying effort achieved its result 48 In 2017 credit reporting agency Equifax lobbied Congress extensively spending 1 1 million in 2016 and 500 000 in 2017 seeking rules to limit damage from lawsuits and less regulatory oversight in August 2017 Equifax s databases were breached and the confidential data of millions of Americans was stolen by hackers and identity thieves potentially opening up the firm to numerous class action lawsuits 49 Major American corporations spent 345 million lobbying for just three pro immigration bills between 2006 and 2008 50 Internet service providers in the United States have spent more than 1 2 billion on lobbying since 1998 and 2018 was the biggest year so far with a total spend of more than 80 million 51 From a review in 2020 major food and beverage corporations spent 38 2 million on lobbying to strengthen and maintain big food influence in Washington D C 52 Unions Edit One report suggested the United Food amp Commercial Workers International Union spent 80 000 lobbying the federal government on issues relating to the tax code food safety immigration reform and other issues 53 Other players Edit Other possible players in the lobbying arena are those who might influence legislation House amp Senate colleagues public opinion in the district the White House party leaders union leaders and other influential persons and groups 28 Interest groups are often thought of as nonparty organizations which regularly try to change or influence government decision making 28 Lobbying methods and techniques Edit Lobbying has much in common with highly people intensive businesses such as management consulting and public relations but with a political and legal sensibility Like lawmakers many lobbyists are lawyers and the persons they are trying to influence have the duty of writing laws That the disciplines of law and lobbying are intertwined could be seen in the case of a Texas lawyer who had been seeking compensation for his unfairly imprisoned client since his exonerated prisoner client had trouble paying the legal expenses the lawyer lobbied the Texas state legislature to raise the state s payment for unfairly imprisoned prisoners from 50 000 per year to 80 000 per year it succeeded making it possible for his newly freed client to pay the lawyer s fees 54 nbsp Connections count Congressman Tom Perriello with lobbyist Heather Podesta at an inauguration party for Barack Obama Well connected lobbyists work in Washington for years know the issues are highly skilled advocates 55 and have cultivated close connections with members of Congress regulators specialists and others They understand strategy and have excellent communication skills many are well suited to be able to choose which clients they would like to represent 55 Lobbyists patiently cultivate networks of powerful people over many years trying to build trust and maintain confidence and friendships When a client hires them to push a specific issue or agenda they usually form coalitions to exert political pressure 11 Lobbying as a result depends on trying to be flexible to new opportunities but at the same time to act as an agent for a client As one lobbyist put it It s my job to advance the interests of my association or client Period comment by a lobbyist 55 Access is important and often means a one on one meeting with a legislator 56 Getting access can sometimes be difficult but there are various avenues email personal letters phone calls face to face meetings meals get togethers and even chasing after congresspersons in the Capitol building My style of lobbying is not to have big formal meetings but to catch members on the fly as they re walking between the House and the office buildings a lobbyist commenting on access 55 dd When getting access is difficult there are ways to wear down the walls surrounding a legislator Jack Abramoff explained Access is vital in lobbying If you can t get in your door you can t make your case Here we had a hostile senator whose staff was hostile and we had to get in So that s the lobbyist safe cracker method throw fundraisers raise money and become a big donor Lobbyist Jack Abramoff in 2011 57 dd Lobbyists often assist congresspersons with campaign finance 55 by arranging fundraisers assembling PACs 27 36 and seeking donations from other clients Many lobbyists become campaign treasurers and fundraisers for congresspersons This helps incumbent members cope with the substantial amounts of time required to raise money for reelection bids one estimate was that congresspersons had to spend a third of their working hours on fundraising activity 36 PACs are fairly easy to set up it requires a lawyer and about 300 roughly 11 An even steeper possible reward which can be used in exchange for favors is the lure of a high paying job as a lobbyist according to Jack Abramoff one of the best ways to get what he wanted was to offer a high ranking congressional aide a high paying job after they decided to leave public office 58 When such a promise of future employment was accepted according to Abramoff we owned them 58 This helped the lobbying firm exert influence on that particular congressperson by going through the staff member or aide At the same time it is hard for outside observers to argue that a particular decision such as hiring a former staffer into a lobbying position was purely as a reward for some past political decision since staffers often have valuable connections and policy experience needed by lobbying firms 59 Research economist Mirko Draca suggested that hiring a staffer was an ideal way for a lobbying firm to try to sway their old bosses a congressperson in the future 59 In a one on one meeting with a lobbyist it helps to understand precisely what goal is wanted 11 A lobbyist wants action on a bill a legislator wants to be re elected 56 The idea is to persuade a legislator that what the lobbyist wants is good public policy 28 Lobbyists often urge lawmakers to try to persuade other lawmakers to approve a bill 56 Still persuasion is a subtle business 28 In one instance of a public relations reversal a lobbying initiative by the Cassidy firm which targeted Senator Robert C Byrd blew up when the Cassidy Byrd connection was published in The Washington Post this resulted in a furious Byrd reversing his previous pro Cassidy position and throwing a theatrical temper tantrum regarding an 18 million facility Byrd denounced lobbyists who collect exorbitant fees to create projects and have them earmarked in appropriation bills for the benefit of their clients 60 Since it often takes a long time to build the network of relationships within the lobbying industry ethical interpersonal dealings are important A maxim in the industry is for lobbyists to be truthful with people they are trying to persuade one lobbyist described it this way what you ve basically got is your word and reputation 55 An untruth a lie is too risky to the successful development of a long term relationship and the potential gain is not worth the risk 55 One report suggested that below the belt tactics generally do not work 11 One account suggest that groping for personal dirt on opponents was counterproductive since it would undermine respect for the lobbyist and their clients 11 And by reverse logic if an untruth is told by an opponent or opposing lobby then it makes sense to publicize it 11 But the general code among lobbyists is that unsubstantiated claims are bad business 11 Even worse is planting an informant in an opponent s camp since if this subterfuge is ever discovered it will boomerang negatively in a hundred ways and credibility will drop to zero 11 The importance of personal relationships in lobbying can be seen in the state of Illinois in which father son ties helped push a smart grid energy bill although there were accusations of favoritism 61 And there is anecdotal evidence that a business firm seeking to profitably influence legislation has to pay particular attention to which lobbyist it hires 62 Strategic considerations for lobbyists trying to influence legislation include locating a power base or a constituency logically predisposed to support a given policy 56 Timing as well is usually important in the sense of knowing when to propose a certain action and having a big picture view of the possible sequence of desired actions 28 Strategic lobbying tries to estimate the possible responses of different groups to a possible lobby approach one study suggested that the expectations of opposition from other interests was a key factor helping to determine how a lobby should operate 63 Increasingly lobbyists seek to put together coalitions and use outside lobbying by swaying public opinion 28 Bigger more diverse and deep pocketed coalitions tend to be more effective in outside lobbying and the strength in numbers principle often applies 64 Interest groups try to build sustainable coalitions of similarly situated individual organizations in pursuit of like minded goals 12 According to one study it is often difficult for a lobbyist to influence a staff member in Congress directly since staffers tend to be well informed and subject to views from competing interests As an indirect tactic lobbyists can try to manipulate public opinion which in turn can sometimes exert pressure on congresspersons 55 Activities for these purposes include trying to use the mass media cultivating contacts with reporters and editors encouraging them to write editorials and cover stories to influence public opinion which may have the secondary effect of influencing Congress 55 According to analyst Ken Kollman it is easier to sway public opinion than a congressional staff member since it is possible to bombard the public with half truths distortion scare tactics and misinformation 55 Kollman suggests there should be two goals 1 communicate that there is public support behind an issue to policymakers and 2 increase public support for the issue among constituents 28 Kollman suggested outside lobbying was a powerful tool for interest group leaders 28 In a sense using these criteria one could consider James Madison as having engaged in outside lobbying since after the Constitution was proposed he wrote many of the 85 newspaper editorials arguing for people to support the Constitution and these writings later became the Federalist Papers 8 As a result of this lobbying effort the Constitution was ratified although there were narrow margins of victory in four of the state legislatures Lobbying today generally requires mounting a coordinated campaign using targeted blitzes of telephone calls letters emails to congressional lawmakers marches down the National Mall bus caravans and such and these are often put together by lobbyists who coordinate a variety of interest group leaders to unite behind a hopefully simple easy to grasp and persuasive message 28 It is important for lobbyists to follow rules governing lobbying behavior These can be difficult and complex take time to learn require full disclosure 55 and mistakes can land a lobbyist in serious legal trouble Gifts for congresspersons and staffers can be problematic since anything of sizeable value must be disclosed and generally such gifts are illegal 58 Failure to observe gift restrictions was one factor which caused lobbyist Jack Abramoff to eventually plead guilty to a raft of federal corruption charges and led to convictions for 20 lobbyists and public officials including congressperson Bob Ney and Bush deputy interior secretary Stephen Griles 58 Generally gifts to congresspersons or their staffs or federal officials are not allowed but with a few exceptions books are permitted provided that the inside cover is inscribed with the congressperson s name and the name of one s organization 11 Gifts under 5 are allowed 11 Another exception is awards so it is permitted to give a congressperson a plaque thanking him or her for support on a given issue 11 Cash gifts payable by check can only be made to campaign committees not to a candidate personally or to staff it is not permitted to give cash or stock 11 Wealthy lobbyists often encourage other lobbying clients to donate to a particular cause in the hope that favors will be returned at a later date Lobbyist Gerald Cassidy encouraged other clients to give for causes dear to a particular client engaged in a current lobbying effort 60 Some lobbyists give their own money Cassidy reportedly donated a million dollars on one project according to one report which noted that Cassidy s firm received many times that much in fees from their clients paid in monthly retainers 60 And their clients in turn had received hundreds of millions in earmarked appropriations and benefits worth hundreds of millions more 60 nbsp Jack Abramoff was at the center of an extensive corruption investigationThe dynamics of the lobbying world make it fairly easy for a semi skilled operator to defraud a client This is essentially what happened in the Jack Abramoff Indian lobbying scandal There was a concerned client in this case an Indian casino worried about possible ill effects of legislation on its gambling business and there were lobbyists such as Jack Abramoff who knew how to exploit these fears The lobbyists actively lobbied against their own casino client as a way to ratchet up their fears of adverse legislation as well as stoke possible future contributions the lobbyists committed other violations such as grossly overbilling their clients as well as violating rules about giving gifts to congresspersons Numerous persons went to jail after the scandal The following are factors which can make fraud a fairly easy to do activity that lobbyists are paid only to try to influence decision makers and may or may not succeed making it hard to tell if a lobbyist did actual work 55 that much of what happens regarding interpersonal relations is obscure despite rather strict disclosure and transparency requirements that there are sizable monies involved factors such as these almost guarantee that there will be future scandals involving fraudulent lobbying activity according to one assessment A fraud similar to Abramoff s was perpetrated in Maryland by lobbyist Gerard E Evans who was convicted of mail and wire fraud in 2000 in a case involving falsely creating a fictitious legislative threat against a client and then billing the client to work against this supposed threat 65 Lobbyists routinely monitor how congressional officials vote sometimes checking the past voting records of congresspersons 11 One report suggested that reforms requiring publicly recorded committee votes led to more information about how congresspersons voted but instead of becoming a valuable resource for the news media or voters the information helped lobbyists monitor congressional voting patterns 66 As a general rule lawmakers must vote as a particular interest group wishes them to vote or risk losing support 11 Strategy usually dictates targeting specific office holders On the state level one study suggested that much of the lobbying activity targeted the offices of governors as well as state level executive bureaucrats state lobbying was an intensely personal game with face to face contact being required for important decisions 67 Lobbying can be a counteractive response to the lobbying efforts of others One study suggested this was particularly true for battles surrounding possible decisions by the Supreme Court which is considered as a battleground for public policy in which differing groups try to etch their policy preferences into law 17 Sometimes there are lobbying efforts to slow or derail other legislative processes for example when the FDA began considering a cheaper generic version of the costly anti clotting drug Lovenox the French pharmaceutical firm Sanofi sprang into action to try and slow the process 68 Lobbyists are often assembled in anticipation of a potential takeover bid particularly when there are large high profile companies or a large foreign company involved and substantial concern that the takeover may be blocked by regulatory authorities 40 An example may illustrate The company Tyco had learned that there had been discussion about a possible new tax provision that might have cost it 4 billion overall 57 So the firm hired Jack Abramoff and paid him a retainer of 100 000 a month 57 He assembled dozens of lobbyists with connections to key congressional committees with the ultimate objective being to influence powerful Senator Charles Grassley 57 Abramoff began with a fundraising effort to round up every check possible 57 He sought funds from his other lobbying clients I had my clients understand that just as other clients who had nothing to do with them would step up and give contributions to congressmen they needed to have some sway with so similarly they needed to do the same I went to every client I could and rounded up every check we could for him Lobbyist Jack Abramoff in 2011 57 Lobbyists as educators and advisors Edit Government has grown so complex that it is a virtual certainty that more than one agency would be affected by any piece of legislation according to one view 11 Lobbyists therefore spend considerable time learning the ins and outs of issues and can use their expertise to educate lawmakers 69 and help them cope with difficult issues 12 Lobbyists knowledge has been considered to be an intellectual subsidy for lawmakers 69 70 Some lobbyists become specialists with expertise in a particular set of issues although one study suggested that of two competing criteria for lobbyists expertise or access that access was far more important 27 71 72 Lobby groups and their members sometimes also write legislation and whip bills and in these instances it is helpful to have lawyers skilled in writing legislation to assist with these efforts 11 Lobbyists may write the actual text of the proposed law and hire lawyers to get the language down pat an omission in wording or an unclear phrase may open up a loophole for opponents to wrangle over for years 11 Lobbyists can often advise a lawmaker on how to navigate the approval process 69 Lobbying firms can serve as mentors and guides For example after months of protesting by the Occupy Wall Street one lobbying firm prepared a memo to its clients warning that Republicans may turn on big banks at least in public which may have the effect of altering the political ground for years to come 73 Here are parts of the memo which were broadcast on the MSNBC network Leading Democratic party strategists have begun to openly discuss the benefits of embracing the growing and increasingly organized Occupy Wall Street OWS movement This would mean more than just short term discomfort for Wall Street firms If vilifying the leading companies of this sector is allowed to become an unchallenged centerpiece of a coordinated Democratic campaign it has the potential to have very long lasting political policy and financial impacts on the companies in the center of the bullseye the bigger concern should be that Republicans will no longer defend Wall Street companies Clark Lytle Geduldig Cranford law lobbying firm to a Wall Street client 73 A growing billion dollar business Edit Top lobbying sectors 1998 2010 74 75 Client Amount Spent 1 Finance Insurance amp Real Estate 4 274 060 331 15 2 Health 4 222 427 808 15 3 Misc Business 4 149 842 571 14 4 Communications Electronics 3 497 881 399 12 5 Energy amp Natural Resources 3 104 104 518 11 6 Transportation 2 245 118 222 8 7 Other 2 207 772 363 7 8 Ideological Single Issue 1 477 294 241 5 9 Agribusiness 1 280 824 983 4 10 Defense 1 216 469 173 4 11 Construction 480 363 108 2 12 Labor 427 355 408 1 13 Lawyers amp Lobbyists themselves 336 170 306 1 Total 28 919 684 431 99 76 Note Amounts do not includecampaign contributions 77 78 Since the 1970s there has been explosive growth in the lobbying industry particularly in Washington D C By 2011 one estimate of overall lobbying spending nationally was 30 billion dollars 78 An estimate of lobbying expenses in the federal arena was 3 5 billion in 2010 while it had been only 1 4 billion in 1998 37 And there is prodigious data since firms are required to disclose lobbying expenditures on a quarterly basis The industry however is not immune to economic downturns If Congress is gridlocked such as during the summer and early fall of 2011 lobbying activity dipped considerably according to The Washington Post 79 Lobbying firm Patton Boggs reported drops in revenue during that year from 12 million in 2010 to 11 million in 2011 79 To cope with the downturn some law firms compensated by increasing activity in litigation regulatory work and representing clients in congressional investigations 79 A sea change in government such as a shift in control of the legislature from one political party to the other can affect the lobbying business profoundly For example the primarily Democratic serving lobbying firm Cassidy amp Associates learned that control of Congress would change hands from Democrats to Republicans in 1994 and the firm acquired Republican lobbyists before the congressional handover of power and the move helped the lobbying firm stay on top of the new political realities 36 Examples of lobbying Edit There are numerous examples of lobbying activity reported by the media One report chronicled a somewhat unusual alliance of consumer advocates and industry groups to boost funding for the Food and Drug Administration the general pattern of lobbying efforts had been to try to reduce the regulatory oversight of such an agency In this case however lobbying groups wanted the federal watchdog agency to have tougher policing authority to avert expensive problems when oversight was lax in this case industry and consumer groups were in harmony and lobbyists were able to persuade officials that higher FDA budgets were in the public interest 80 Religious consortiums according to one report have engaged in a 400 million lobbying effort on such issues as the relation between church and state civil rights for religious minorities bioethics issues including abortion and capital punishment and end of life issues and family issues 81 Lobbying as a career Edit While national level lobbyists working in Washington have the highest salaries many lobbyists operating at the state level can earn substantial salaries The table shows the top lobbyists in one state Maryland in 2011 Top Maryland lobbyists 2011 Lobbyist IncomeGerard E Evans 1 232 000Timothy A Perry 1 217 793Joel D Rozner 1 215 161Robin F Shaivitz 1 156 368Gregory S Proctor Jr 1 107 144John R Stierhoff 1 059 766Michael V Johansen 1 050 234Nicholas G Manis 1 016 250D Robert Enten 863 193Lisa Harris Jones 857 000Source State EthicsCommission 82 Top power brokers such as Gerald Cassidy have made fortunes from lobbying Cassidy s reaction to his own wealth has been complicated He lives large riding around town in his chauffeured car spending thousands on custom made clothes investing big money in for example the Charlie Palmer Steak restaurant at the foot of Capitol Hill just for the fun of it He has fashioned a wine cellar of more than 7 000 bottles He loves to go to England and live like a gentleman of the kind his Irish antecedents would have considered an anathema journalist Robert G Kaiser in 2007 in The Washington Post 36 Effectiveness of lobbying Edit nbsp There is general agreement that money is a key variable in lobbying The consensus is that lobbying generally works overall in achieving sought after results for clients particularly since it has become so prevalent with substantial and growing budgets although there are dissenting views A study by the investment research firm Strategas which was cited in The Economist and The Washington Post compared the 50 firms that spent the most on lobbying relative to their assets and compared their financial performance against that of the S amp P 500 in the stock market the study concluded that spending on lobbying was a spectacular investment yielding blistering returns comparable to a high flying hedge fund even despite the financial downturn of the past few years 62 A 2009 study by University of Kansas professor Raquel Meyer Alexander suggested that lobbying brought a substantial return on investment 83 A 2011 meta analysis of previous research findings found a positive correlation between corporate political activity and firm performance 84 There are numerous reports that the National Rifle Association or NRA successfully influenced 45 senators to block a proposed rule to regulate assault weapons despite strong public support for gun control 85 86 The NRA spends heavily to influence gun policy it gives 3 million annually to the re election campaigns of congresspersons directly and gives additional money to PACs and others to influence legislation indirectly according to the BBC in 2016 87 There is widespread agreement that a key ingredient in effective lobbying is money 88 This view is shared by players in the lobbying industry Deep pockets speak the money trumps it all Anonymous lobbyist 2002 55 Still effectiveness can vary depending on the situational context One view is that large multiple issue lobbies tend to be effective in getting results for their clients if they are sophisticated managed by a legislative director familiar with the art of compromise and play political hardball 11 But if such lobbies became too big such as large industrial trade organizations they became harder to control often leading to lackluster results 11 A study in 2001 which compared lobbying activity in US style congressional against European style parliamentary systems found that in congressional systems there was an advantage favoring the agenda setters but that in both systems lobbying has a marked effect on policies 89 One report suggested that the 1 000 registered lobbyists in California were highly influential such that they were called the Third House 90 Studies of lobbying by academics in previous decades painted a picture of lobbying being an ineffectual activity although many of these studies were done before lobbying became prevalent in American politics A study in 1963 by Bauer Pool amp Dexter suggested lobbyists were mostly impotent in exerting influence 28 Studies in the early 1990s suggested that lobbying exerted influence only marginally although it suggested that when lobbying activity did achieve political impacts that the results of the political choices were sufficient to justify the expenditure on lobbying 28 A fairly recent study in 2009 is that Washington lobbies are far less influential than political rhetoric suggests and that most lobbying campaigns do not change any views and that there was a strong entrenchment of the status quo 19 But it depends on what is seen as effective since many lobbying battles result in a stalemate since powerful interests battle and in many cases merely keeping the status quo could be seen as a victory of sorts What happens often is that varying coalitions find themselves in diametrical opposition to each other and that stalemates result 12 91 There is anecdotal evidence from numerous newspaper accounts of different groups battling that lobbying activity usually achieves results For example the Obama administration pledged to stop for profit colleges from luring students with false promises but with this threat the lobbying industry sprang into action with a 16 million campaign and their efforts succeeded in watering down the proposed restrictions 92 How did the lobbying campaign succeed Actions taken included spent 16 million 92 hired all star list of prominent players including Democrats and Republicans with White House ties 92 plotted strategy 92 worked with fund raising bundler Jamie Rubin a former Obama communications director 92 won support from influential people including congressperson turned lobbyist Dick Gephardt senator turned lobbyist John Breaux lobbyist Tony Podesta Washington Post CEO Donald E Graham education entrepreneur and University of Phoenix founder John Sperling others 92 key leaders made impassioned appeals 92 mobilization effort produced 90 000 public documents to the Education department advocating against changes 92 dd And sometimes merely keeping the status quo could be seen as a victory When gridlock led to the supposed supercommittee solution numerous lobbyists from all parts of the political spectrum worked hard and a stalemate resulted but with each side defended their own special interests 93 And while money is an important variable it is one among many variables and there have been instances in which huge sums have been spent on lobbying only to have the result backfire One report suggested that the communications firm AT amp T failed to achieve substantial results from its lobbying efforts in 2011 since government antitrust officials rejected its plan to acquire rival T Mobile 94 Lobbying is a practical necessity for firms that live and die by government decisions such as large government contractors such as Boeing A study done in 2006 by Bloomberg News suggested that lobbying was a sound money making strategy for the 20 largest federal contractors The largest contractor Lockheed Martin Corporation received almost 40 billion in federal contracts in 2003 4 and spent 16 million on lobbying expenses and campaign donations 62 For each dollar of lobbying investment the firm received 2 517 in revenues according to the report 62 When the lobbying firm Cassidy amp Associates began achieving results with earmarks for colleges and universities and medical centers new lobbying firms rose to compete with them to win earmarks of their own a clear sign that the lobbying was exceedingly effective 36 Lobbying controversies EditLobbying has been the subject of much debate and discussion There is general consensus that lobbying has been a significant corrupting influence in American politics although criticism is not universal and there have been arguments put forward to suggest that the system is working properly Unfavorable image Edit Main article Corruption in the United States nbsp The Bosses of the Senate corporate interests as giant money bags looming over senators 95 Generally the image of lobbyists and lobbying in the public sphere is not a positive one although this is not a universal sentiment Lobbyists have been described as a hired gun without principles or positions 55 Scandals involving lobbying have helped taint the image of the profession such as ones involving lobbyist Jack Abramoff and congressmen Randy Duke Cunningham and Bob Ney and others and which featured words such as bribery lobbyist member of Congress and prison tending to appear together in the same articles 8 96 Negative publicity can sully lobbying s image to a great extent high profile cases of lobbying fraud such as Abramoff s 8 dubious father son exchange of favors ties 61 public officials such as Newt Gingrich being accused and then denying accusations of having done lobbying and earning 1 6 million from strategic advice 97 There are a variety of reasons why lobbying has acquired a negative image in public consciousness While there is much disclosure much of it happens in hard to disclose personal meetings and the resulting secrecy and confidentiality can serve to lower lobbying s status 11 Revolving door Edit Main article Revolving door politics nbsp The image of a revolving door has been used to describe the relation between working in government and for lobbyists Since the 1980s congresspersons and staffers have been going downtown becoming lobbyists and the big draw is money 98 The lucrative world of K Street means that former congresspersons with even modest seniority can move into jobs paying 1 million or more annually without including bonuses for bringing in new clients 98 The general concern of this revolving door activity is that elected officials persons who were supposed to represent the interests of citizens 99 have instead become entangled with the big money interests of for profit corporations and interest groups with narrow concerns and that public officials have been taken over by private interests 66 In July 2005 Public Citizen published a report entitled The Journey from Congress to K Street the report analyzed hundreds of lobbyist registration documents filed in compliance with the Lobbying Disclosure Act and the Foreign Agents Registration Act among other sources It found that since 1998 43 percent of the 198 members of Congress who left government to join private life have registered to lobby A similar report from OpenSecrets found 370 former members were in the influence peddling business with 285 officially registered as federal lobbyists and 85 others who were described as providing strategic advice or public relations to corporate clients 98 The Washington Post described these results as reflecting the sea change that has occurred in lawmakers attitudes toward lobbying in recent years The report included a case study of one particularly successful lobbyist Bob Livingston who stepped down as Speaker elect and resigned his seat in 1999 In the six years since his resignation The Livingston Group grew into the 12th largest non law lobbying firm earning nearly 40 million by the end of 2004 During roughly the same time period Livingston his wife and his two political action committees PACs contributed over 500 000 to the campaign funds of various candidates The percentage of former members of Congress who become lobbyists has continued to increase A 2019 study found that 59 of representatives who leave Congress to work in the private sector are working for lobbying or political consulting firms trade groups or business groups tasked with influencing federal government policy 100 Numerous reports chronicle the revolving door phenomenon 55 A 2011 estimate suggested that nearly 5 400 former congressional staffers had become federal lobbyists over a ten year period and 400 lawmakers made a similar jump 59 It is a symbiotic relationship in the sense that lobbying firms can exploit the experience and connections gleaned from working inside the legislative process and lawmakers find a ready pool of experienced talent 59 There is movement in the other direction as well one report found that 605 former lobbyists had taken jobs working for lawmakers over a ten year period 59 A study by the London School of Economics found 1 113 lobbyists who had formerly worked in lawmakers offices 59 The lobbying option is a way for staffers and lawmakers to cash in on their experience according to one view 36 Before the 1980s staffers and aides worked many years for congresspersons sometimes decades and tended to stay in their jobs now with the lure of higher paying lobbying jobs many would quit their posts after a few years at most to go downtown 36 nbsp Lawmaker turned lobbyist Democratic congressperson Dick Gephardt switched to lobbying and has been making millions annually working for clients such as Goldman Sachs And it is not just staffers but lawmakers as well including high profile ones such as congressperson Richard Gephardt He represented a working class district in Missouri for many years but after leaving Congress he became a lobbyist 98 In 2007 he began his own lobbying firm called Gephardt Government Affairs Group and in 2010 it was earning close to 7 million in revenues with clients including Goldman Sachs Boeing Visa Inc Ameren Corporation and Waste Management Inc 98 Senators Robert Bennett and Byron Dorgan became lobbyists too 101 Mississippi governor Haley Barbour became a lobbyist 102 In 2010 former representative Billy Tauzin earned 11 million running the drug industry s lobbying organization called Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America PhRMA 98 His bill to provide prescription drug access to Medicare recipients gave major concessions to the pharmaceutical industry 1 Medicare was prevented from negotiating lower costs for prescription drugs 2 the reimportation of drugs from first world countries was not allowed 3 Medicare D was undermined by a policy of Medigap D After the bill passed a few months later Tauzin retired from Congress and took an executive position at PhRMA to earn an annual salary of 2 million 103 Many former representatives earned over 1 million in one year including James Greenwood and Daniel Glickman 98 Insider s game Edit nbsp Occupy Wall Street protesters have been critical of lobbying in government A similar concern voiced by critics of lobbying is that Washington politics has become dominated by elites and that it is an insider s game excluding regular citizens 55 and which favors entrenched firms 104 Individuals generally can not afford to lobby and critics question whether corporations with deeper pockets should have greater power than voters In this view the system favors the rich such that the rich have gotten richer the weak weaker admits lobbyist Gerald Cassidy 36 Those having more money and better political connections can exert more influence than others There is so much money that it has been described as a flood that has a corrupting influence 37 so that the United States appears to be awash in interest groups 8 If coalitions of different forces battle in the political arena for favorable treatment and better rules and tax breaks it can be seen as fair if both sides have equal resources and try to fight for their interests as best they can 40 105 Gerald Cassidy said In a lot of areas the stakes are between big companies and it s hard to argue that one solution is better than another solution with regard to the consumer s interest The issue is whether Company A s solution or Company B s solution based on their technology or their footprint is the right one Lobbyist Gerald Cassidy 36 A related but slightly different criticism is that the problem with lobbying as it exists today is that it creates an inequity of access to the decision making process 12 As a result important needs get left out of the political evaluation such that there are no anti hunger lobbies or lobbies seeking serious solutions to the problem of poverty 36 Nonprofit advocacy has been conspicuously absent from lobbying efforts according to one view 12 Critics suggest that when a powerful coalition battles a less powerful one or one which is poorly connected or underfunded the result may be seen as unfair and potentially harmful for the entire society The increasing number of former lawmakers becoming lobbyists has led Senator Russ Feingold D WI to propose when paring back the many Capitol Hill privileges enjoyed by former senators and representatives His plan citation needed would deprive lawmakers turned lobbyists of privileges such as unfettered access to otherwise members only areas such as the House and Senate floors and the House gym Choice making problems Edit nbsp Studies have linked problems in the housing industry with lobbying efforts A concern among many critics is that influence peddling hurts overall decision making according to this criticism Proposals with merit are dropped in favor of proposals backed by political expediency 12 An example cited in the media is the recent battling between food industry lobbyists and healthcare lobbyists regarding school lunches A group supported by the United States Department of Agriculture proposed healthier lunches as a way to combat childhood obesity by limiting the number of potatoes served limiting salty foods and adding more fresh vegetables but this group was countered by a strong food lobby backed by Coca Cola Del Monte and makers of frozen pizza 106 The food lobbyists succeeded in blocking the proposed reforms even writing rules suggesting that the tomato paste on a pizza qualified as a vegetable 37 but overall according to critics this case appeared to be an example where business interests won out over health concerns 106 Critics use examples such as these to suggest that lobbying distorts sound governance 106 A study by IMF economists found that the heaviest lobbying came from lenders making riskier loans and expanding their mortgage business most rapidly during the housing boom and that there were indications that heavy lobbying lenders were more likely to receive bailout funds 104 107 108 The study found a correlation between lobbying by financial institutions and excessive risk taking during 2000 2007 and the authors concluded that politically active lenders played a role in accumulation of risks and thus contributed to the financial crisis 108 Another study suggested that governments tend to protect domestic industries and have a habit of shunting monies to ailing sectors the study suggested that it is not that government policy picks losers it is that losers pick government policy 109 One critic suggested that the financial industry has successfully blocked attempts at regulation in the aftermath of the 2008 financial collapse 110 Governmental focus Edit nbsp Lobbyists collided over school lunches Pizza can be served to schoolchildren since tomato paste can be considered as a vegetable and part of a healthy meal Critics have contended that when lawmakers are drawn into battles to determine issues such as the composition over school lunches or how much an ATM fee should be 111 more serious issues such as deficit reduction or global warming or social security are neglected 37 66 It leads to legislative inertia 112 The concern is that the preoccupation with what are seen as superficial issues prevents attention to long term problems Critics suggested that the 2011 Congress spent more time discussing per transaction debit card fees while neglecting issues seen as more pressing 66 113 Methodological problems Edit In this line of reasoning critics contend that lobbying in and of itself is not the sole problem but only one aspect of a larger problem with American governance Critics point to an interplay of factors citizens being uninvolved politically 55 congresspersons needing huge sums of money for expensive television advertising campaigns increased complexity in terms of technologies congresspersons spending three days of every week raising money 113 and so forth Given these temptations lobbying came along as a logical response to meet the needs of congresspersons seeking campaign funds and staffers seeking personal enrichment In a sense in competitive politics the common good gets lost I know what my client wants no one knows what the common good is Anonymous lobbyist 55 A lobbyist can identify a client s needs But it is hard for a single individual to say what is best for the whole group The intent of the Constitution s Framers was to have built in constitutional protections to protect the common good but according to these critics these protections do not seem to be working well The structure of representative government elected by the people was to be our system s built in protection of the whole of us fairly elected officeholders were to represent their constituent groups free from any obligations to special interests Unfortunately money has corrupted the system and compromised both the fairness of the electoral process as well as the independence and impartiality of elected officials Barry Hessenius in Hardball Lobbying for Nonprofits 2007 12 nbsp Former convicted lobbyist Jack Abramoff left listens to Harvard law professor Lawrence Lessig in 2011 Lawrence Lessig a professor at Harvard Law School and author of Republic Lost suggested that the moneyed persuasive power of special interests has insinuated itself between the people and the lawmakers 114 115 116 He quoted congressperson Jim Cooper who remarked that Congress had become a Farm League for K Street in the sense that congresspersons were focused on lucrative lobbying careers after Congress rather than on serving the public interest while in office 117 In a speech Lessig suggested the structure of incentives was such that legislators were tempted to propose unnecessary regulations as a way to further lobbying industry activity 118 According to one view major legislation such as proposed Wall Street reforms have spurred demand for participating in the regulatory process 79 Lessig suggested the possibility that it was not corporations deciding to take up lobbying but Congress choosing to debate less than important issues to bring well heeled corporations into the political fray as lobbyists As a result of his concerns Lessig has called on state governments to summon a Second Constitutional Convention to propose substantive reform 116 Lessig believes that a constitutional amendment should be written to limit political contributions from non citizens including corporations anonymous organizations and foreign nationals 119 Our current tax system with all its complexities is in part designed to make it easier for candidates in particular congressmen to raise money to get back to congress All sorts of special exceptions which expire after a limited period of time are just a reason to pick up the phone and call somebody and say Your exception is about to expire here s a good reason for you to help us fight to get it to extend And that gives them the opportunity to practice what is really a type of extortion shaking the trees of money in the private sector into their campaign coffers so that they can run for congress again Lawrence Lessig 2011 112 Scholars such as Richard Labunski Sanford Levinson Glenn Reynolds 120 Larry Sabato 121 as well as newspaper columnist William Safire 122 and activists such as John Booth of RestoringFreedom org have called for constitutional changes that would curb the powerful role of money in politics 117 Expansion of lobbying Edit Law in the United States is generally made by Congress but as the federal government has expanded during much of the twentieth century there are a sizeable number of federal agencies generally under the control of the president These agencies write often industry specific rules and regulations regarding such things as automobile safety and air quality 121 Unlike elected congresspersons who are constantly seeking campaign funds these appointed officials are harder to influence generally However there are indications that lobbyists seek to expand their influence from the halls of Congress deeper into the federal bureaucracy 69 123 President Obama pledged during the election campaign to rein in lobbying As president in January 2009 he signed two executive orders and three presidential memoranda 124 to help ensure his administration would be more open transparent and accountable These documents attempted to bring increased accountability to federal spending and limit the influence of special interests and included a lobbyist gift ban and a revolving door ban In May 2009 the Recovery Act Lobbying Rules 125 The Executive Branch Reform Act H R 985 was a bill which would have required over 8 000 Executive Branch officials to report into a public database nearly any significant contact from any private party The purpose was to identify lobbying activity 126 The bill was supported by proponents as an expansion of government in the sunshine including groups such as Public Citizen 126 nbsp The National Association of Realtors is a special interest representing home selling agents Photo its Washington headquarters But the proposals ran into serious opposition from various groups including the lobbying industry itself 126 Opponents argued that the proposed reporting rules would have infringed on the right to petition making it difficult not just for lobbyists but for regular citizens to communicate their views on controversial issues without having their names and viewpoints entered into a government database 127 Opposition groups suggested that although the proposed rules were promoted as a way to regulate lobbyists persons described as a private party could be practically anybody and that anybody contacting a federal official might be deemed to be a lobbyist The U S Department of Justice raised constitutional and other objections to the bill 128 Opponents mobilized over 450 groups including the U S Chamber of Commerce and National Association of Realtors with letter writing campaigns against the proposed restrictions Lobbyist Howard Marlowe argued in a stern letter 69 that the restriction on gift giving to federal employees would create fear of retribution for political donations Since your announcement to seek the Presidency you have consistently attacked the honorable profession of lobbying Lobbyists play an important role in the legislative process serving as educators to elected officials It is in the best interest to government to have informed individuals who serve as experts in every arena of public policy Our ability to access and navigate the legislative process and push issues forward through a bureaucratic cluster is a vital service to the nation The Draft Order would inhibit one of the most vital tools in the advocate s arsenal by creating fear of retribution for political donations Making this kind of disclosure a part of the bidding process tarnishes a competition based on qualifications adds an unneeded level of bureaucracy and endangers the protection of free speech afforded to all Americans by the First Amendment of the Constitution Howard Marlowe president of the All American League of Lobbyists in a letter to President Obama May 31 2011 69 123 In 2011 there were efforts to shift regulatory power from the executive branch to Congress by requiring that any major rule which may cost the economy more than 100 million must be decided by Congress with an up or down vote 18 But skeptics think that such a move proposed by Republican lawmakers could usher in a lobbying bonanza from industry and other special interest groups to use campaign contributions to reshape the regulatory milieu 18 Potential for reform Edit Critics suggest that Congress has the power to fix itself but is reluctant to sacrifice money and power One report suggested that those in control had an unbroken record of finding ways to navigate around reform laws or turn regulatory standards to their own advantage 66 Arguments for lobbying Edit According to the Madisonian view of politics in which factions were supposed to compete with other factions the system is working exactly as it should Sometimes powerful financial interests lose the battle Since lobbyists often become highly knowledgeable about a specific issue by studying it in depth over years they can bring considerable expertise to help legislators avoid errors as well as grasp the nuances of complex issues It has been argued that lobbyists can help Congress by possibly raising red flags about proposed rulings 129 Another argument in support of lobbying is that different interest groups and lobbyists while trying to build coalitions and win support often amend or soften or change their positions in this process and that interest groups and lobbyists regulate each other in a sense 129 But a more general sentiment supporting the lobbying arrangement is that every citizen can be construed as being represented by dozens of special interests 11 Every citizen is a special interest Blacks consumers teachers pro choicers gun control advocates handicapped people aliens exporters and salesmen are all special interests There is not an American today who is not represented whether he or she knows it or not by at least a dozen special interest groups One person s special interest is another person s despotism Donald E deKieffer author of The Citizen s Guide to Lobbying Congress 2007 11 nbsp This is what users saw when they tried to access the English Wikipedia on January 18 2012 It participated in a lobbying campaign by blacking out the encyclopedia for a day and encouraged users to contact congresspersons to support positions it favored as part of an outside lobbying effort If powerful groups such as the oil industry succeed in winning a battle in government consumers who drive gas powered cars can benefit a bit according to this view Even readers of Wikipedia could be conceived as being a special interest and represented by various lobbies For example opponents of the Stop Online Piracy Act believed that the act might restrict sites such as Wikipedia on January 18 2012 as a form of protest and as a way to encourage readers and contributors of English Wikipedia to write their congresspersons the online encyclopedia was blacked out for a day as part of an effort to lobby the government 130 131 Another view in support of lobbying is that it serves a helpful purpose as helping guard against extremism According to this view lobbying adds built in delays and permits and encourages opposing lobbies to battle In the battling possibly damaging decrees and incorrect decisions are stymied by seemingly unhelpful delays and waits 11 A slightly different view is that lobbying is no different from other professions Lobbying is no more perfect than is the practice of law or the practice of medicine Lobbyist Gerald S J Cassidy 2007 36 The regulatory environment EditDisclosure and domestic regulations Edit Generally the United States requires systematic disclosure of lobbying and it may be one of the few countries to have such extensive requirements 27 Disclosure in one sense allows lobbyists and public officials to justify their actions under the banner of openness and with full compliance of the law 132 The rules often specify how much a lobbyist can spend on specific activities and how to report expenses many of the laws and guidelines are specified in the Lobbying Disclosure Act of 1995 Transparency and disclosure requirements mean that there are volumes of statistics available for all kinds of analyses by journalists by the public by rival lobbying efforts Researchers can subdivide lobbying expenditures by numerous breakdowns such as by contributions from energy companies 133 Sometimes defining clearly who is a lobbyist and what precisely are lobbying activities can be difficult According to the Lobbying Disclosure Act several authorized definitions include Lobbying activities means lobbying contacts and efforts in support of such contacts including preparation and planning activities research and other background work that is intended at the time it is performed for use in contacts and coordination with the lobbying activities of others 27 Lobbying contact means any oral or written communication including an electronic communication to a covered executive branch official or a covered legislative branch official 27 Still distinguishing lobbyists from a strategic adviser can be difficult since the duties of each can often overlap and are hard to define precisely 98 There have been issues raised about what constitutes the difference between a lobbyist and a bundler one report described bundlers as supporters who contribute their own money to his campaign and solicit it from others and there was a question whether such persons were really lobbyists involved with raising campaign monies for the election of Barack Obama and whether Obama had broken his own pledge not to receive money from lobbyists 134 The legal ramifications of lobbying are further intertangled with aspects of campaign finance reform since lobbyists often spend time seeking donations for the reelection efforts of congresspersons sorting out these issues can pose ethical challenges 55 There are numerous regulations governing the practice of lobbying often ones requiring transparency and disclosure People paid to lobby must register with the secretary of the Senate and the clerk of the House of Representatives within 45 days of contacting a legislator for the first time or 45 days after being employed 11 An exception is that lobbyists who earn less than 3 000 per client for each fiscal quarter or whose total lobbying expenses are less than 11 500 each quarter do not need to register Part time lobbyists are exempt from registering unless they spend more than 20 of their working hours doing lobbying activities in any quarter If lobbyists have two or more contacts with a legislator as a lobbyist then they must register 11 Generally nonprofit organizations other than churches are exempt from registering if they hire an outside lobbying firm States are moving in the direction of greater disclosure and transparency regarding lobbying activities California has an online database called Cal Access although there were reports that it has been underfunded 135 136 Money collected from registration fees are often used to pay for the disclosure services such as Cal Access 137 There were complaints in Illinois that the disclosure requirements were often not rigorous enough and allowed lobbyists to work without public notice and with possible conflicts of interest 132 Many local municipalities are requiring legislative agents register as lobbyists to represent the interests of clients to local city council members such as in the swing state of Ohio cities such as Columbus and Cincinnati citation needed Laws requiring disclosure have been more prevalent in the twentieth century In 1946 there was a so called sunshine law requiring lobbyists to disclose what they were doing on whose behalf and how much they received in payment 11 138 The resulting Federal Regulation of Lobbying Act of 1946 governed lobbying rules up until 1995 when the Lobbying Disclosure Act replaced it 11 The Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971 later amended in 2002 as the McCain Feingold Act had rules governing campaign contributions 11 Each branch of Congress has rules as well 11 Legislation generally requires reports containing an accounting of major expenditures as well as legislation that was influenced the wording of some of the pertinent laws can be found in 2 U S C ch 26 139 nbsp The American Bar Association published a book about lobbying regulations Lobbying law is a constantly evolving field the American Bar Association published a book of guidelines in 2009 with over 800 pages 140 The laws are often rather specific and when not observed can lead to serious trouble 60 Failing to file a quarterly report or knowingly filing an incorrect report or failing to correct an incorrect report can lead to fines up to 200 000 and imprisonment up to five years Penalties can apply to lobbyists who fail to list gifts made to a legislator 60 In other situations the punishment can be light for example Congressional aide turned lobbyist Fraser Verrusio spent a few hours in jail after pleading guilty to taking a client to a World Series baseball game and failing to report it 141 Tax rules can apply to lobbying In one situation the charity Hawaii Family Forum risked losing its tax exempt status after it had engaged in lobbying activity federal tax law requires charities such as that one to limit their lobbying to 20 of their overall expenditures or else be eligible for being taxed like a for profit corporation 142 Lobbyists sometimes support rules requiring greater transparency and disclosure Our profession is at a critical point where we can either embrace the constructive changes and reforms by Congress or we can seek out loopholes and continue the slippery slide into history along side the ranks of snake oil salesmen Lobbyist Gerald S J Cassidy 2007 36 Scandals can spur impetus towards greater regulation as well The Jack Abramoff Indian lobbying scandal which started in the 1990s and led to a guilty plea in 2006 inspired the Legislative Transparency and Accountability Act of 2006 S 2349 According to Time Magazine the Senate bill barred lobbyists themselves from buying gifts and meals for legislators but left a loophole in which firms and organizations represented by those lobbyists could still dole out gifts and perks allowed privately funded trips if lawmakers got prior approval from a commissioned ethics committee required lobbyists to file frequent and detailed activity reports and have them posted publicly The bill was approved in 2006 by a 90 8 vote In 1995 the 104th Congress tried to reform Lobbying by passing the Lobbying Disclosure Act of 1995 which defines and requires lobbyists who are compensated for their actions to register with congressional officials The legislation was later amended by the Lobbying Disclosure Technical Amendments Act of 1998 There were subsequent modifications leading to the Honest Leadership and Open Government Act of 2007 27 The Lobbying Transparency and Accountability Act of 2006 H R 4975 legislation modified Senate rules although some senators and a coalition of good government groups assailed the bill as being too weak 143 The Honest Leadership and Open Government Act of 2007 was a comprehensive ethics and lobbying reform bill H R 2316 which passed in 2007 in the House and Congress by a large majority 144 A parallel Senate version of the legislation S 1 passed in 2007 by a nearly unanimous vote 145 After the House amp Senate resolved their differences and passed an amended revision President Bush signed the enrolled bill into law Pub L Tooltip Public Law United States 110 81 text PDF Some states have considered banning government employees permanently from lobbying on issues they had worked on For example there was a proposal along these lines to prevent county employees in Maryland from ever lobbying on issues they had worked on The proposal insisted that county officials post financial disclosures as well as prohibit gifts from contractors 25 Jack Abramoff emerging from prison has spoken publicly about lobbying In his view regulations designed to rein in the excesses of lobbying have not been effective and reforms and regulations have not cleaned up the system at all Abramoff said lobbyists could find a way around just about any reform Congress enacted and gave an example You can t take a congressman to lunch for 25 and buy him a hamburger or a steak or something like that But you can take him to a fund raising lunch and not only buy him that steak but give him 25 000 extra and call it a fund raiser and have all the same access and all the same interactions with that congressman Jack Abramoff commenting on 60 Minutes according to CNN 58 A similar view suggested that lobbying reform efforts have been fought tooth and nail to prevent its passage since the people with the power to reform would curtail their own powers and income flows 12 Foreign lobbying Edit Since commerce worldwide is becoming more integrated with firms headquartered in one country increasingly doing business in many other countries it is logical to expect that lobbying efforts will reflect the increasing globalization Sometimes foreign owned corporations will want to lobby the United States government and in such instances new rules can apply since it can be particularly thorny resolving whether national security interests are at stake and how they might be affected In 1938 the Foreign Agents Registration Act 146 required an explicit listing of all political activities undertaken by a lobbyist on behalf of any foreign principal 11 There were serious concerns about lobbying firms representing foreign entities and potentially values opposed to American principles after Axis power agitprop was planted in American soils during World War II 147 through the efforts of public relations specialist Ivy Lee s proxy firm German Dye Trust 148 As a result in 1938 the Foreign Agents Registration Act or FARA was passed by Congress and this law required foreign lobbyists to share information about their contracts with the Justice Department 148 FARA s mandate was to disclose to policymakers the sources of information that influenced public opinions policies and law 149 However the goal was not to restrict the speech of the lobbyist or the content of the lobbying 150 Nonetheless it was estimated that less than half of foreign lobbyists who should have registered under FARA actually did so 148 By the 1960s perceived failures in FARA s enforcement led to public outcry against lobbying excesses while revelations of foreign bribery circulated regularly well into the early 1970s 151 This prompted legislation proposed to reduce the autonomy of foreign firms most of which was not ratified for concerns over a lack of constitutionality 151 While the House of Representatives passed a rule 152 to increase public scrutiny of foreign lobbying one estimate was that about 75 of lobbyists were exempt from a registration requirement including individuals representing foreign interests 153 nbsp Saudi Arabia spent at least 7 5 million lobbying against the Justice Against Sponsors of Terrorism Act 154 A general trend is that the number of lobbyists representing foreign companies is rising 155 The case of Washington s APCO Worldwide a firm which represented the dictatorship of General Sani Abacha of Nigeria in 1995 whose regime had hanged nine pro democracy activists attracted negative publicity 148 While current law forbids foreign nations from contributing to federal state or local elections loopholes allow American subsidiaries of foreign corporations to establish so called separated segregated funds or SSFs to raise money 156 According to one view the definition of which firms are defined as foreign was unclear and the lack of clarity undermines the ability to regulate their activity Foreign funded lobbying efforts include those of Israel Saudi Arabia Turkey Egypt Pakistan Libya and China lobbies In 2010 foreign governments spent approximately 460 million on lobbying Congress and the U S Government 157 Between 2015 and 2017 the Saudi Arabia paid 18 million to 145 registered lobbyists to influence the U S government 158 While Congress has tried to quell criticisms against the leverage of domestic lobbying firms by updating domestic lobbying legislation such as the revision of the Lobbyist Disclosure Act in 1997 159 there was a report that its inaction in rectifying loopholes in foreign lobbying regulation has led to scandals 159 There was a report of an upsurge of lobbying by foreign owned U S subsidiaries against Democratic efforts to limit campaign spending in early 2010 160 The proposed was to restrict lobbying by U S subsidiaries of foreign firms 160 In 2011 the Chinese firm Alibaba hired a lobbying firm in Washington when it began contemplating a purchase of the U S firm Yahoo 40 There was a case in which a lobbying effort described as extraordinary was trying to change the designation of a fringe Iranian opposition group from being a terrorist organization to being a benign organization 161 Lobbyists seeking to downgrade the designation hired influential foreign affairs officials including former CIA directors a former FBI director and others to advocate for the change of designation 161 But there have been others accused of illegally lobbying for foreign nations 162 or who failed to register as a foreign agent 163 who may face prison time as a result See also EditUnited States Chamber of Commerce History of lobbying in the United States Political action committee Citizens United National Rifle Association AARP formerly the American Association of Retired Persons Honest Leadership and Open Government Act of 2007 Israel lobby in the United States American Israel Public Affairs Committee Direct lobbying in the United States Campaign finance in the United States China Lobby Turkish lobby in the United States Libya lobby in the United States Saudi Arabia lobby in the United States Fossil fuels lobby Albanian American Civic League Opposition research OpenSecrets Arab lobby in the United States Jack Abramoff Indian lobbying scandal Jerry Lewis Lowery lobbying firm controversy Lobbying Disclosure Act of 1995 Military industrial complex United States v Harriss NARFE National Active and Retired Federal Employees Dark moneyReferences Edit Robert Reich June 9 2015 Salon magazine Robert Reich Lobbyists are snuffing our democracy one legal bribe at a time Retrieved May 30 2017 This second scandal is perfectly legal but it s a growing menace the financial rewards from lobbying have mushroomed as big corporations and giant Wall Street banks have sunk fortunes into rigging the game to their advantage Mike Masnick April 12 2012 Tech Dirt Is Lobbying Closer To Bribery Or Extortion Retrieved May 30 2017 Gilens Martin Page Benjamin I September 1 2014 Testing Theories of American Politics Elites Interest Groups and Average Citizens Perspectives on Politics 12 3 564 581 doi 10 1017 S1537592714001595 ISSN 1541 0986 a b c d e f g Brad Plumer November 8 2011 Corporate lobbying is a very exclusive club The Washington Post Retrieved January 13 2012 a b Lee Fang March 10 2014 The Nation Where Have All the Lobbyists Gone On paper the influence peddling business is drying up But lobbying money is flooding into Washington DC like never before What s going on Accessed March 21 2014 Wall Street spends record 2bn on US election lobbying Financial Times March 8 2017 Wall Street Spent 2 Billion Trying to Influence the 2016 Election Fortune March 8 2017 a b c d e Ronald J Hrebenar Bryson B Morgan 2009 Lobbying in America ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 59884 112 1 Retrieved January 12 2012 see Preface page xv Lalor John Joseph 1890 Cyclopaedia of political science political economy Charles E Merrill amp Co Retrieved January 14 2012 see page 78 History Willard InterContinental Washington D C Hotel Retrieved April 8 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah Donald E deKieffer 2007 The Citizen s Guide to Lobbying Congress Revised and Updated Chicago Review Press ISBN 978 1 55652 718 0 Retrieved January 12 2012 see Ch 1 a b c d e f g h i j Barry Hessenius 2007 Hardball Lobbying for Nonprofits Real advocacy for nonprofits in the new century Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 4039 8202 5 Retrieved January 12 2012 Donald H Haider 1974 When governments come to Washington Governors mayors and intergovernmental lobbying Free Press ISBN 0 02 913370 X Retrieved January 12 2012 Washington Representatives 32 ed Bethesda MD Columbia Books November 2007 p 949 ISBN 978 1 880873 55 7 Lobbying Data Summary Lobbying Database OpenSecrets Retrieved December 27 2019 a b Hedge fund group spent 1 million lobbying in 3Q CBS News Associated Press December 12 2011 Retrieved January 14 2012 a b Lisa A Solowiej Paul M Collins jr July 2009 Counteractive Lobbying in the U S Supreme Court American Politics Research 37 4 670 699 doi 10 1177 1532673X08328674 S2CID 6898262 a b c Suzy Khimm December 7 2011 Would shifting regulatory power to Congress usher in a lobbying bonanza The Washington Post Retrieved January 12 2012 a b Baumgartner Berry Hojnacki Kimball Leach 2009 Lobbying and Policy Change Who wins who loses and why The University of Chicago Press Back cover ISBN 978 0 226 03946 6 Retrieved January 12 2012 Washington lobbies are far less influential than political rhetoric suggests a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Ben Pershing April 16 2011 As frustrations mount does D C need new lobbying strategy The Washington Post Retrieved January 14 2012 Stephen Magagnini of the Sacramento Bee December 19 2011 California man leads lobbying to halt U S aid to Egypt Miami Herald Retrieved January 13 2012 Greg Toppo December 30 2011 Former D C schools chief busy lobbying helping politicians USA Today Retrieved January 13 2012 MARTHA BRANNIGAN December 28 2011 Mayor Gimenez vetoes new Tallahassee lobbying contracts Asserting the county commission failed in its aim to cut spending Miami Dade Mayor Carlos Gimenez vetoed a measure that would have paid 450 000 to lobbying firms Miami Herald Retrieved January 13 2012 William Mansell August 18 2011 Florida s Lobbying Powerhouses Vie for City of St Pete Contract Old Northeast Downtown St Pete Patch Archived from the original on January 31 2013 Retrieved January 14 2012 a b Alison Knezevich November 2 2011 County ethics bill would restrict lobbying add enforcement Baltimore Sun Retrieved January 14 2012 TIM NOVAK September 26 2011 Seven former Chicago aldermen now lobbying City Hall Chicago Sun Times Retrieved January 14 2012 a b c d e f g h i William Kerr William Lincoln Prachi Mishra November 22 2011 The dynamics of firm lobbying VOX EU Retrieved January 13 2012 a b c d e f g h i j k l Ken Kollman 1998 Outside Lobbying Public Opinion amp Interest Group Strategies Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 01740 9 Retrieved January 12 2012 See Preface amp Introduction Dan Eggen amp T W Farnam July 13 2011 The Influence Industry Coming soon to a screen near you a lobbying campaign The Washington Post Retrieved January 13 2012 Kia Kokalitcheva July 13 2016 Fortune magazine Government Lobbyists Are More Nimble Than Ever Retrieved August 21 2016 Taxpayer funded lobbying Taxpayer Funded Lobbying Drives the Earmark Problem Fox News March 9 2015 Clemens Jason Kaszton Julie Rufer Karrie Sucheski Laura March 2010 State Level Lobbying and Taxpayers How Much Do We Really Know PDF Pacific Research Institute Retrieved April 8 2023 The Right to Petition Illinois First Amendment Center Archived from the original on April 11 2013 A NOTED LOTTERY MAN DEAD CAREER OF CHARLES T HOWARD OF THE LOUISIANA COMPANY The New York Times June 1 1885 Retrieved December 3 2011 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Kaiser Robert G Crites Alice 2007 How lobbying became Washington s biggest business Big money creates a new capital city As lobbying booms Washington and politics are transformed Citizen K Street The Washington Post Archived from the original on August 28 2008 Retrieved January 13 2012 a b c d e f Paul Harris November 19 2011 America is better than this paralysis at the top leaves voters desperate for change The Guardian London Retrieved January 17 2012 a b c d Catherine Ho December 25 2011 Lobbying practices leave law firms for more independence equity for non lawyers The Washington Post Retrieved January 12 2012 Catherine Ho December 14 2011 Holland amp Knight s lobbying group to shed traditional hourly billing The Washington Post Retrieved January 12 2012 a b c d BEN PROTESS December 29 2011 Alibaba Taps Lobbying Firm The New York Times Retrieved January 12 2012 Salamon Lester M and John J Siegfried 1977 Economic Power and Political Influence The Impact of Industry Structure on Public Policy American Political Science Review 71 Masters Marick F and Gerald D Keim 1985 Determinants of PAC Participation Among Large Corporations Journal of Politics 47 Bombardini Matilde 2008 Firm Heterogeneity and Lobby Participation Journal of International Economics 75 a b c d BEN PROTESS August 1 2011 Wall Street Continues to Spend Big on Lobbying New York Times Retrieved January 13 2012 Jere R Francis Spring 1987 Lobbying against proposed accounting standards The case of employers pension accounting Journal of Accounting and Public Policy Volume 6 Issue 1 Pages 35 57 Amazon spent 450 000 lobbying gov t in Q3 Boston Globe December 16 2011 Archived from the original on January 18 2013 Retrieved January 13 2012 a b Lynn Sweet November 21 2011 Chicago based Boeing flexing lobbying political muscle Chicago Sun Times Archived from the original on May 18 2012 Retrieved January 13 2012 a b c d Kimberly Kindy May 30 2017 Washington Post How Congress dismantled federal Internet privacy rules Retrieved May 30 2017 Renae Merle and Hamza Shaban September 19 2017 Washington Post Before the breach Equifax sought to limit exposure to lawsuits Retrieved September 20 2017 Equifax the company lobbied Congress on legislation to limit how much it could be forced to pay if sued by consumers it pressed lawmakers to roll back the powers of its regulators Republican Rep Barry Loudermilk said at a Sept 7 hearing on the proposal How did opening borders to mass immigration become a Left wing idea February 11 2016 Archived from the original on March 25 2017 Retrieved July 7 2018 How much does your ISP spend on lobbying Comparitech Retrieved May 29 2019 Doering Christopher Where the dollars go Lobbying a big business for large food and beverage CPGs fooddive com Food Dive UFCW union spent 80K lobbying federal gov t CBS News Associated Press December 27 2011 Retrieved January 13 2012 JOHN SCHWARTZ May 9 2011 Exonerated Inmates Fight Lawyer s Lobbying Fees The New York Times Retrieved January 13 2012 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Woodstock Theological Center 2002 The Ethics of Lobbying Organized Interests Political Power and the Common Good Georgetown University Press ISBN 0 8784 0905 X Retrieved January 12 2012 see page 1 of The Ethics of Lobbying chapter a b c d Willard C Richan 2006 Lobbying for Social Change Third Edition The Haworth Press ISBN 9780865549937 Retrieved January 12 2012 a b c d e f The Tuesday Podcast Jack Abramoff On Lobbying NPR December 20 2011 Retrieved January 13 2012 a b c d e Abramoff Lobbying reforms haven t fixed flawed system CNN November 6 2011 Archived from the original on November 10 2011 Retrieved January 13 2012 a b c d e f T W Farnam September 13 2011 Revolving door of employment between Congress lobbying firms study shows The Washington Post Retrieved January 13 2012 a b c d e f Kaiser Robert G Crites Alice 2007 How lobbying became Washington s biggest business Big money creates a new capital city As lobbying booms Washington and politics are transformed Citizen K Street The Washington Post Archived from the original on May 12 2008 a b JOHN SULLIVAN FREDRIC N TULSKY and KRISTEN McQUEARY January 7 2012 Public Officials Found Helping Clients of Family The New York Times Retrieved January 12 2012 a b c d Brad Plumer October 10 2011 The outsized returns from lobbying The Washington Post Retrieved January 13 2012 Hiring a top flight lobbyist looks like a spectacular investment Thomas T Holyoke Choosing Battlegrounds Interest Group Lobbying Across Multiple Venues Political Research Quarterly Retrieved January 12 2012 September 2003 vol 56 no 3 325 336 Dara Olmsted March 28 2011 Lobbying for waterways Boston Globe Retrieved January 13 2012 permanent dead link John Wagner January 2 2012 Evans regains top lobbying spot in Annapolis The Washington Post Retrieved January 12 2012 Evans was convicted accusations of concocting a fictitious legislative threat that he charged clients to lobby against a b c d e THOMAS B EDSALL December 14 2011 Putting Political Reform Right Into the Pockets of the Nation s Voters The New York Times Retrieved January 23 2012 Anthony J Nownes Krissy Walker DeAlejandro December 11 2011 Lobbying in the New Millennium Evidence of Continuity and Change in Three States State Politics amp Policy Quarterly Retrieved January 12 2012 vol 9 no 4 pages 429 455 Nancy Cordes May 29 2011 Senators rail at big pharma s secretive lobbying CBS News Retrieved January 14 2012 a b c d e f Sam Stein June 1 2011 Lobbying Group For Lobbyists Demands Obama Drop Executive Order On Contracting Donations Huffington Post Retrieved January 14 2012 RICHARD L HALL and ALAN V DEARDORFF 2006 Lobbying as Legislative Subsidy American Political Science Review 100 pp 69 84 doi 10 1017 S0003055406062010 Bertrand Marianne Matilde Bombardini and Francesco Trebbi 2011 Is It Whom You Know or What You Know An Empirical Assessment of the Lobbying Process University of British Columbia Working Paper Blanes i Vidal Jordi Mirko Dracaz and Christian Fons Rosen 2011 Revolving Door Lobbyists London School of Economics Working Paper a b Jason Cherkis November 23 2011 Lobbying Firm Memo To Advise Wall Street Clients On Occupy Movement Huffington Post Retrieved January 12 2012 Lobbying Database Open Secrets Archived from the original on July 28 2011 Ranked Sectors Open Secrets Archived from the original on December 19 2010 Note numbers do not add to 100 because of rounding error Lobbying OpenSecrets Archived from the original on July 28 2011 a b Sachs Jeffrey 2011 The Price of Civilization New York Random House pp 112 ISBN 978 1 4000 6841 8 a b c d Catherine Ho October 30 2011 Lobbying revenue lags in wake of gridlocked Congress The Washington Post Retrieved January 13 2012 Dina ElBoghdady November 30 2011 FDA funding boosted through lobbying effort The Washington Post Retrieved January 13 2012 Dan Gilgoff November 22 2011 Report tracks explosion of religious lobbying in Washington CNN Retrieved January 13 2012 John Wagner January 2 2012 Evans regains top lobbying spot in Annapolis The Washington Post Retrieved January 12 2012 Raquel Meyer Alexander Stephen W Mazza Susan Scholz Measuring Rates of Return for Lobbying Expenditures An Empirical Case Study of Tax Breaks for Multinational Corporations April 8 2009 Retrieved March 7 2013 Lux Sean Crook T Russell Woehr David J January 2011 Mixing Business With Politics A Meta Analysis of the Antecedents and Outcomes of Corporate Political Activity Journal of Management Retrieved November 26 2012 doi 10 1177 0149206310392233 Journal of Management vol 37 no 1 223 247 Bill Daley April 19 2013 Heidi Heitkamp betrayed me on gun control Washington Post Retrieved June 14 2016 Heitkamp voted to block legislation to make gun background checks more comprehensive along with those of 41 Republicans and three other Democrats was a key reason the measure fell short of the 60 votes needed for passage nine in 10 Americans support background check she heard from the gun lobby Barack Obama April 17 2013 President Obama s Speech On Gun Control Bill Defeat Transcript Sooner or later we are going to get this right The memories of these children demand it And so do the American people Time doi 10 1525 california 9780520276130 001 0001 ISBN 9780520276130 Retrieved June 14 2016 That s why 90 percent of the American people supported it the gun lobby willfully lied about the bill US gun control What is the NRA and why is it so powerful It is one of the most powerful players in one of the most hotly debated issues in the US gun control but what exactly is the NRA Here s a quick guide BBC News BBC January 8 2016 Retrieved June 14 2016 The NRA officially spends about 3m per year to influence gun policy considerable sums are spent elsewhere via PACs and independent expenditures funds which are difficult to track Tony Burman December 17 2011 Burman Campaign funding in U S makes a joke of democracy The Star Toronto Retrieved January 23 2012 Helpman Elhanan Persson Torsten November 3 2001 Lobbying and Legislative Bargaining Advances in Economic Analysis amp Policy Archived from the original on October 2 2010 Retrieved January 12 2012 Vol 1 Iss 1 Article 3 Karen de Sa December 26 2011 State senator aims to double lobby fee in California to 14 cents a day San Jose Mercury News Retrieved January 13 2012 California s 1 000 registered lobbyists are so influential they re known as The Third House Morten Bennedsena Sven E Feldmann May 2006 Informational lobbying and political contributions PDF Journal of Public Economics 90 4 5 631 656 doi 10 1016 j jpubeco 2005 08 003 hdl 10398 7608 Volume 90 Issues 4 5 May 2006 Pages 631 656 a b c d e f g h ERIC LICHTBLAU December 9 2011 With Lobbying Blitz For Profit Colleges Diluted New Rules The New York Times Retrieved January 13 2012 Alex M Parker October 13 2011 Super Committee Lobbying Begins in Earnest US News Retrieved January 13 2012 Jim Puzzanghera December 21 2011 AT amp T finds big money lobbying ad efforts don t always pay off Los Angeles Times Retrieved January 13 2012 But the rejection of its proposed 39 billion purchase of T Mobile USA showed that money can t necessarily buy you love from antitrust officials Joseph Keppler Puck January 23 1889 National Public Radio 2006 STEVE INSKEEP host GOP Faces Ney Departure Leadership Decision Accessed April 17 2014 Congressman Bob Ney was identified by lobbyist Jack Abramoff in his guilty plea on corruption charges Nia Malika Henderson December 15 2011 Newt Gingrich insists he did no lobbying of any kind while working for Freddie Mac The Washington Post Retrieved January 12 2012 Gingrich earned 1 6 million for providing the lender strategic advice a b c d e f g h THOMAS B EDSALL December 18 2011 The Trouble With That Revolving Door The New York Times Retrieved January 14 2012 Managing Conflict of Interest in the Public Service OECD Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development OECD 2005 Retrieved December 9 2018 Public Citizen 30 May 2019 Revolving Congress The Revolving Door Class of 2019 Flocks to K Street Nearly Two Thirds of Former Members of 115th Congress Working Outside Politics and Government Have Lobbying or Strategic Consulting Jobs Catalina Camia January 11 2011 Two ex senators join major lobbying firm USA Today Retrieved January 14 2012 Lucy Madison December 22 2011 Haley Barbour will return to lobbying after governorship ends CBS News Retrieved January 13 2012 The Legacy of Billy Tauzin The White House PhRMA Deal Sunlight Foundation 2010 a b Casey B Mulligan May 25 2011 Financial Lobbying and the Housing Crisis The New York Times Retrieved January 14 2012 The study by the I M F economists found that the heaviest lobbying came from lenders making riskier loans Alan Zibel November 4 2011 Lobbying Titans Square Off Over Loan Limits Wall Street Journal Retrieved January 13 2012 a b c KJ Dell Antonia November 3 2011 Lobbying Against the Too Healthy School Lunch Slate Magazine Retrieved January 13 2012 Stephen Gandel May 26 2011 Wall Street and Markets Did Lobbying Cause the Financial Crisis Time Magazine Retrieved January 14 2012 The IMF economists found that lenders that lobbied the most also tended to make riskier loans areas of the country dominated by lenders who spent the most lobbying dollars also tended to higher rates of default a b Igan Deniz Mishra Prachi Tressel Thierry 2012 A Fistful of Dollars Lobbying and the Financial Crisis NBER Macroeconomics Annual 26 1 195 230 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 167 2455 doi 10 1086 663992 S2CID 168107092 Richard E Baldwin Frederic Robert Nicoud December 13 2010 Entry and Asymetric Lobbying Why Governments Pick Losers PDF Journal of the European Economic Association 5 5 1064 1093 doi 10 1162 JEEA 2007 5 5 1064 S2CID 5876811 Occupy Wall Street Tea Party United In Distrust NPR October 22 2011 Retrieved January 23 2012 Tamara Keith May 10 2011 Banks Retailers In Lobbying Race Over Debit Fees NPR Retrieved January 13 2012 a b Tom Ashbrook January 2 2012 Lawrence Lessig on Money Corruption and Politics 90 9 wbur Boston s NPR Archived from the original on June 9 2016 Retrieved January 23 2012 a b Margaret Carlson of Bloomberg News December 26 2011 Book review Harvard law professor Lawrence Lessig offers plan to smash culture of money in politics Chicago Tribune Retrieved January 23 2012 Lawrence Lessig November 16 2011 Republic Lost How Money Corrupts Congress and a Plan to Stop It Google YouTube Huffington Post Retrieved December 13 2011 see 32 06 minutes into the video Lessig Lawrence June 19 2007 Required Reading the next 10 years Lessig Blog Lessig org Archived from the original on January 16 2011 Retrieved January 23 2011 a b Lessig L 2011 Republic Lost How Money Corrupts Congress and a Plan to Stop It Archived April 10 2014 at the Wayback Machine New York City Hachette Twelve excerpt a b Lawrence Lessig February 8 2010 How to Get Our Democracy Back CBS News The Nation Retrieved December 14 2011 Lawrence Lessig November 16 2011 Republic Lost How Money Corrupts Congress and a Plan to Stop It Google YouTube Retrieved December 13 2011 Hill Adriene October 4 2011 Campaign finance lobbying major roadblocks to effective government Marketplace Morning Report American Public Media James O Toole December 12 2011 Constitutional convention call gains traction Pittsburgh Post Gazette Archived from the original on July 28 2020 Retrieved December 14 2011 a b America s constitution If it ain t broke The Economist November 8 2007 Retrieved December 23 2011 Letter to the ed October 10 1987 In Defense of John Jay Our First Chief Justice The New York Times Retrieved December 23 2011 a b Howard Marlowe president May 31 2011 letter from All American League of Lobbyists to President Obama May 31 2011 docstoc com Retrieved January 14 2012 Archived copy Archived from the original on June 10 2009 Retrieved June 11 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Ethics Jesse Lee May 29 2009 Update on Recovery Act Lobbying Rules New Limits on Special Interest Influence whitehouse gov via National Archives a b c Fredreka Schouten November 22 2011 Proposed lobbying restrictions upset business groups USA Today Retrieved January 13 2012 Memorandum Archived April 1 2007 at the Wayback Machine Congressman Waxman advances grave new threat to citizens right to petition government officials by Douglas Johnson and Susan Muskett J D National Right to Life Committee February 20 2007 Letter from Richard D Hertling Archived June 14 2007 at the Wayback Machine Acting Assistant Attorney General Office of Legislative Affairs U S Department of Justice to the Honorable Henry A Waxman Chairman Committee on Oversight and Government Reform U S House of Representatives March 8 2007 a b Epstein David Sharyn O Halloran October 1995 A Theory of Strategic Oversight Congress Lobbyists and the Bureaucracy Journal of Law Economics amp Organization 11 2 227 255 JSTOR 764997 Tiffany Hsu amp Andrea Chang January 18 2012 Websites go dark to protest SOPA PIPA bills Thousands of popular websites including Wikipedia Reddit and Boing Boing have shut down for as long as 24 hours to protest congressional antipiracy bills they say amount to censorship Los Angeles Times Retrieved January 19 2012 Magid Larry What Are SOPA and PIPA And Why All The Fuss Forbes Retrieved April 8 2023 a b Fredric N Tulsky amp John Sullivan January 7 2012 Disclosure Often Spotty or Inaccurate The New York Times Retrieved January 12 2012 via the New York Times 2005 Most popular lobbying firms for energy policy Boston Globe Retrieved January 14 2012 ERIC LICHTBLAU October 27 2011 Obama Backers Tied to Lobbies Raise Millions The New York Times Retrieved January 13 2012 Patrick McGreevy December 9 2011 CalAccess database for campaign money crashes again and again Los Angeles Times Retrieved January 13 2012 Lobbying for just pennies a day Los Angeles Times December 28 2011 Retrieved January 13 2012 Karen de Sa December 26 2011 State senator aims to double lobby fee in California to 14 cents a day San Jose Mercury News Retrieved January 13 2012 1946 law 60 Stat 839 August 2 1946 Federal Regulation of Lobbying Act Lobbying Reform Background and Legislative Proposals 109th Congress pdf R Eric Petersen Retrieved January 9 2007 Luneburg William V Susman Thomas M Gordon Rebecca H 2009 The Lobbying Manual A Complete Guide to Federal Lobbying Law and Practice Fourth Edition American Bar Association ISBN 9781604424645 Retrieved January 12 2012 Hours Long Sentence Is Given in Lobbying Case The New York Times ASSOCIATED PRESS August 6 2011 Retrieved January 13 2012 It s lobbying and it s taxable editorial Staradvertiser September 21 2010 Retrieved January 14 2012 Statement of Reform Groups on Lobbying Legislation Passed by Senate March 29 2006 Campaign Legal Center Common Cause Democracy 21 the League of Women Voters Public Citizen and U S PIRG H R 2316 Honest Leadership and Open Government Act of 2007 GovTrack us Retrieved August 2 2007 Turner Trish July 31 2007 House Approves Tighter Earmark Lobbying Rules Fox News Associated Press Retrieved August 2 2007 52 Stat 631 of June 8 1938 The Harvard Law Reviews Association Foreign Campaign Contributions and the First Amendment Harvard Law Review 110 8 1986 1886 1903 a b c d Silverstein Ken July 1 2007 Their Men in Washington The Clintons so called charitable enterprise has served as a vehicle to launder money and to enrich family friends Harper s Magazine Vol July 2007 ISSN 0017 789X Retrieved April 8 2023 Zhang Juyan World system and its agents An analysis of the registrants of Foreign Agent Registration Act FARA Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Communication Association New Orleans Sheraton New Orleans LA May 27 2004 lt Not Available gt 2009 05 26 Atieh Jahad Foreign Agents Updating FARA to Protect American Democracy University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law pp 1051 1088 Fall 2009 1052 a b Keffer Jone M and Hill Roland Paul Ethical Approach to Lobbying Activities of Businesses in the United States Journal of Business Ethics 16 12 13 1997 1371 1379 Bill S 349 in 1994 by a vote of 315 110 Dunham R S 1994 Why Lobbying Reform Could Get Lobbied to Death Business Week 57 Saudi Arabia Reboots Its Washington Lobbying Blitz Bloomberg April 25 2018 Zhang Juyan World system and its agents An analysis of the registrants of Foreign Agent Registration Act FARA Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Communication Association New Orleans Sheraton New Orleans LA May 27 2004 2009 05 26 The Harvard Law Reviews Association Foreign Campaign Contributions and the First Amendment Harvard Law Review 110 8 1986 1886 1903 Lobbying by Foreign Countries Decreases Roll Call September 14 2011 Retrieved April 8 2023 Fang Lee May 19 2017 As Trump Travels to Saudi Arabia the Kingdom s D C Lobbying Surge Is Paying Off The Intercept Retrieved April 8 2023 a b Atieh Jahad Foreign Agents Updating FARA to Protect American Democracy University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law 1052 Fall 2009 1051 1088 a b Bravin Jess and Mullins Brody Foreign Spending on Politics Fought The Wall Street Journal January 9 2010 a b SCOTT SHANE November 26 2011 For Obscure Iranian Exile Group Broad Support in U S The New York Times Retrieved January 13 2012 Richard A Serrano July 20 2011 Pair charged with illegally lobbying for Pakistan Two U S citizens are accused of secretly being paid by Pakistan s spy service and failing to register as foreign agents The charges are likely to further strain Washington Islamabad relations Los Angeles Times Retrieved January 13 2012 C M Matthews January 12 2012 Former Congressman Gets One Year For Lobbying For Terror Sponsor Wall Street Journal Retrieved January 13 2012 Notes Edit Federalist No 10 p 56 of the Dawson edition at Wikisource Federalist No 10 p 58 of the Dawson edition at Wikisource Federalist No 10 p 60 of the Dawson edition at Wikisource Further reading EditBalogh Brian 2009 Mirrors of Desires Interest Groups Elections and the Targeted Style in Twentieth Century America The Democratic Experiment pp 222 249 doi 10 1515 9781400825820 222 ISBN 9781400825820 Baumgartner Frank R and Beth L Leech Basic Interests The Importance of Groups in Politics and in Political Science 1998 64 82 reviews the political science literature on interest groups ISBN 9780691059150 Blanes i Vidal Jordi Mirko Draca and Christian Fons Rosen Revolving Door Lobbyists 5th Annual Conference on Empirical Legal Studies Paper July 2010 Clemens Elisabeth S The People s Lobby Organizational Innovation and the Rise of Interest Group Politics in the United States 1890 1925 1997 ISBN 9780226109930 Hansen John M Gaining Access Congress and the Farm Lobby 1919 1981 1991 Kaiser Robert G 2010 So Damn Much Money The Triumph of Lobbying and the Corrosion of American Government ISBN 9780307385888 Loomis Christopher M 2009 The Politics of Uncertainty Lobbyists and Propaganda in Early Twentieth Century America Journal of Policy History 21 2 187 213 doi 10 1017 S0898030609090083 S2CID 154647291 Lux Sean Crook T Russell Woehr David J 2011 Mixing Business with Politics A Meta Analysis of the Antecedents and Outcomes of Corporate Political Activity Journal of Management 37 223 247 doi 10 1177 0149206310392233 S2CID 144560276 Stokes Leah Cardamore 2020 Short Circuiting Policy Interest Groups and the Battle Over Clean Energy and Climate Policy in the American States Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 oso 9780190074258 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 007425 8 Thompson Margaret S The Spider Web Congress and Lobbying in the Age of Grant 1985 on 1870s Tichenor Daniel J Harris Richard A 2002 Organized Interests and American Political Development Political Science Quarterly 117 4 587 612 doi 10 2307 798136 JSTOR 798136 online Zelizer Julian E Arsenal of Democracy The Politics of National Security From World War II to the War on Terrorism 2009 excerpt and text searchExternal links EditLobbying Database from OpenSecrets Government Accountability Groups from 500 Leading U S Progressive Organizations by Category SourceWatch Lobbyists info database of lobbyists and government relations professionals Lawrence Lessig TED talk on lobbying Sunlight Foundation US Senate Lobbying Database Search Archived December 1 2020 at the Wayback Machine US House of Representatives Lobby Contributions Search Archived October 7 2015 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lobbying in the United States amp oldid 1178405227, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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