6. Lobbyists Buy Congress
Source:
Open Secrets.org
Title: Washington Lobbying Grew to $3.2 Billion Last Year, Despite
Economy
Authors: Center for Responsive Politics
Student Researchers: Alan Grady and Leora Johnson
Faculty Evaluator: John Kramer, PhD, Sonoma State University
According to a study by The Center for Responsive Politics, special
interests paid Washington lobbyists $3.2 billion in 2008more than
any other year on record. This was a 13.7 percent increase from 2007
(which broke the record by 7.7 percent over 2006).
The Center calculates that interest groups spent $17.4 million on lobbying
for every day Congress was in session in 2008, or $32,523 per legislator
per day. Center director Sheila Krumholz says, The federal government
is handing out billions of dollars by the day, and that translates into
job security for lobbyists who can help companies and industries get
a piece of the payout.
Health interests spent more on Federal lobbying than any other economic
sector. Their $478.5 million guaranteed the crown for the third year,
with the finance, insurance, real estate sector a runner up, spending
$453.5 million. The pharmaceutical/health products industry contributed
$230.9 million, raising their last eleven-year total to over $1.6 billion.
The second-biggest spender among industries in 2008 was electric utilities,
which spent $156.7 million on lobbying, followed by insurance, which
spent $153.2 million, and oil and gas, which paid lobbyists $133.2 million.
Pro-Israel groups, food processing companies, and the oil and gas industry
increased their lobbying expenditures the most (as a percentage) between
2007 and 2008.
Finance, insurance and real estate companies have been competing to
get a piece of the $700 billion bailout package Congress approved late
last year. The companies that reduced lobbying the most are those that
declared bankruptcy or were taken over by the federal government and
stopped their lobbying operations all together. Even though some
financial, insurance and real estate interests pulled back last year,
they still managed to spend more than $450 million as a sector to lobby
policymakers. That can buy a lot of influence, and its a fraction
of what the financial sector is reaping in return through the governments
bailout program, Krumholz said.
Business and real estate associations and coalitions were among the
organizations that ramped up their lobbying expenditures the most last
year. The National Association of Realtors increased spending by 25
percent, from $13.9 million to $17.3 million. The American Bankers Association
spent $9.1 million in 2008, a 47 percent increase from 2007. Other industry
groups that spent more in 2008 include the Private Equity Council, the
Mortgage Bankers Association of America and the Financial Services Roundtable.
The US Chamber of Commerce remained the number one spender on lobbying
in 2008, spending nearly $92 millionmore than $350,000 every weekday,
and a 73 percent increase over 2007to advocate for its members
interests. Pro-business associations as a whole increased their lobbying
47 percent between 2007 and 2008.
With record spending on lobbying, some industries face serious cut
backs and have put the brakes on spending, but have not discontinued
the practice. Automotive companies decreased the amount they paid lobbyists
by 7.6 percent, from $70.9 million to $65.5 million. This is a big change
from prior years; auto manufacturers and dealers increased lobbying
spending by 21 percent between 2006 and 2007. Between 2007 and 2008
the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers, which testified before Congress
with Detroits Big Three last year, decreased its reported lobbying
by 43 percent, from $12.8 million to $7.3 million. Of the Big Three,
only one company, Ford, increased its efforts, though not by much: it
went from $7.1 million to $7.7 million, an 8 percent increase.
Among Washington lobbing firms, Patton Boggs reported the highest revenues
from registered lobbying for the fifth year in a row: 41.9 million dollars,
an increase over 2006 of more than 20 percent. The firms most
lucrative clients included private equity firm Cerberus Capital Management,
confection and pet food maker Mars, communication provider Verizon,
pharmaceutical manufacturers Bristol-Myers Squibb and Roche, and the
American Association for Justice (formerly the Association of Trial
Lawyers of America).
Update by Lindsay Renick Mayer
It seems like this should be a classified ad: Laid off and looking
for work? The lobbying industry wants you! Since we posted this
story on OpenSecrets.org in January, the lobbying industry has only
continued to grow, even as industries across the board have continued
to shrink, forcing hundreds of thousands of Americans out of work. This
growth could be attributed in part to the economy itselfmany executives
are looking for some help from the government to keep their businesses
afloat. Others are simply taking advantage of the opportunities that
a spate of government handouts has presented. But as long as theres
a federal government calling the shots, lobbyists will be paid more
and more each year to hold their clients fire to lawmakers
feet.
Year after year we see increases in lobbying expendituresin fact,
100 percent over the last decadeand the flurry of activity during
the first three months of 2009 indicates that the trend wont come
to an end any time soon. Based on records from the Senate Office of
Public Records, the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics found
that from January through March, lobbying increased slightly compared
to the same period of time last year, by at least $2.4 million. Unions,
organizations and companies spent at least $799.7 million so far this
year on sending influence peddlers to Capitol Hill, compared to $797.2
million during the same time in 2008. That might seem like a small increase
compared to the billions spent each year on this activity, but in a
time of economic turmoil, thats a hefty revenue stream for a single
industry.
That said, the industries that have made the most headlines for the
help theyve asked for or received from the federal government
actually decreased the amount they spent on lobbying in the first three
months of 2009 compared to 2008. Recipients of cash from the federal
governments Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) handed out less
money to lobbyists than they had in any quarter of 2008, in part, perhaps,
because they faced new rules restricting their lobbying contact with
officials in connection with the bailout program. CRP found that TARP
recipients have spent $13.9 million on lobbying so far this year, compared
to $20.2 million in January through March of last year and $17.8 million
in the last three months of 2008. With the government doling out billions
of dollars, these sums pale in comparison to the benefit the companies
are reaping.
To read more about how lobbying and influence peddling are shaping
legislation, keep up with CRPs blog at http://www.opensecrets.org/news/.