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- <text id=93TT0441>
- <title>
- Nov. 01, 1993: A Lobbyist's Paradise
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Nov. 01, 1993 Howard Stern & Rush Limbaugh
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- GOVERNMENT, Page 36
- A Lobbyist's Paradise
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>In spite of Clinton's protests, the influence-peddling machine
- in Washington is back in high gear
- </p>
- <p>By GEORGE J. CHURCH--Reported by Laurence I. Barrett/Washington
- </p>
- <p> "The last 12 years were nothing less than an extended hunting
- season for high-priced lobbyists and Washington influence peddlers.
- On streets where statesmen once strolled, a never-ending stream
- of money now changes hands--tying the hands of those elected
- to lead."
- </p>
- <p> --Candidate Bill Clinton, describing the atmosphere of the
- Reagan and Bush Administrations
- </p>
- <p> "The period we're in is a lobbyist's dream come true."
- </p>
- <p> --Joan Claybrook, head of the advocacy group Public Citizen,
- describing the atmosphere of the Clinton Administration
- </p>
- <p> Another illustration of the adage that the more things change,
- the more they remain the same? Not quite: in this case, the
- more things have changed, the more they have got even worse.
- Under President Clinton, the lobbying, influence peddling and
- revolving-door connections between officials and lobbyists that
- candidate Clinton denounced have become more intense, and at
- times more brazen, than ever.
- </p>
- <p> Largely as an unintended result of his election too. Clinton
- has tried to deliver on his campaign pledge to "stop this betrayal
- of democracy" by issuing Executive Orders and proposing legislation
- designed to curb some lobbying abuses. But his not very vigorous
- efforts have been overwhelmed by some side effects of his defeat
- of George Bush:
- </p>
- <p> The change in party control of the White House has put hundreds
- of new people whom lobbyists need to cultivate into executive
- policymaking posts. Their displaced Republican predecessors,
- meanwhile, have stepped en masse through the famed revolving
- door into lobbying. They have been joined by an exceptionally
- large number of former Representatives, Senators and their staff
- members who have left Capitol Hill, by retirement or defeat,
- but have no wish to depart from the corridors of power.
- </p>
- <p> The new Administration is proposing legislation that affects
- the interests of more lobbyists' clients more deeply than anything
- else in at least a dozen years. The frenzied lobbying stirred
- by the fight over taxes and the budget is already being eclipsed
- by the jockeying over health-care reform, which will touch vital
- interests of big business, small business, insurers, unions,
- doctors, nurses, the elderly, the poor--just about every group
- well organized enough to employ a lobbyist. And then there is
- the North American Free Trade Agreement, a legacy from Bush
- that Clinton has made his own and is pushing toward a showdown
- vote. Says Wayne Berman, a consultant on trade issues to a think
- tank and a major insurance company: "This has been a blockbuster
- summer for Washington lobbyists. The Clinton Administration
- made it a blockbuster summer by its frenetic activism on budget,
- taxes, trade and health care."
- </p>
- <p> With George Bush in the White House, much legislative maneuvering--and lobbying--on Capitol Hill was mere shadow-boxing. So
- many bills were obviously headed for veto that congressional
- tinkering with their details was irrelevant. Now lobbyists must
- go all out to influence committee and floor votes on amendments
- to legislation that a Democratic President is almost sure to
- sign into law.
- </p>
- <p> The surge in lobbying only partly shows up in numbers. Currently
- 6,198 people have registered as lobbyists, up from 5,312 in
- 1988 and close to a record, but not much different from 1991
- or 1992. The number of clients they represent has also grown,
- from 10,874 two years ago to 11,414 today.
- </p>
- <p> In any case, lobbying is far more extensive and influential
- than the numbers begin to show. For every registered lobbyist
- there is probably at least one additional person who is also
- trying to influence policy by offering legal services to clients,
- or advising on the best strategy for dealing with government,
- or providing introductions to friends in the power elite--but not personally buttonholing legislators or Administration
- officials. And these alleged nonlobbyists can have much more
- clout than those who do work the cloakrooms and corridors, since
- the trend these days is to "grass-roots lobbying"--that is,
- influencing legislators by stirring up a storm of letters and
- phone calls from their constituents back home.
- </p>
- <p> One big name who denies being a lobbyist is Robert Oakley, the
- former ambassador called out of retirement by Clinton to try
- to negotiate a political settlement in Somalia. As head of counterterrorism
- for the State Department in 1985, Oakley helped draft a ban
- on flights between the U.S. and Lebanon. As a principal of C&O
- Resources, Inc., a consulting firm, he stands to share in fees
- of as much as $600,000, which Middle East Airlines will pay
- to C&O and another consulting firm if the Clinton Administration
- lifts the ban by Jan. 1. The State Department is investigating
- whether Oakley violated a law that forbids former officials
- of the Executive Branch ever to lobby in regard to decisions
- that they "personally and substantially" participated in. Oakley
- told the New York Times he did no lobbying--he only passed
- along to State Department officials information on how greatly
- the threat of terrorism in Beirut has diminished.
- </p>
- <p> The revolving door between government, or Congress, and lobbying
- has been spinning faster than ever. A study by Public Interest
- Research Group, a Ralph Nader organization, of 319 people who
- left government or congressional service last January found
- 101 who went into outright lobbying and an additional 79 who
- joined law firms that do lobbying, a total of well over half
- this most recent graduating class. Some lobbyists have also
- been operating more boldly than ever. John Rousselot, a former
- Republican Congressman from California and officer of the extreme
- right-wing John Birch Society, last week caused a stir by appearing
- on the dais during a hearing of the House Ways and Means Committee,
- on which he once sat. Rousselot insists his appearance was inadvertent:
- he was doing some "fact finding," or so he says, in an anteroom,
- got into a conversation with California Democrat Robert Matsui
- and unthinkingly strolled with Matsui out onto the dais. Others
- suspect Rousselot of showing off for his clients (he represents
- a score of cruise-ship operators), or auditioning for prospective
- clients, or maybe both.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton's moral clout in dealing with influence peddling has
- been a bit weakened because some of his own appointees have
- been accused of influence peddling, notably Secretary of Commerce
- Ron Brown, who has denied any impropriety in his contacts with
- a Vietnamese businessman. Nonetheless, the President has tried
- to put a crimp in future lobbying by an Executive Order prohibiting
- senior members of his Administration from lobbying their old
- colleagues for five years after leaving office. (The limit,
- in cases not concerning matters the officers had been "personally
- and substantially" involved in, had been one year.) The President
- also persuaded into budget law a limitation on the tax deductions
- businesses can take for lobbying expenses.
- </p>
- <p> These moves might help, but how much? The Executive Order does
- nothing to slow down the speed at which the revolving door spins
- right now. It may also be vulnerable to the same difficulties
- in defining what is and is not lobbying that plague enforcement
- of the law requiring lobbyists to register. Meanwhile, says
- consultant Berman, Clinton's fulminations against lobbyists
- may be doing them an unintended favor: "By demonizing lobbyists,
- he has strengthened their appeal" to clients who do not at all
- mind hiring adept practitioners of a black art.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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