The Cost of Independence

By Albert on November 22, 2009 6:02 PM

When it comes to business, corporate, and special interest lobbying, I’m under the impression that being bigger is better.

I did a quick search on Wikipedia for information, and they reference OpenSecrets.org, which houses some interesting information about who the biggest spenders were in 2009:

Lobbying Client Total
US Chamber of Commerce$65,211,000
Exxon Mobil$20,750,000
Pharmaceutical Rsrch & Mfrs of America$20,165,000
General Electric$19,661,000
Blue Cross/Blue Shield$16,727,065
Pfizer Inc$16,340,000
Chevron Corp$15,515,000
AARP$15,060,000
National Assn of Realtors$13,857,000
Verizon Communications$13,450,000
ConocoPhillips$13,292,079
American Medical Assn$12,600,000
American Hospital Assn$12,337,176
FedEx Corp$12,290,000
BP$11,370,000
AT&T Inc$11,368,732
Boeing Co$10,720,000
National Cable & Telecommunications Assn$10,660,000
Altria Group$10,170,000
Lockheed Martin$9,928,992

Surprise! The US Chamber of Commerce spent the most on lobbying last year. Sounds, impressive right? According the chamber of commerce website:

More than 96% of U.S. Chamber members are small businesses with 100 employees or fewer.

However, the next 19 biggest spenders collectively spent $2,615,536,322, 4000% as much as the US Chamber of Commerce.

I’m reviewing this information to learn about how independent businesses are represented in Washington, D.C., and in the process I’m shocked at how much money is spent on lobbying. Incredible.

Ted Stevens, The Former Lobbyists Pal

By Albert on November 1, 2009 10:20 AM

I happened to read up on some comments regarding Ted Stevens’ description of the Internet as a series of tubes, and found this comment particularly amusing:

“Alaska, wake up! Get this bum out of office - and as for corporate lobbyists, tarring and feathering should make a comeback in Washington.”

http://www.publicknowledge.org/node/497#comment-16

Pay Attention to Earmarks!

By Albert on October 30, 2009 12:46 AM

I'm so glad to see this headline:

House Ethics Panel Probes Earmarks by 7 Lawmakers

I only skimmed through the article right now as I've got to start work on another project but plan to review it later. Here at the lawmakers under review:

  • James Moran (D., Va.)
  • C.W. Bill Young (R., Fla.)
  • Peter Visclosky (D., Ind.)
  • Norm Dicks (D., Wash.)
  • Todd Tiahrt (R., Kan.)
  • Marcy Kaptur (D., Ohio)

The lobbying company in question is the PMA Group, a company whose offices were raided by the FBI and dissolved afterwards.

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