SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: JohnM who wrote (2720)6/26/2003 8:52:34 PM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793912
 
"To the Victor belong the spoils." THE WRAP - CBS

No Democrats Need Apply:

The Washington Post takes a close look at the growing GOP domination of Washington?s lobbying community, nicknamed Gucci Gulch, where an ever-increasing stream of Republicans are taking over powerful jobs once held by Democrats.

The so-called K Street Project - an effort to blacklist Democratic lobbyists begun by former House Speaker Newt Gingrich in the 1990s and re-invigorated since President Bush took office by House Majority Whip Tom Delay - has, by all accounts, been highly successful in strong arming lobbying groups into hiring lobbyists friendly to GOP causes.

Another factor, the Post reports, is the Republican control of both houses of Congress as well as the White House.

Many of the most powerful lobbying groups in Washington, like the Recording Industry of Association of America and the Motion Picture Association of America, are slowly but surely pushing out their lobbyists with Democratic ties in favor of former Republican politicians and staffers. The names of former Pentagon spokeswoman Torie Clark and Republican Rep. Mary Bono have surfaced as possible replacements for Democrats Hilary Rosen and Jack Valenti. In addition, the Post reports, several Fortune 500 companies - including GE, Comcast and Citigroup, have hired former Bush administration and GOP Hill aides for their top lobbying jobs. The Post reports that a "Republican National Committee official recently told a group of GOP lobbyists that 33 of 36 top-level Washington positions he is monitoring went to Republicans."

The money is so alluring, the top lobbyists at the top firms make in excess of $500,000 annually, that many GOP lawmakers have reportedly considered leaving their posts to become lobbyists, including Rep. Chip Pickering, R-Miss., who?s reportedly on the shortlist to run the Cellular, Telecommunications & Internet Association for at least $750,000 a year.

Some of the more brazen Republican tactics, include a move last year by Rep. Michael Oxley, R-Ohio, to have the Invest Company Institute, a mutual fund lobbying group, remove its top lobbyist, a Democrat. In exchange, Oxley's staff suggested to ICI leaders that a House Financial Services Committee probe into the mutual fund industry might be eased.

The Post also says that the K Street Project organizers were warned by the Senate Ethics Committee that their plan to track the political affiliation and contributions of lobbyists would violate Senate rules if access were denied to Democrats. Still, the Post says, the threat alone was enough to scare most lobbying groups into cowing to the GOP.

"I am hearing of a lot of pressure, and it's not subtle," said House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer of Maryland.

But, the Post reports that most of the GOP maneuvering takes place in far more backroom ways. The Post says Sen. Rick Santorum, GOP Conference Chairman, and other GOP leaders monitor openings on K Street. Santorum and the others then meet with lobbyists to discuss the job, how much it pays and then "suggest" Republican candidates. These candidates, some of whom are administration or Hill lawmakers who've been urged to quit their public-sector jobs, are vetted by Nels Olsen of the headhunting firm Korn/Ferry International. Then, GOP lawmakers and other government officials push the candidate until he or she is hired. The RNC takes this seriously enough to assign a staffer to keep a running tab of the openings and which are filled by GOP-friendly types, the Post reports.

As one GOP lobbyist, Dan Mattoon, tells the Post: "There is a recognition that Republicans are in a position to continue to control both houses of Congress for the next 10 years, and the K Street community should be reflective of the party with power." cbsnews.com



To: JohnM who wrote (2720)6/27/2003 3:47:45 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 793912
 
Krugman faces reality. The Republicans are doing what the Dems did for forty years.

Toward One-Party Rule
By PAUL KRUGMAN - NEW YORK TIMES

In principle, Mexico's 1917 Constitution established a democratic political system. In practice, until very recently Mexico was a one-party state. While the ruling party employed intimidation and electoral fraud when necessary, mainly it kept control through patronage, cronyism and corruption. All powerful interest groups, including the media, were effectively part of the party's political machine.

Such systems aren't unknown here, think of Richard J. Daley's Chicago. But can it happen to the United States as a whole? A forthcoming article in The Washington Monthly shows that the foundations for one-party rule are being laid right now.

In "Welcome to the Machine," Nicholas Confessore draws together stories usually reported in isolation, from the drive to privatize Medicare, to the pro-tax-cut fliers General Motors and Verizon recently included with the dividend checks mailed to shareholders, to the pro-war rallies organized by Clear Channel radio stations. As he points out, these are symptoms of the emergence of an unprecedented national political machine, one that is well on track to establishing one-party rule in America.

Mr. Confessore starts by describing the weekly meetings in which Senator Rick Santorum vets the hiring decisions of major lobbyists. These meetings are the culmination of Grover Norquist's "K Street Project," which places Republican activists in high-level corporate and industry lobbyist jobs, and excludes Democrats. According to yesterday's Washington Post , a Republican National Committee official recently boasted that "33 of 36 top-level Washington positions he is monitoring went to Republicans."

Of course, interest groups want to curry favor with the party that controls Congress and the White House; but as The Washington Post explains, Mr. Santorum's colleagues have also used "intimidation and private threats" to bully lobbyists who try to maintain good relations with both parties. "If you want to play in our revolution," Tom DeLay, the House majority leader, once declared, "you have to live by our rules."

Lobbying jobs are a major source of patronage ? a reward for the loyal. More important, however, many lobbyists now owe their primary loyalty to the party, rather than to the industries they represent. So corporate cash, once split more or less evenly between the parties, increasingly flows in only one direction.

And corporations themselves are also increasingly part of the party machine. They are rewarded with policies that increase their profits: deregulation, privatization of government services, elimination of environmental rules. In return, like G.M. and Verizon, they use their influence to support the ruling party's agenda.

As a result, campaign finance is only the tip of the iceberg. Next year, George W. Bush will spend two or three times as much money as his opponent; but he will also benefit hugely from the indirect support that corporate interests, very much including media companies, will provide for his political message.

Naturally, Republican politicians deny the existence of their burgeoning machine. "It never ceases to amaze me that people are so cynical they want to tie money to issues, money to bills, money to amendments," says Mr. DeLay. And Ari Fleischer says that "I think that the amount of money that candidates raise in our democracy is a reflection of the amount of support they have around the country." Enough said.

Mr. Confessore suggests that we may be heading for a replay of the McKinley era, in which the nation was governed by and for big business. I think he's actually understating his case: like Mr. DeLay, Republican leaders often talk of "revolution," and we should take them at their word.

Why isn't the ongoing transformation of U.S. politics, which may well put an end to serious two-party competition, getting more attention? Most pundits, to the extent they acknowledge that anything is happening, downplay its importance. For example, last year an article in Business Week titled "The GOP's Wacky War on Dem Lobbyists" dismissed the K Street Project as "silly, and downright futile." In fact, the project is well on the way to achieving its goals.

Whatever the reason, there's a strange disconnect between most political commentary and the reality of the 2004 election. As in 2000, pundits focus mainly on images, John Kerry's furrowed brow, Mr. Bush in a flight suit, or on supposed personality traits. But it's the nexus of money and patronage that may well make the election a foregone conclusion.
nytimes.com