The Center for Responsive Politics has taken a look at lobbying expenses for 2009 and found that we have a new record. $3.47 billion was spent by 13,741 registered lobbyists to lobby the Congress in 2009. In 2008 $3.27 billion was spent. And this is only the spending for those folks who have to register …
$3.47 billion spent. Did you get a pony?Post + Comments (22)
It has been almost six years since the Abramoff scandal broke on the front page of the WaPost. The story was followed for a while, but now it is just old news. Except that it isn’t. The system of corruption that Jack Abramoff helped to build is as strong today as it ever was. All the scams that Jack used to run are still being run today. The only difference is that Washington is now filled with “Baby Jacks” running these cons. And this corruption is a bipartisan project–perhaps the only bipartisan project that functions inside the beltway.
The Abramoff scandal is a Rosetta stone of how the system of lobbying, money laundering and influence works in Washington. This scandal needs to be examined and expose if we hope to reclaim our democracy from those who seek to bleed it dry.
There are Millions and millions of pages of Abramoff related documents, emails, testimony and other evidence that have been gathered by the DOJ. Another 750,000 pages of documents were gathered by John McCain and then sent to the National Archives to be swept under the rug of history. In these documents is a clear road map of how “legal” lobbying works in Washington. As some wise folks have observed, the worst part of the Abramoff scandal are all the things he did that are legal .
It is time to demand some action by Congress when it comes to out-of-control bribery (also known as lobbying). The measures put in place in the wake of the Abramoff scandal were only designed to deal with the low hanging fruit–the most obvious examples of pay for play. Everything else was left in place.
I suspect most folks would be surprised to learn that neither the House nor the Senate ever conducted any investigation into the connections that many elected officials and Hill staffers had with the scandal. Yes, there were a handful of very narrow Congressional investigation, but each of these intentionally avoided following up any trail of corruption that led to a staffer or a member of the House or Senate. Also surprising is the fact that neither the House nor the Senate ever conducted any investigation into the systemic and root problems with lobbying exposed by the scandal.
It is time to demand that Congress does its job.
A Member of Congress (especially on the Oversight and Government Reform Committee) or a Senator could launch an investigation into the Abramoff scandal and use this mountain of documents to expose the system of lobbying. Such a report could lead to stronger disclosure laws and an expansion of the definition of a “lobbyist”. It would also help if Congress gave prosecutors new laws and tools to help convict corrupt lobbyists, staffers and elected and appointed officials. As things stand right now most crimes of lobbying are “legal”.
And the Bush/Roberts Court is working on new Legislation from the bench to weaken and obstruct the current laws on the books that have been used in most prosecutions of public corruption over the last thirty years. Think of it as companion Legislation for the Unlimited Corporate Money Bill the Court enacted a few weeks ago.
Legalized bribery–AKA lobbying–is a threat to our Nation. Congress will not act unless they are forced to act. It is time to make some noise about this. It is time for Congressional Hearings and reform legislation. It is time for Congress to start working on Legislation to counteract the new Legislation being created and ordered by the Bush/Roberts Courts.
If you divide the money spent by lobbyists last year it comes to about $11 for every Citizen of America. Most of us are not seeing any benefit for that. Ponies are not in the mail.
If one wants to focus on the root of dysfunction in Washington, you have to look at lobbying. The Executive Branch under President Obama has put in place the toughest rules and the most transparent disclosure of lobbying contacts in the history of America. While this is great news, it will matter very little if Congress does not act to clean-up its own rules and pass real lobbying reform laws.
And as the most activist Court in American history continues to legislate from the bench, Congress needs to act to protect its right to make the laws of the land from the rogue Bush/Roberts Court.
We live in interesting times.
Cheers
dengre