Welcome back to
Contemplative Being!
Do you ever wonder what happens behind the scenes with elected
officials? How does it all work? These are questions I have thought about on
several occasions. The fact is that for elected officials particularly those in
the federal or state legislatures work is accomplished through negotiations. It
is a constant give and take between representative from different political
parties and even for those in the same party. The objective of a representative
is to serve those that elected him in addition to achieving the goal of keeping
their jobs, in other words getting re-elected.
We are all familiar with special interest groups and their efforts
to impact legislation in a way that benefits them. The way these special
interest groups operate to achieve their goal is by hiring lobbyists to promote
their cause. In case you are not familiar with the meaning of lobbying it is
defined by Wikipedia as the act of attempting to influence decisions made by officials
in the government, most often legislators or members of regulatory agencies. So,
how can a lobbyist influence a government official or anyone else for that
matter? Well, the answer to this is quite obvious bribery oops no no, I mean sexual
favors, wait that can be right either, can it? The short answer is yes, that is
pretty much how it works. How can this be? Aren’t there laws that prohibit
these sorts of things? Of course there are, so here is pretty much how it
works. A lobbyist cannot give a government official money for themselves
because that would be illegal, what the official can receive instead is a
donation to their campaign. There are a number of laws on the books that are intended
to make it seem like politicians are not allowed to receive gifts from anyone
but many of them are essentially useless. For example if a lobbyist takes a
public official to dinner he is not allowed to pay for the official’s meal
unless of course the lobbyist gives the politician a check for any amount of
money because at that point the dinner becomes a fundraiser and that’s okay. So
you see this is essentially legal bribery. Politicians need lots of campaign
contributions to be able to try to keep their jobs and lobbyists are happy to
contribute in exchange for the politician to support the cause of the
particular interest group.
Campaign contributions
are not the only techniques lobbyists have at their disposal to influence
politicians. Prior to the conviction of legendary lobbyist Jack Abramoff lobbyists
could give politicians lavish gifts in the form of travel to exotic locations
and staying at fancy hotels, expensive cigars and alcohol and much more Lobbyists find out what the particular
politician prefers and that’s what they get. The North Carolina state ethics
commission recently passed a decision stating that it is legal for a lobbyist
to use sexual favors as a form of influence (Brown, 2015). Essentially what
this means is that it is illegal for a lobbyist to pay for a prostitute because
that sort of gift is not allowed but if that lobbyist happens to be a
prostitute it is a okay.
Every once in a while
a lobbyist runs into a politician that is seemingly incorruptible. For a time
this is a nuisance for the lobbyist and the cause he is working for however
there is another technique that lobbyists have up their sleeves to deal with
these situations. The approach taken here is to do everything possible to
ensure that honorable politician does not win reelection. The way to do this is
to spend all that money that could have gone to the politicians campaign had
they played along to the opponent. The Washington state Supreme Court actually
struck down a law prohibiting politicians form intentionally telling lies about
each other so it’s not hard or illegal anymore for a well-funded campaign to convince
the public who the “better” candidate is (McGann, 2007).
Jack Abramoff was one
of the most successful lobbyists this country has ever seen and he was
eventually convicted of going too far and breaking laws. After serving jail
time he has written a book and become a leader in the anti-lobby movement. He
talks about techniques he used to influence politicians and how the laws that
were enacted since his conviction are nearly meaningless. He also discusses how
at the time he did not think that what he was doing was wrong. The term for
this is motivated reasoning and ethical fading. It is no secret that lobbyists
make lots of money so they rationalize that what they are doing is not wrong
because most of the techniques they use are not illegal. Continuing down this
through process leads to ethical fading because they are no longer able to see
from where they started. This is what can lead them to illegal behavior as was
the case with Mr. Abramoff (click
here to watch an interview Jack Abramoff gave on C-Span). I don’t know about you but I don’t want the
people I elect to be willingly or forcefully corrupted so they can keep their
jobs or get rich. Special interest groups particularly those with money can get
pretty much whatever they want under the current system. Hopefully some day we
will see reform to stop this.
Thanks for reading! I
will be taking a break from this blog for a while but if you add me to your
Google + I will be sure to let you know when I’m back at it.
Brown, E. (2015). Lobbyists Can
Legally Screw Politicians in North Carolina, Says Ethics Commission. Retrieved
March 5, 2015, from http://reason.com/blog/2015/03/04/lobbying-sex-okay-in-north-carolina
McGann, C. (2007). State's highest court backs lying in politics.
Retrieved March 5, 2015, from http://www.seattlepi.com/local/article/State-s-highest-court-backs-lying-in-politics-1251683.php
Abramoff, J. (2011). After Words with Jack Abramoff. Retrieved
March 5, 2015, from http://www.c-span.org/video/?303101-1/words-jack-abramoff
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