Monday, October 27, 2014

P.J. O’Rourke: "In Defense of Lobbyists"

Congress doesn’t pass laws anymore. Not really. Not the kind of individual laws where I can go to a representative or a senator and explain what the law would mean, pro or con, to my client. Nowadays they’re burying all the laws inside gigantic fuzzy bills.”
“Congress is punting legislation to regulators. Congress feels less inclined to get the facts. That ball is in the hands of the regulatory agency receivers.”

Eric told me about a case with which a fellow lobbyist had to cope. McDonalds wanted universal nutritional restaurant menu labeling. If Mickey D ain’t happy, ain’t nobody going to be happy. What Big Mac wanted Big Mac got, buried somewhere in the paper pyramid that is Obamacare and worded as clumsily as Joe Biden remark.

The FDA was left to decide what a “restaurant” is. The FDA said anyplace where 50 percent of square footage was devoted to preparing and serving food. Eric’s friend had go to a hearing and explain that this definition would eliminate the nation’s delis, commissaries, and school cafeterias. As a dimwit consumer affairs reporter put it to Eric’s friend, “Oh, I never thought of that.”

Eric said, “I meet with regulatory agencies. But they don’t answer to voters. They don’t answer to anybody. I go in by myself, and they’ve got twenty agency employees at the table with a dozen others calling in by speakerphone. It’s more like testifying in court than lobbying.”

I asked him, “Isn’t there some growing, sort of libertarian, anti-regulatory feeling in the country?”

He said, “I’d agree if Congress had done anything about the IRS. Basically congress’s attitude is ‘Who gives a shit about business owners? They dealt with this before. They’ll deal with it again.’”

“Maybe,” he said, “the pendulum swings on things like regulation. But gerrymandering has cold cocked the pendulum weight, stopped it dead. ‘He was elected for being too far right.’ ‘She was elected for being too far left.’ Not much room for me to get in there and sway opinion. I’ve stopped putting regulatory reform on my agenda.”

“How many of these problems,” I ask, “are unintended consequences of lobbying reform laws?”

“Intended consequences,” Eric said. “All we can do now is have our industry give money to campaigns. I’ll go in for a meeting with a congressman who isn’t even listening, and the next day I’ll get a call from his campaign fund-raisers wanting to know what my client will donate. I spend more time on fund-raising than on issue influencing. They don’t even need the money. The incumbent is going to get re-elected. It’s just, ‘I’ve got more money, so I’ve got more credibility.’ This is a shell of the lobbying industry. All we are is ATM machines in pinstripe suits.”

Money spent on lobbying itself (as opposed to campaign contributions) is declining, down almost 9 percent since 2010. Advocacy group lobbying has held on but lobbyists for private enterprise aren’t getting a grip. E.g., the U.S. Chamber of Commerce spent $136.3 million lobbying in 2012 and $74.7 million in 2013. The number of registered lobbyists peaked in 2007 at 14,838.This year it’s 11,079.

And don’t for a moment think any of that is good news.
I skipped the first half, the comical half of this article. You can go ahead and read the whole thing if you want. PJ is a good writer.

6 comments:

Chip Ahoy said...

Is this thing on?

Dad Bones said...

Enlightening, funny and depressing. The country could use a few more P.J. O'Rourke's to explain how government works, and how it's getting worse.

Not that anybody would listen these days.

Unknown said...

All of PJ O'Rourke's books should be required reading in civics classes. (do we even have civics classes anymore? or are they all just Zinn 101 America hatred?)

Begin with "Eat the Rich" and follow up with "Parliament of Whores"

AllenS said...

It's because of all the rules and regulations that work against the common citizen creating anything, that you have to have a lobbyist to work the system.

That is not good.

bagoh20 said...

Remember the post a while back with the rocky dude that saved the town from the bolder only to get attacked by the town which was then destroyed by the bolder.

The bolder is government and especially government employees, and the Tea Party was trying to save us from them, and what did they get for it? People didn't like the color of their socks, so the bolder is growing every day and it's still coming. The GOP will likely get big gains this cycle, but they are part of the bolder too. They will only continue to install more self-protecting, abusive, pension-obsessed government employees. Even with both houses of Congress and the Presidency, they won't cut one single department, or reduce the budget in real numbers by a penny. The Dems lie about nearly everything of course, but the GOP lies about the very thing they they say is the reason for voting for them. We got what we deserve, and it ain't getting better, because we don't respect the truth unless it shows up in our favorite color singing our favorite tune.

ricpic said...

Since the last thing either party wants is limited government there is no way that the liberty our ancestors took for granted will be restored peacefully.