Hey Big Daddy,
It seems like lobbying is at an all-time high around this place. Do they have too much
power?
Signed,
Lois in Lodi
Hey Lois,
My thoughts on the relationship between lobbying and
lawmakers are well know: If you can’t eat their food, drink their liquor, etc. etc. etc.
But that statement was made in another time and place,
back when the Legislature was filled with people who
actually did belong.
These days, I’m not so sure the underlying assumption of that quotation
holds. And it’s not just because we’ve got more boring tea-totalers in the Legislature than
we used to. There’s no denying that the power of special interests has
increased exponentially in this town. We just need
to go to the tape to prove it.
During the last legislative cycle, special interests
spent more than half-a-billion dollars to try to influence California decision
makers, both in the legislative and executive branches
(bribes paid to judges were not disclosed on the Secretary
of State’s Web site for some odd reason).
And these groups are not doing it for their health
– or in the case of many of these chemical companies,
they’re not doing it for your health, either. They’re doing it because it is chump change for many of
these groups to play in Sacramento compared to the
financial implications the decisions made here have
on their bottom lines.
But what does it really get you? Just ask organized
labor if all that lobbying, or campaign giving, actually
helps when it comes time for members to put up tough
budget votes. Personally, I can’t wait to see all the jockeying over this alleged budget
deal, as all of the ambitious statewide candidates
vie for campaign position during this budget vote.
In the Assembly alone, you’ve got three Democrats – Alberto Torrico, Ted Lieu and Pedro Nava – who have all expressed interest in running for attorney
general. Dave Jones is running for insurance commissioner.
Over in the Senate, Jeff Denham and Democrats Alan
Lowenthal and Dean Florez are talking about running
for lieutenant governor. Even Mike Villines was forced
last week to debunk rumors he’s running for the lite gov spot.
I’m sure I’m missing other statewide wanna-bes, but the point is the same – this vote is going to go a long way to indicate how
these ambitious pols are going to sell themselves to
special interests. And make no mistake, that’s what they’re doing. Do you really think it’s just coincidence that Denham stopped voting for budgets
the minute he got a bit of statewide ambition in his
bonnet?
But there are some signs that not even these major
political players nor their lobbyists are immune from
the current international financial meltdown. Many
of the folks looking for a bailout are some of our
sacred Capitol’s biggest lobbyist employers. And when they don’t look good, we don’t look good.
It’ll take a few months to see how much this trickle-down actually does affect California’s political-industrial complex. But perhaps a little bit of shared
pain may help rehabilitate the image most of us have
of lobbyists.
OK, that’s a stretch. Lobbyists are somewhere in between Darrell
Strawberry and Amy Winehouse on the list of rehabilitation
candidates. That’s why they keep all those polticians and journalists
around – to make themselves look better.
But even if lobbinsts aren’t heading for a full make-over, keep in mind that yesterday’s fat cat may be tomorrow’s feral kitty. And if those lobbyist expense accounts
start drying up, then all of us will start to feel
the pain.
