Business As Usual
Jan 31st, 2008 at 8:53 am by Susie
And it’s all we can expect until we have full public financing for elections:
Most of the thousands of lobbyists work across the city, in and around K Street. In the past decade, 18 lobbying firms, corporations and labor unions have purchased town houses or leased office space near the Capitol, joining more than a dozen others that had operated there for years, according to real estate records.
Despite a strict new ban on gifts to lawmakers, lobbyists routinely use these prime locations to legally wine and dine members of Congress while helping them to raise money, campaign records show. The lawmakers get a venue that is often free or low-cost, a short jaunt from the Capitol. The lobbyists get precious uninterrupted moments with lawmakers — the sort of money-fueled proximity the new lobbying law was designed to curtail. The public seldom learns what happens there because the law doesn’t always require fundraising details to be reported.
“It’s a nice added bonus to say, ‘Hey, we’re going to host it at our house,’” said Jeffrey Shoaf, chief lobbyist of the Associated General Contractors of America, which opened its doors for nine fundraisers — and others that he says went undisclosed — last year at its redbrick town house two blocks from the Capitol.
The receptions, which can range from small breakfast meetings of five to large catered parties of 100 or so, are only a sliver of the fundraising universe.
Even so, they illustrate that lawmakers still are allowed to accept valuable favors from special interests willing to pay for access, despite promises by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other lawmakers that the restrictions on gifts and trips would “break the link between lobbyists and legislators.”
The role of lobbyists in fundraisers wasn’t addressed in the lobbying law signed last September. As long as they don’t exceed the federal cap on campaign donations — $10,000 per two-year election cycle for political action committees — lobbyists can underwrite an event for a favored senator or representative at a resort, on a golf trip or at their town house.
USA TODAY counted more than 400 congressional fundraisers at lobbyist-, corporate- or labor-owned Capitol Hill facilities last year through November, benefiting 214 lawmakers — 40% of Congress. Those numbers, based on invitations, interviews and Federal Election Commission records, capture only part of the total because many events go undisclosed. The figures don’t include fundraisers hosted by lobbyists at their K Street offices, which are subject to the same rules but don’t offer similarly convenient geography. USA TODAY also found examples of lawmakers helping the interests of the lobbyists who hosted them.
“This is business as usual,” said Malcolm Berkley, a spokesman for UPS, which opened its doors for lawmakers 57 times during the first 11 months of last year. “We are participating in the system that is established, and we do it by the rules and guidelines.

if you want to see some truly nauseating business as usual, check out Clinton’s Borat-gate in the NYT.
Through the ages, they have been called camp followers: opportunists, whores and miscreants out to pad their positions in life. It’s a tassel-loafer ghetto and it needs to be cleaned out. Drain the swamp!
And it’s the GOP who’re going to have the campaign finance reformer as their candidate. Bizarre.