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Lobbying With Bribes

There are 3 kinds of people who work in Washington, DC:

1.) The hard working staffers who do everything possible to help make America better.

2.) The 9-5 workers who watch the clock and can’t wait to get home and really don’t care about anything.

3.) Criminals who want to steal as much money as possible before they get caught.

Don’t miss Season Two of: House of Cards, on Netflix. Feb. 2014

See the Real Life House of Cards, below:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CHiicN0Kg10

Watch the new theme song for Washington politicians and lobbyists, below:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QmiKCBOvVPA

American Innovators for Patent Reform Strongly Condemns the Passage of H.R. 3309

The So Called “Innovation Act” Is the Worst Anti-Innovation Bill in American History

New York, N.Y. − American Innovators for Patent Reform (AIPR), an industry group representing small patent owners − start-ups, R&D companies, universities and independent inventors − as well as patent practitioners, strongly condemns the passage of H.R. 3309, the so-called Innovation Act, by the House as the worst anti-innovation and anti-inventor legislation in American history.

“Our Founding Fathers had the wisdom to lay the foundation of the American patent system in the U.S. Constitution,” said Dr. Alexander Poltorak, the Founder and President of AIPR. “Today’s lawmakers had the ‘wisdom’ to erode this foundation!”

Under the guise of curbing litigation abuse by so-called patent trolls, H.R. 3309 is a get-out-of-jail-free-card for corporate infringers.  In fact, corporate lobbyists crafted this bill with no input from inventors, universities or patent practitioners.

“This bill was rushed through the House without debate or deliberation, and without any input from the inventor community.  It was shepherded through the corridors of Capitol Hill by high paid lobbyists for large corporations,” observed Dr. Poltorak.  He concluded, “American democracy is the best democracy your money can buy!”

The centerpiece of this legislation is the fee-shifting provision, which requires the losing party to pay the prevailing party’s legal fees and expenses.  To penalize inventors and small patent owners for attempting in good faith to enforce their patent rights is nothing short of closing the courthouse doors in their faces.

“The fee-shifting provision of this Bill is a shameless attempt to intimidate inventors and small patent owners − true American innovators − into submission,” said Dr. Poltorak. “It is thoroughly un-American and flies in the face of our tradition of equal access to justice for all.”

The purpose of the Innovation Act is very clear: to make it easier for large high tech corporations to infringe patents owned by universities, independent inventors, R&D companies and other small patent owners, and to make it more difficult for them to enforce their intellectual property rights.

“The result of H.R. 3309, should a similar bill pass in the Senate and be signed into law, will be to weaken and devalue U.S. Patents,” observed Alec Schibanoff, Executive Director of AIPR. “That means fewer inventors will be able to secure the financing needed to commercialize their new technologies, and that will result in fewer new business start-ups and, ultimately, fewer new jobs.  With passage of this Bill by the House of Representatives, AIRP will take its fight to the U.S. Senate.”

What the U.S. Patent system really needs, but Congress lacks the will to do, is to provide full funding for the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

“Patents are the currency of a knowledge based economy,” said Dr. Poltorak. “Devaluing this currency, which will be the inevitable result if this bill becomes law, will stifle innovation and cost American jobs.”

American Innovators for Patent Reform calls on every engineer, researcher and inventor, and every American citizen who values innovation, to write to their U.S. Senators urging them to stop eroding our patent system and to pass a real patent reform bill that would establish full funding of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.

About American Innovators for Patent Reform

Headquartered in New York City, American Innovators for Patent Reform (AIPR) represents a broad constituency of American innovators and innovation stakeholders, including inventors, engineers, researchers, entrepreneurs, patent owners, small businesses, universities, investors, intellectual property professionals such as patent attorneys and patent agents, tech transfer managers and licensing executives.

AIPR opposes any legislation that makes it more difficult to enforce patents as such legislation ultimately weakens the U.S. Patent system and decreases the value of patents. AIPR advocates patent reform that creates a multi-tier patent system, strengthens U.S. patents, and provides full funding for the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.

For more information about AIPR, please visit www.aminn.org.
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Google, once disdainful of lobbying, now a master of Washington influence

 Mr. Schmidt goes to Washington

Google’s Eric Schmidt is no stranger to D.C. He has spent lots of time at the White House and on Capitol Hill lobbying on behalf of his titan technology company. But his relationship with Washington and the Obama administration has not always been a comfortable one.

Written by Tom Hamburger Matea Gold

Published: April 12

In May 2012, the law school at George Mason University hosted a forum billed as a “vibrant discussion” about Internet search competition. Many of the major players in the field were there — regulators from the Federal Trade Commission, federal and state prosecutors, top congressional staffers.

What the guests had not been told was that the day-long academic conference was in large part the work of Google, which maneuvered behind the scenes with GMU’s Law & Economics Center to put on the event. At the time, the company was under FTC investigation over concerns about the dominance of its famed search engine, a case that threatened Google’s core business.

In the weeks leading up to the GMU event, Google executives suggested potential speakers and guests, sending the center’s staff a detailed spreadsheet listing members of Congress, FTC commissioners, and senior officials with the Justice Department and state attorney general’s offices.

“If you haven’t sent out the invites yet, please use the attached spreadsheet, which contains updated info,” Google legal assistant Yang Zhang wrote to Henry Butler, executive director of the law center, according to internal e-mails obtained by The Washington Post through a public records request. “If you’ve sent out the invites, would it be possible to add a few more?”

Butler replied, “We’re on it!”

On the day of the conference, leading technology and legal experts forcefully rejected the need for the government to take action against Google, making their arguments before some of the very regulators who would help determine its fate.

The company helped put on two similar conferences at GMU around the time of the 18-month investigation, part of a broad strategy to shape the external debate around the probe, which found that Google’s search practices did not merit legal action.

The behind-the-scenes machinations demonstrate how Google — once a lobbying weakling — has come to master a new method of operating in modern-day Washington, where spending on traditional lobbying is rivaled by other, less visible forms of influence.

That system includes financing sympathetic research at universities and think tanks, investing in nonprofit advocacy groups across the political spectrum and funding pro-business coalitions cast as public-interest projects.

The rise of Google as a top-tier Washington player fully captures the arc of change in the influence business.

Nine years ago, the company opened a one-man lobbying shop, disdainful of the capital’s pay-to-play culture.

Since then, Google has soared to near the top of the city’s lobbying ranks, placing second only to General Electric in corporate lobbying expenditures in 2012 and fifth place in 2013.

The company gives money to nearly 140 business trade groups, advocacy organizations and think tanks, according to a Post analysis of voluntary disclosures by the company, which, like many corporations, does not reveal the size of its donations. That’s double the number of groups Google funded four years ago.

This summer, Google will move to a new Capitol Hill office, doubling its Washington space to 55,000 square feet — roughly the size of the White House.

Google’s increasingly muscular Washington presence matches its expanded needs and ambitions as it has fended off a series of executive- and legislative-branch threats to regulate its activities and well-funded challenges by its corporate rivals.

Today, Google is working to preserve its rights to collect consumer data — and shield it from the government — amid a backlash over revelations that the National Security Agency tapped Internet companies as part of its surveillance programs. And it markets cloud storage and other services to federal departments, including intelligence agencies and the Pentagon.

“Technology issues are a big — and growing — part of policy debates in Washington, and it is important for us to be part of that discussion,” said Susan Molinari, a Republican former congresswoman from New York who works as Google’s top lobbyist. “We aim to help policymakers understand Google’s business and the work we do to keep the Internet open and spur economic opportunity.”

Molinari added, “We support associations and third parties across the political spectrum who help us get the word out — even if we don’t agree with them on 100 percent of issues.”

Susan Molinari, a Republican former congresswoman from New York, works as Google’s top lobbyist in Washington. Susan Molinari, a Republican former congresswoman from New York, works as Google’s top lobbyist in Washington.

As Google’s lobbying efforts have matured, the company has worked to broaden its appeal on both sides of the aisle. Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt is a well-known backer of President Obama and advises the White House. Google’s lobbying corps — now numbering more than 100 — is split equally, like its campaign donations, among Democrats and Republicans.

Google executives have fostered a new dialogue between Republicans and Silicon Valley, giving money to conservative groups such as Heritage Action for America and the Federalist Society. While also supporting groups on the left, Google has flown conservative activists to California for visits to its Mountain View campus and a stay at the Four Seasons Hotel.

The company has also pioneered new and unexpected ways to influence decision-makers, harnessing its vast reach. It has befriended key lawmakers in both parties by offering free training sessions to Capitol Hill staffers and campaign operatives on how to use Google products that can help targetvoters.

Through a program for charities, Google donates in-kind advertising, customized YouTube channels and Web site analytics to think tanks that are allied with the company’s policy goals.

Google “fellows” — young lawyers, writers and thinkers paid by the company — populate elite think tanks such as the Cato Institute, the Competitive Enterprise Institute and the New America Foundation.

To critics, Google’s investments have effectively shifted the national discussion away from Internet policy questions that could affect the company’s business practices. Groups that might ordinarily challenge the policies and practices of a major corporation are holding their fire, those critics say.

“Google’s influence in Washington has chilled a necessary and overdue policy discussion about the impact of the Internet’s largest firm on the future of the Internet,” said Marc Rotenberg, a Georgetown University law professor who runs the Electronic Privacy Information Center, a watchdog and research organization.

Some with deep ties to the company say that Google’s embrace of aggressive lobbying was a necessary concession to the realities of Washington.

“I don’t fault Google for playing that game, in which big companies use their money to buy advocates and allies,” said Andrew McLaughlin, who served as Google’s first director of global public policy in Washington. “Given where the company is today, the fiduciary duty it has to shareholders and the way Washington works, it’s a rational judgment.”

Google goes to lunch

An early sign of Google’s new Washington attitude came in September 2011, when executives paid a visit to the Heritage Foundation, the stalwart conservative think tank that has long served as an intellectual hub on the right, to attend a weekly lunch for conservative bloggers.

The session took place at a critical juncture for the company.

Days earlier, Schmidt had endured a rare and unnerving appearance on Capitol Hill, where he was lectured by a Republican senator who accused the company of skewing search results to benefit its own products and hurt competitors. The FTC antitrust inquiry was underway. And, in what Google saw as a direct threat to the open Internet, major lobbies such as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the Motion Picture Association of America were mounting a legislative campaign to place restrictions on the sale of pirated music and movies. The effort was getting bipartisan traction in the House and the Senate.

Google Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt testifies before a Senate Judiciary antitrust subcommittee in September 2011. Google Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt testifies before a Senate Judiciary antitrust subcommittee in September 2011. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Inside Google’s Washington headquarters, a handful of lobbyists were crafting what they called the “Republican strategy” to defeat the legislation. Their approach: build conservative opposition based on the right’s distaste for regulation. They also seized on an obscure provision that they told Republicans would be a boon for trial lawyers, a Democratic constituency.

As the campaign took shape, there was a building sense within the company that it needed to beef up its firepower on the Hill. That fall, Google’s first Washington lobbyist, a computer scientist and lawyer named Alan Davidson, a Democrat, would announce his resignation, replaced a few months later by the former GOP lawmaker, Molinari.

In their visit to Heritage that day, Google officials were eager to make new friends. Their challenge was instantly clear.

“In 2008, your CEO campaigned for Barack Obama,” said Mike Gonzalez, Heritage’s vice president for communications, according to a video of the event. “. . . As a company, you’re really identified with this administration from the beginning. And you come here and you’re like a mix of Milton Friedman and Friedrich Hayek.”

Adam Kovacevich, then a member of Google’s policy team, responded by stressing the company’s interest in building new alliances.

“One of the things we’ve recognized is that no company can get anything done in Washington without partnerships on both sides of the aisle,” he said.

He noted the recent hiring of Lee Carosi Dunn, one of several former top aides to Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) brought on by the company.

Dunn, addressing the audience, promised “a lot of reach-out to Republicans.”

“I think it’s another lesson young companies that come to Washington learn — you can’t put all your marbles in one basket,” Dunn said. Referring to the editor of the conservative Weekly Standard, Dunn added: “Look, even Bill Kristol was walking around wearing Google glasses. We’re making strides!”

The Google-Heritage relationship soon blossomed — with benefits for both.

A few weeks after the blogger session, Heritage researcher James L. Gattuso penned a critique of the antitrust investigation into Google, praising the company as “an American success story.”

That winter, Heritage joined the chorus of groups weighing in against the anti-piracy legislation. As the bill, the Stop Online Piracy Act, appeared to gain steam in the GOP-led House, Gattuso wrote a piece warning of “unintended negative consequences for the operation of the Internet and free speech.” The legislation, he said, could disrupt the growth of technology. Gattuso said he came to his position independently and was not lobbied by Google.

After Gattuso’s piece went live, Heritage Action, the think tank’s sister advocacy organization, quickly turned the argument into a political rallying cry. In terms aimed at tea party conservatives, the group cast the bill as “another government power grab.”

In mid-January 2012, Heritage Action designated the legislation a “key vote” it would factor into its congressional race endorsement decisions — heightening the pressure on Republicans.

The next day, leading Internet sites, including Wikipedia, went dark as part of an online blackout protesting the bills.

Google turned its iconic home page into a political platform for the first time, urging users to sign a petition against the legislation. Seven million people added their names, and many of them added their e-mails, creating a valuable activist list for Google to mobilize then and in later fights.

As congressional offices were flooded with phone calls and e-mail protests, support for the legislation crumbled. Within days, both the House and Senate versions of the bill were shelved and Hill veterans were left marveling at the ability of Google and its allies to muster such a massive retail response.

For Google and Heritage, the legislative victory was the beginning of a close relationship. A few months later, Google Ideas and the Heritage Foundation co-hosted an event focused on the role the Internet could play in modernizing Cuba, featuring Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) and Google Ideas director Jared Cohen.

The following year, a new name popped up on Google’s list of groups it supports financially: Heritage Action.

GMU conferences

Facing a broad and potentially damaging FTC probe, Google found an eager and willing ally in George Mason University’s Law & Economics Center.

The center is among the academic programs at universities such as Harvard and Stanford that have benefited from Google’s largesse. For the past several years, the free-market-oriented law center has received an annual donation from the company, a grant that totaled $350,000 last year, according to the school.

Google’s relationship with the law center proved helpful in the summer of 2011 as speculation mounted that the FTC was going to launch an antitrust investigation of the tech giant. The company’s rivals, including Microsoft and Yelp, were aggressively pressing arguments that Google was exploiting its dominance in the search business.

On June 16, 2011, Google and the law center put on the first of three academic conferences at the GMU law school’s Arlington County campus, all focusing on Internet search competition. It was eight days before the company announced it had received formal notification it was under FTC investigation.

Google was listed as a co-sponsor of the day-long forum, but some participants were still struck by the number of speakers who took a skeptical view of the need for antitrust enforcement against the company, according to people in attendance.

The keynote address was by Google engineer Mark Paskin, who delivered a lunchtime speech titled “Engineering Search.”

A few days later, Christopher Adams, an economist in the FTC’s antitrust division who later worked on the Google investigation, e-mailed Butler, the law center’s director, to thank him for putting on the conference. “I think it was one of the best policy conferences that I’ve been too [sic],” Adams wrote, praising Paskin’s talk as “excellent.”

Adams declined to comment for this article, referring questions to the FTC press office.

FTC spokesman Justin Cole said the agency’s staffers “are required to adhere to established federal government ethics rules and guidelines. Attendance and participation in the 2011 and 2012 GMU conferences by our staff adhered to these guidelines.”

As the agency’s investigation stretched into its second year, the staff and professors at GMU’s law center were in regular contact with Google executives, who supplied them with the company’s arguments against antitrust action and helped them get favorable op-ed pieces published, according to the documents obtained by The Post.

The school and Google staffers worked to organize a second academic conference focused on search. This time, however, Google’s involvement was not publicly disclosed.

Months before the event, Zhang, the Google legal assistant, e-mailed Chrysanthos Dellarocas, a professor in the Information Systems Department at Boston University’s School of Management, to suggest he participate. Dellarocas had received $60,000 in 2011 from Google to study the impact of social networks on search.

“We’d love for you . . . to submit and present this paper, if you are interested and willing,” she wrote.

When GMU officials later told Dellarocas they were planning to have him participate from the audience, he responded that he was under the impression from “the folks at Google who have funded our research” that they wanted him to showcase his work at the event. He said he wanted “to be in compliance with our sponsor’s expectations.”

Dellarocas, who had a schedule conflict and ultimately did not attend, told The Post that while Google occasionally checked on his progress, the company did not have any sway over his research.

“At no point did they have any interference with the substance of my work,” he said.

Even as Google executives peppered the GMU staff with suggestions of speakers and guests to invite to the event, the company asked the school not to broadcast its involvement.

“It may seem like Google is overwhelming the conference,” Zhang fretted in an e-mail to the center’s administrative coordinator, Jeffrey Smith, after reviewing the confirmed list of attendees a few weeks before the event. She asked Smith to mention “only a few Googlers.”

Smith was reassuring. “We will certainly limit who we announce publicly from Google,” he replied.

A strong contingent of FTC economists and lawyers were on hand for the May 16, 2012, session, whose largely pro-Google tone took some participants aback. “By my count, out of about 20 panelists and speakers, there were 31 / 2 of us who thought the FTC might have a case,” said Allen Grunes, a former government antitrust lawyer who served on a panel and described the conference as “Google boot camp.” Grunes said he was not aware of Google’s role organizing the event until informed of it by a Post reporter.

Daniel D. Polsby, dean of GMU’s School of Law, which houses the center, said that while Google provided suggestions, the agenda and speakers were determined by university staffers. “I think it would misrepresent this conference to suggest that it was a Google event,” he said, adding that the law center discloses on its Web site the support it gets from Google and other corporations.

Google declined to comment about the conferences.

In January 2013, after an investigation that spanned more than a year and a half, the FTC settled the case with Google, which agreed to give its rivals more access to patents and make it easier for advertisers to use other ad platforms.

But when it came to the charges that Google biased its search results to promote its own products, the five FTC commissioners all voted to close the investigation, saying there was no evidence the company’s practices were harming consumers.

Jon Leibowitz, then the chairman of the agency, said in an interview that the FTC was not affected by Google’s campaign, noting that the company’s rivals were waging a parallel effort on the other side.

“It didn’t bother me that a lot of people were building events around the possibility of the FTC investigation,” said Leibowitz, who has since left the FTC. “That’s sort of life in the big city, and both sides were doing it.”

Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) discusses the U.S. economy in a March speech at a Jack Kemp Foundation forum at Google’s Washington offices.

Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) discusses the U.S. economy in a March speech at a Jack Kemp Foundation forum at Google’s Washington offices. (T.J. Kirkpatrick/For The Washington Post)

Attendees listen to Rubio’s speech. While also supporting groups on the left, Google has courted conservative groups and lawmakers in recent years.

Attendees listen to Rubio’s speech. While also supporting groups on the left, Google has courted conservative groups and lawmakers in recent years. (T.J. Kirkpatrick/For The Washington Post)

NSA fallout

On a February night this year, Schmidt sat down with a Washington audience far friendlier than the panel of senators who had grilled him nearly three years earlier. Addressing a dinner of journalists and scholars at the libertarian Cato Institute, Schmidt received applause and lots of head-nodding as he declared, “We will not collaborate with the NSA.”

Cato was not always in sync with Google’s policy agenda. In previous years, the think tank’s bloggers and scholars had been sharply critical of the company’s support for government rules limiting the ways providers such as Comcast and Verizon could charge for Internet services.

But, like manyinstitutions in Washington, Cato has since found common ground with Google.

And the think tank has benefited from the company’s investments, receiving $480,000 worth of in-kind “ad words” from Google last year, according to people familiar with the donation.

Schmidt’s message to Cato that night in February reflected the current focus of Google’s energy — containing the fallout from revelations by NSA leaker Edward Snowden.

As the public’s outrage has grown, the tech giant has tried to keep the focus on limiting government surveillance, not on the data collection done by private companies. A White House review of those issues is expected to be released this coming week.

A campaign against government spying, meanwhile, is in high gear, drawing together some unexpected bedfellows. The American Civil Liberties Union, Heritage Action, Americans for Tax Reform and the Center for Democracy & Technology have formed a coalition calling for the government to obtain a probable-cause warrant before getting access to e-mails and other electronic data.

The coalition, Digital 4th, is funded by Google.

Alice Crites contributed to this report.

Corruption, American Style – Forbes

Jan 22, 2009 … Bribery gets all the bad press, but lobbying is the real danger, because it affects everybody–whether they want it to or not.

www.forbes.com/ 2009/ 01/ 22/ corruption-lobbying-bribes-biz-corruption09-cx_mm_0122maiello.html – View by Ixquick ProxyHighlight

Jack Abramoff – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

After his release from prison, he wrote the autobiographical book Capitol Punishment: The Hard Truth About Corruption From America’s Most Notorious Lobbyist …

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jack_Abramoff – View by Ixquick ProxyHighlight

Lobbying is big and unpunished corruption | downwithelite

Apr 9, 2013 … Just wonder why laws exist that exclusively favour the pharmaceutical or the oil industry. That corruption is involved is plausible. Lobbying is …

downwithelite.wordpress.com/ 2013/ 04/ 09/ lobbying-is-big-and-unpunished-corruption/ – View by Ixquick ProxyHighlight

An expert on bribery and corruption makes a lonely visit to …

Feb 28, 2013 … GOP lobbyist Jack Abramoff is questioned about illegal lobbying practices during a hearing on … “You can be very corrupt within a reform bill.”.

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Jack Abramoff Proposes Reforms for Corrupt Lobbying – Washington …

Feb 6, 2012 … Jack Abramoff says lobbying rules need serious reform.

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Corruption? 5400 Lawmakers Have Become Lobbyists in the Last …

Sep 13, 2011 … More proof that Washington is corrupt? A new Legistorm study reveals there is a ” revolving door” between Congress and lobbying firms, …

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Corrupt Lobbyist Jack Abramoff’s Plan to End Corrupt Lobbying

Nov 3, 2011 … Disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff knows a thing or two about political corruption and lobbying. And in his new book “Capitol Punishment: The …

www.gawker.com/ 5856082/ corrupt-lobbyist-jack-abramoffs-plan-to-end-corruptlobbyingView by Ixquick ProxyHighlight

Lobbying is not the same as corruption! – Times of India Blogs

Dec 11, 2012 … An unnecessary controversy has broken around Walmart’s lobbying spends, some of which were directed towards securing FDI in multi-brand …

blogs.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/ the-real-truth/ entry/ lobbying-is-not-the-same-as-corruption – View by Ixquick ProxyHighlight

The American Anti-Corruption Act

Provide federal prosecutors the additional tools necessary to combat corruption, and prohibit lobbyists who fail to properly register and disclose their activities …

www.anticorruptionact.org – View by Ixquick ProxyHighlight

Our Corrupt Politics: It’s Not All Money by Ezra Klein | The New York …

Mar 22, 2012 … Capitol Punishment: The Hard Truth About Washington Corruption from America’s Most Notorious Lobbyist. by Jack Abramoff. WND , 303 pp.

www.nybooks.com/ articles/ archives/ 2012/ mar/ 22/ our-corrupt-politics-its-not-all-money/ – View by Ixquick ProxyHighlight

Jack Abramoff: The lobbyist’s playbook – CBS News

May 30, 2012 … Crooked lobbyist Jack Abramoff explains how he asserted his influence in Congress for years, and how such corruption continues today.

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Lobbying, Corruption and Political Influence – EconStor

focus on the relationship between lobbying and corruption (that is, … evidence on lobbying, corruption and influence using data for about 4000 firms in 25.

www.econstor.eu/bitstream/10419/33990/1/518050076.pdf – View by Ixquick ProxyHighlight

Jack Abramoff: From Corrupt Lobbyist To Washington Reformer – NPR

Nov 18, 2011 … Through his interview with Tell Me More’s Michel Martin and his new book, former lobbyist Jack Abramoff is obviously hoping his past makes …

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The Value of (Corrupt) Lobbying by Alexander Borisov, Eitan …

Mar 16, 2012 … Does corporate lobbying simply add value by allowing firms to communicate expert information to policy makers, or does it also add value by …

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Lobbying, Corruption and Political Influence Nauro F. Campos – Iza

focus on the relationship between lobbying and corruption (that is, … evidence on lobbying, corruption and influence using data for about 4000 firms in 25.

ftp.iza.org/dp2313.pdf – View by Ixquick ProxyHighlight

‘Congress corrupt to core’ – US lobby probe scapegoat – YouTube

Jan 18, 2012 … When it comes to big money in America’s politics, lobbyists are the people who know exactly how it works. RT talks to former lobbyist Jack …

www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ks0G7LGoYCo – View by Ixquick ProxyHighlight

Bribes, Lobbying, and Development – Kellogg School of Management

Feb 1, 2011 … —–International Herald Tribune, May 31, 2006. Lobbying and corruption have been the subject of tremendous public interest and research.

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(Corrupt) Lobbying – Kelley School of Business – Indiana University

May 14, 2012 … firms to lobby and engage in corruption, we examine the effect of …. value of corrupt lobbying activities, which faced intense scrutiny in the …

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Jack Abramoff: Inside Capitol corruption – CBS News

Jack Abramoff: Inside Capitol corruption … Minutes’ Lesley Stahl says to Jack Abramoff, one of the most notorious lobbyists of our time, on 60 Minutes this week .

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What is ‘lobbying‘ and its link to corruption? | space for transparency

Sep 14, 2009 … But how does lobbying cross the line to become corruption? TI’s Global Corruption Report 2009: Corruption and the Private Sector takes this …

blog.transparency.org/ 2009/ 09/ 14/ what-is-%E2%80%98lobbying%E2%80%99-and-its-link-to-corruption/ – View by Ixquick ProxyHighlight

Corrupt Politicians, Greedy Corporations and Lobbyists Hurting the …

Nov 2, 2013 … By James Moreland November 2, 2013 In order to assure a strong economic future, it is imperative that the U.S. cut ties with all of our “free …

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Lobbying versus Corruption – CESifo

tween lobbying and corruption, if any, are unimportant. Indeed, this is a view that … corruption lies in the fact that lobbying is a way of seek- ing influence which is …

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Investigation into corruption risks involved in lobbying – Independent …

present the Commission’s report on its investigation into the corruption risks involved in the lobbying of public officials and public authorities in New South Wales …

www.icac.nsw.gov.au/ documents/ doc_download/ 3678-investigation-into-corruption-risks-involved-in-lobbying-operati on-halifax – View by Ixquick ProxyHighlight

Former Lobbyist Jack Abramoff Speaks at USF – University of San …

Jun 19, 2013 … Disgraced super lobbyist Jack Abramoff — the man at the center of one of the biggest government corruption scandals in recent history — gave …

www.usfca.edu/ Newsroom/ Passion_for_Justice/ Disgraced_Super_Lobbyist_Jack_Abramoff_at_USF/ – View by Ixquick ProxyHighlight

Abramoff Talks Lobbying – The Hoya

Oct 11, 2013 … OLIVIA HEWITT/THE HOYA. Former lobbyist Jack Abramoff, who served time in prison for corruption, spoke about campaign finance reform and …

www.thehoya.com/abramoff-talks-lobbying-1.3076968 – View by Ixquick ProxyHighlight

Is it not lobbying same to corruption? | NowPublic News Coverage

Jul 19, 2010 … Many scholars and practitioners say that lobbying is a strategy to be different and achieve goals. From my friends residing in USA and from my …

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Lobbying groups corrupt US Congress’ – YouTube

Apr 26, 2013 … An analyst says lobby groups like the NRA have corrupted US Congress to act in their special interests rendering the American people …

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Lobbyist Is Expected to Plead Guilty in Corruption Case

Jan 3, 2012 … Richard J. Lipsky, who was accused of directing about $260000 of his lobbying fees to shell companies linked to State Senator Carl Kruger, …

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Corporate power has turned Britain into a corrupt state – The Guardian

Jun 4, 2013 … Seumas Milne: Westminster lobbying is the least of it. Revolving-door colonisation of public life is a corrosive threat to democracy.

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Dorf on Law: Lobbying and Corruption

Feb 19, 2010 … Posted by Neil H. Buchanan Two weeks ago, The New York Times ran a news article by Eric Lichtblau under the headline: “Lobbying Imperils …

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Institutions, Lobbying, and Corruption: A Theoretical Framework …

This chapter presents a theoretical framework that analyzes how differences in the lobbying strategies of business interest groups emerge from differences in …

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Is Lobbying Closer To Bribery… Or Extortion? | Techdirt

Apr 10, 2012 … We’ve certainly talked quite a bit about the institutional-level corruption of the way Congress and lobbying works, but a recent This American …

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Oil Companies Spend Millions Lobbying Corrupt Equatorial Guinea …

Jun 1, 2011 … News from the New York Times yesterday that U.S.-based military contractor Military Professional Resources Inc. (MPRI) is training Equatorial …

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Corruption happens, lobbying rules – Vox

Nov 8, 2008 … We still know very little about lobbying in developing countries. To many analysts, the distinction between lobbying and corruption is not …

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Lobbying Felon Jack Abramoff Calls Out Newt Gingrich’s Corrupt

Nov 17, 2011 … In an interview for NBC News’ web-only Meet The Press Press Pass, former lobbyist and convicted felon Jack Abramoff, now a self-styled …

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Corrupt Lobbyists Remain Triumphant | Common Dreams

Corrupt Lobbyists Remain Triumphant. by Lee Drutman. So, at long last, and with the begrudging signature of the president of the United States …

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Romney and Santorum Rally with Corrupt Lobbyist Ralph Reed in …

Mar 30, 2012 … Tomorrow morning in Waukesha, WI, Mitt Romney and Rick Santorum, among others (Gov.

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Corrupt Lobbyist’s Tell-All Published by Conspiracy-Mongering WND

Nov 14, 2011 … Given his reputation as a corrupt master of manipulation, disgraced former lobbyist Jack Abramoff has been given a surprisingly credulous …

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How corrupt is Obamacare? – John Lott’s Website – Blogger

Aug 26, 2013 … Major lobbying firms such as Fierce, Isakowitz & Blalock, The Glover Park Group, Alston & Bird, BGR Group and Akin Gump can all boast an …

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“Measuring Corruption: Do Campaign Contributions and Lobbying

Private interests expend great amounts of resources attempting to influence government decisions using tools such as campaign contributions and lobbying.

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From Logrolling to Corruption: The Development of Lobbying … – Jstor

Historians have generally given the impression that lobbying and the corruption that evolved from it were serious problems only after the Civil War.4 In fact, both …

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DownWithTyranny!: How Corrupt Are Members Of Corgress? Short …

Jan 4, 2013 … Sunday the Washington Post took a look at the special congressional corruption that involves family members working as lobbyists. After a …

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Inside the Corrupt World of Washington Lobbyists | Fox News Video

Nov 20, 2011 … Ex-D.C. insider Jack Abramoff exposes hypocrisy in D.C..

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I Know the Congressional Culture of Corruption – Jack Abramoff …

Jul 24, 2012 … Nevertheless, corruption has dulled the luster of the American political … During the years I was lobbying, I purveyed millions of my own and …

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Lobbying scandals see UK fall in corruption table – Politics.co.uk

Dec 5, 2012 … The UK has dropped from 16th to 17th in the international corruption table, as worries over unfair lobbying and party political funding grow.

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Becker & Poliakoff lobbyist at center of latest Miami-Dade corruption …

Aug 7, 2013 … In February, Hollywood-based Becker & Poliakoff law firm, one of South Florida’s top lobbying shops, trumpeted a big expansion of its lobbying …

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Bill de Blasio Sold Out: Corrupt Campaign Finance and Lobbyist …

Nov 3, 2013 … Real estate developers, gambling interests, and lobbyists corrupt New York City and New York State politics. In this YouTube video, questions …

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Politicalprof – SOPA/PIPA and Why Lobbying Is Not Corrupt

Jan 20, 2012 … SOPA/PIPA and Why Lobbying Is Not Corrupt My turn back on the skewer: lobbying is not an inherently bad thing. To make my case, let me …

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Completely corrupt Portland city council secretly met with fluoride …

Oct 23, 2012 … Completely corrupt Portland city council secretly met with fluoride lobbyists before voting to poison Oregonians’ water.

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Is lobbying so bad? | The 15th International Anti-Corruption …

Nov 9, 2012 … But Isaksson argues that not only are lobbying practices not corrupt, they are good for democracy. In fact, he says the more the better.

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JACK ABRAMOFF: Hell Yes Washington Is Corrupt — It’s Legalized …

Feb 23, 2012 … The former lobbyist explains how it really goes down. … JACK ABRAMOFF: Hell Yes Washington Is Corrupt — It’s Legalized Bribery!

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Lobbying, Corruption and Political Influence – Ideas – RePEc

Downloadable! Conventional wisdom suggests that lobbying is the preferred mean for exerting political influence in rich countries and corruption the preferred  …

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Corruption Confusion – Department of Political Science

The weakness of the lobbying registration trigger is more salient (Think Newt or Daschle).  The institutional corruption critique (Thompson,. Lessig, etc).

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corruption – Is there any possibility to have a democracy inherently …

Can a democratic system be structured in a way that doesn’t rely on ethics or brute-force, police-state-esque measures to disable lobbying? Is there a way to …

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Recent articles on revolving doors, lobbying, corruption etc …

Politicians and civil servants under the influence of corporations are caricatured as greedy fat cats, bad apples in an otherwise untarnished barrel. In truth, these …

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True News (The Bund): Corrupt lobbyist

Nov 28, 2012 … Corrupt lobbyist. ____3/ 6/ 2013_________________________________________________________________ ______________

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PressTV – ‘Lobbying groups corrupting US Congress’: Lawrence …

Apr 26, 2013 … An analyst says lobby groups like the NRA have corrupted US Congress to act in their special interests rendering the American people …

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Amazon.com: Customer Reviews: Capitol Punishment: The Hard …

This review is from: Capitol Punishment: The Hard Truth About Washington Corruption From America’s Most Notorious Lobbyist (Hardcover). This book has its …

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Obama’s Lobbying Ban Leads To More Corruption – Republic Report

Mar 9, 2012 … When Republic Report launched Sell Out Of The Week feature, our initial winner was President Obama, who earned the prize for embracing his …

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Lobbying Archives | Corruption Daily

Main menu. Skip to content. your daily dose of corruption …

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TI-UK submission – Statutory register of lobbyists

A new regulatory regime for lobbying will help to ensure there is greater transparency and reduce the risk of corrupt lobbying activity. Download now: TI- UK …

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The Insider – British government is controlled by lobbying by the …

Mar 21, 2010 … British government is controlled by lobbying by the powerful, through blatant corruption. *** Western “democracy” is a pretence put on by ruling …

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Lobbying « FCPA Professor

Corruption And Anti-Corruption: Challenges And Future Perspectives … Transparency International’s new emphasis on lobbying may indicate the beginning of a …

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Jack Abramoff Reveals Shocking Facts on Political Lobbying – Mercola

Dec 4, 2011 … In this 60 Minutes episode, ex-political lobbyist Jack Abramoff reveals … It is a rare look behind the scenes at just how corrupt the US political …

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Lobbyist Caps Cause Corruption? Not Quite |

Feb 20, 2012 … A few weeks ago, state Representative Lynn Smith (R – Newnan) spoke at length about lobbyists, influence, and the need for ethics reform after …

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Do Campaign Contributions and Lobbying Corrupt? Evidence from …

Introduction Private interests channeled over $ 300 million of political contributions to federal candidates alone during the last election cycle in 2004. 1 A further …

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Just how corrupt is Europe? | The Bureau of Investigative Journalism

Jun 6, 2012 … A call to arms, Europe governments must do more to fight corruption … Lithuania’s lobbying law is described by TI as ‘completely deficient’.

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How Much Has The Chamber Spent On Lobbying For FCPA Reform …

Jul 20, 2011 … Jonathan Ernst/ReutersThe U.S. Chamber of Commerce paid $120000 for the services of former U.S. Attorney General Michael Mukasey in the …

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Access and Lobbying: Looking Beyond the Corruption Paradigm’

Access and Lobbying: Looking Beyond the Corruption Paradigm’ by DORIE APOLLONIO, * BRUCE E. CAIN,** and LEE DRUTMAN***. Introduction. Political  …

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Democrat CA Cong. George Miller (and lobbyist son) investigated …

Apr 5, 2012 … Hot water rising for Rep. Miller, son byRichard Pollock, Washington Examiner, 4/ 5/12 Rep. George Miller, D-CA, has cultivated a reputation for …

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Just how corrupt is Europe? – Inside Story – Al Jazeera English

Jun 8, 2012 … “At the end of the day corruption is a moral problem. For example, lobbyists will always meet politicians but the problem comes in when a …

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Ex-Lobbyist Abramoff Visits Raleigh to Talk Government Corruption …

Ex-Lobbyist Abramoff Visits Raleigh to Talk Government Corruption and Reform. By Bryan Warner Published: Feb. 10, 2012. RALEIGH – Taking the stage at …

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Download – U4 Anti-Corruption Resource Centre

than corruption as a means of influencing policy, if adequately regulated. To many, the differences between lobbying and corruption may not be obvious.

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Corruption and the Archaeological Lobby’s Models – Cultural …

Dec 5, 2012 … It’s interesting to see where the archaeological lobby’s models stack up on Transparency International’s 2012 Corruption Perception Index: …

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Lobbying and corruption as substitute forms of rent-seeking

Nov 4, 2008 … inction to corruption (modelled as a transfer) and lobbying (a DUP activity) … ment revolves around corruption and lobbying being substitute …

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‘Corruption is legal in Washington’ – insider tips — RT News – RT.com

Jan 18, 2012… corporate influence in US politics, RT talks to a former American lobbyist who has been at the heart of a far-reaching corruption scheme.

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Court Expands Reach of Anti-Bribery Statute – Lawful Lobbying

Mar 4, 2013 … Court Expands Reach of Anti-Bribery Statute – Lawful Lobbying, Corrupt Bribery & Implicit Quid Pro Quo. Posted by Hayes Hunt on March 04, …

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D.C. Awash in Contracts, Lobbying Wealth: Does Big Government …

Nov 19, 2013 … America’s founding fathers understood the human nature to let power corrupt so they decentralized power. But times have changed.

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Summer Reading: Corruption and American Politics V – CityEthics.org

Aug 27, 2012 … The fifth essay in Corruption and American Politics, an essay collection edited by Michael A. Genovese and Victoria A. Farrar-Meyers (Cambria, …

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Abramoff: How to end corruption – MJ Lee – POLITICO.com

Nov 2, 2011 … Disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff says in a new book that the 1299 nights he … have opened his eyes about how to rid Washington of corruption.

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