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Why isn't the press asking about the k-street project?

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myrna minx Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-04-06 01:53 PM
Original message
Why isn't the press asking about the k-street project?
Edited on Wed Jan-04-06 01:53 PM by myrna minx
DC's biggest open secret!

http://www.nybooks.com/articles/18075
This remark is only slightly exaggerated. For over ten years, but particularly since George W. Bush took office, powerful Republicans, among them Tom DeLay and Senator Rick Santorum, of Pennsylvania, have been carrying out what they call the "K Street Project," an effort to place more Republicans and get rid of Democrats in the trade associations and major national lobbying organizations that have offices on K Street in downtown Washington (although, of course, some have offices elsewhere).


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The Republican purge of K Street is a more thorough, ruthless, vindictive, and effective attack on Democratic lobbyists and other Democrats who represent businesses and other organizations than anything Washington has seen before. The Republicans don't simply want to take care of their friends and former aides by getting them high-paying jobs: they want the lobbyists they helped place in these jobs and other corporate representatives to arrange lavish trips for themselves and their wives; to invite them to watch sports events from skyboxes; and, most important, to provide a steady flow of campaign contributions. The former aides become part of their previous employers' power networks. Republican leaders also want to have like-minded people on K Street who can further their ideological goals by helping to formulate their legislative programs, get them passed, and generally circulate their ideas. When I suggested to Grover Norquist, the influential right-wing leader and the leading enforcer of the K Street Project outside Congress, that numerous Democrats on K Street were not particularly ideological and were happy to serve corporate interests, he replied, "We don't want nonideological people on K Street, we want conservative activist Republicans on K Street."

The K Street Project has become critical to the Republicans' efforts to control all the power centers in Washington: the White House, Congress, the courts—and now, at least, an influential part of the corporate world, the one that raises most of the political money. It's another way for Republicans to try to impose their programs on the country. The Washington Post reported recently that House Majority Whip Roy Blunt, of Missouri, has established "a formal, institutionalized alliance" with K Street lobbyists. They have become an integral part of the legislative process by helping to get bills written and passed—and they are rewarded for their help by the fees paid by their clients. Among the results are legislation that serves powerful private interests all the more openly—as will be seen, the energy bill recently passed by the House is a prime example —and a climate of fear that is new. The conservative commentator David Brooks said on PBS's NewsHour earlier this year, "The biggest threat to the Republican majority is the relationship on K Street with corporate lobbyists and the corruption that is entailed in that." But if the Republicans are running a risk of being seen as overreaching in their takeover of K Street, there are few signs that they are concerned about it.

When the Republicans first announced the K Street Project after they won a majority in Congress in the 1994 election, they warned Washington lobbying and law firms that if they wanted to have appointments with Republican legislators they had better hire more Republicans. This was seen as unprecedentedly heavy-handed, but their deeper purposes weren't yet understood. Since the Democrats had been in power on Capitol Hill for a long time, many of the K Street firms then had more Democrats than Republicans or else they were evenly balanced. But the Democrats had been hired because they were well connected with prominent Democrats on Capitol Hill, not because Democratic Congresses demanded it. Moreover, it makes sense for lobbying firms that want access to members of Congress to hire people with good contacts in the majority party—especially former members or aides of the current leaders. But the bullying tactics of Republicans in the late 1990s were new.
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Loonman Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-04-06 01:56 PM
Response to Original message
1. The press has probably been purged as well
My guess.
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myrna minx Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-04-06 01:59 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. The jack abramoff scandal could blow wide open the
corruption of the k-street project. I guess I'm so furious that the "press" is erroneously making this a bi-partisan scandal when it is a republican corruption scandal to the core.
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oasis Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-04-06 02:04 PM
Response to Original message
3. Bill Press, Carville or Lawrence O'Donnell need to insert Delay/K-Street
in every round table discussion they are involved in.

Joe-sixpack has gotta know that there has been a dramatic change in the way Washington lobbyists do business since Delay's been in charge.
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myrna minx Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-04-06 02:06 PM
Response to Reply #3
5. This is the prime time to do it when the country's attention
is rapt. This needs to be brought to light and the timing, in this context is perfect.
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oasis Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-05-06 03:47 AM
Response to Reply #5
10. Richard Ben-Veniste mentions "K-Street" impact in today's "Hardball".
Democrats need to stay active to keep it front and center.
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leeroysphitz Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-04-06 02:05 PM
Response to Original message
4. The media knows who signs the checks.... n/t
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kenny blankenship Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-04-06 03:08 PM
Response to Reply #4
8. Precisely. The media is owned by the same class of people who fund KStreet
and who show, election cycle after election cycle, that they share the "values" of the Republinazis, who thought up the K-Street project purge.

Corporate totalitarianism is the inevitable end result of 2party corporate kowtowing. With both parties grovelling for corporate patronage and the scattered horde of average americans irretrievably sold out and permanently alienated from their own country's political system, it turns out that only one party is really needed for american-style Demockracy. Why pay for both parties when only one is needed and only one can lay claim to the TRUE FAITH of Corporatism, having served it and professed it ostentatiously since the 19th century?

The Democrats finally got the downsizing which they worked so hard to help the Company achieve.
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politicaholic Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-04-06 02:11 PM
Response to Original message
6. Well, let's think about this...
How far do you think their neo-con cronies are going to get when the Dems once again dominate the house and senate.

They just want cronies in these positions so that they can get favors back. That just shows the short sightedness of the republicans. How far do you think these lobbying agencies will get if they are packed to the rafters with republicans and the Democrats take hold of the congress and senate? Any self respecting corporation would drop them like a sack of wet spinich and switch to a dem lobbying agency. The thing about a large portion of corporations is that they could care less who's in office, just as long as the particular politician works with them to achieve their agenda.

Welcome to politics.

"Poli...many, ticks...blood sucking insects." -James Kennedy, SF poet-
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myrna minx Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-04-06 02:56 PM
Response to Reply #6
7. I understand that they are short sighted, but my beef is that the
press is trying hard to make the corruption scandals a bi-partisan issue, when it is completely obvious that it is exclusively a republican cancer. This can been illustrated via the arrogance of the K-Street project.
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politicaholic Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-04-06 03:11 PM
Response to Reply #7
9. The arrogance on K street is a strong symptom...
but really not illegal. It's like being a business owner and saying to your main distributer, "I don't like your salesman much, hire my nephew, I can work with him." Ethical? No. Common? Fairly.

Try to keep this in mind. There are always going to be scumbags on Capitol Hill trying to bribe, influence, and schmooz their agenda. The thing about it is that, they're not the ones who took the oath of office. The republicans can pack the lobbying offices, but if illegal activity is rampant then investigations are going to happen and if the repubs get too arrogant, they'll find themselves either out of a job in the next election cycle or behind bars.
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sandnsea Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-05-06 03:59 AM
Response to Original message
11. Or the Young College Republicans
that spawned Abramoff, Reed, Rove, Norquist, Atwater. Or Norquist's Wednesday Meeting. Or the infusion of money into "political interest" front groups by the Four Sisters, like L. Brent Bozell and his Media Research Center and Parent Television Council. Or the conservative philosophy that brought us Delay's Mariana "petri dish" of no immigration laws, "guest worker" slave labor and forced prostitution and abortion through the lobbying of Jack Abramoff. Why indeed.

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