LECTURE NOTES
INTEREST GROUPS
Interest
group – An organization
that attempts to influence government actions and policy.
Lobbyist
– A person who attempts
to influence government. This
could include a professional who is hired by an interest group, or any
of us who take the time to try to influence government. Phone calls, e-mail,
and try to influence government and their actions.
Techniques Used by Interest Groups & Lobbyists To Influence Government:
1. Electioneering--
trying to get candidates sympathetic to your cause elected--most effective
and expensive method.
· Campaign
contributions-- trying to get candidates sympathetic to your cause elected
to office by supporting them financially. Best way to do this is through
campaign contributions.
· At
the federal level, the most an individual can contribute to a campaign à $2,000
· If
you are a political action committee your limit is $10,000 in any one candidate
in any one election.
· Each
labor union, corporation, or interest group is limited to one PAC (political
action committee) each.
· Endorsement --Stand
behind and give a stamp of approval to certain candidates. Sway voters for
the cause you stand for. This
can deliver votes to a candidate that they otherwise would not get. (Ex.: When
the National Right to Life endorses a candidate, millions of pro-life Americans
will be influenced by that endorsement and support the candidates endorsed.)
· Volunteers--Provide
volunteer workers.
· People
who answer telephones, fill envelopes, and hang posters. Vast majority of campaign workers is volunteers.
2. Lobbying
· Face
to face contact or verbal or written persuasion.
· Most
effective Lobbyists are former members of government, but are also very,
very expensive. Posses a wealth of connections, expertise, and technical
know how.
· E-mail,
Letters, Faxes, Phone calls, and Personal appearances.
· Providing
Research and information. To bring about change by proving your cause with
facts provided by personal or personally funded research. Statistics,
facts, and research.
· Wining
and Dining 90% of budget spent on it because of effectiveness. Entertaining
and
· Providing
free gifts.
· List
of favorite women of government officials. Escorts.
· Letter
writing campaign.
3. Persuasion-public
opinion
· An
attempt to mold, shape, and influence public opinion on an issue through
a media campaign- Expensive.
· This
includes: Ads on television, radio, newspapers, magazines; billboards, films,
speakers
· Write
letters to the Editor & get them published in local newspaper—inexpensive—goal
is to influence members of the community who read the letters to the editor
4. Influence
appointment of sympathetic government officials
· An attempt to get the “right person” appointed to a governmental
position—someone who shares your political views
· This
requires connections for personal visits or to get your call through or to
get your letter read.
5. Litigation
· Must
have a legal issue—examples include:
· Gun
control
· Abortion
· Immigration
· Discrimination
· Is
comparatively less expensive than electioneering & lobbying
· Is
time consuming—with appeals, the process can take years
· The
judicial branch is the most objective & nonpolitical of the 3 branches—judges
are there to do what is constitutionally and legally correct, and are NOT
there to do what is politically popular. Thus, if you feel the law and/or the Constitution is on your
side, this is the route to go
6. Direct
action
· This
is non-violent or peaceful protest (civil disobedience) and includes:
· Marches,
demonstrations, sit-ins
· Picketing
· Boycott
· Two
advantages:
· This
is fairly cheap & inexpensive
· This
often brings in the media—thus, free publicity to your cause
· Disadvantage:
· If
violence results then your group takes the blame for the action even if they
did not initiate it.
· Americans
typically view groups and individuals who engage in civil disobedience as
“troublemakers,” “radicals,” and “Un-American” & often
there is a public backlash as even people who initially supported your group
or agreed with your stand on that issue turn against you
7. Illegalities
This would be anything that violates the law, including:
· Bribery
· Blackmail
· Extortion
· arson
· terrorism
· violence
· murder
· assault
· Business and Trade Lobbyists are the most successful and powerful. 80%
of all registered lobbyists are representing them.
Lobby Regulation at the Federal Level:
The New 1995 Lobby Regulation Act (went into effect January 1, 1996).
· This
was a BIG improvement over the old 1946 Lobby Regulation
Act because it more broadly defined who was a lobbyist and who had to register
as a lobbyist and report their activities.
· Its
provisions:
· Lobbyists
must register with House clerk & Senate secretary
· Must
report who their clients
· Must
report what agencies or branches of Congress are lobbied (this includes
the executive & legislative branches—the old law only covered lobbying
Congress)
· Anyone
who spends 20% of their time lobbying must now register as a lobbyist (under
the old law only paid lobbyists—professionals—who were paid primarily for
their lobbying activities had to register—thus exempting many lawyers)
This is a broader definition of “lobbyist” and thus covers more lobbyists)
· Restrictions
on gifts that can be accepted from lobbyists
§ Members
of Congress & their staffs can only accept gifts worth less than $50
· Major
loopholes:
§ Does
not include the judicial branch
§ Does
not apply to grass-roots lobbying (efforts to generate phone calls, faxes,
email, & letters to government officials)