Posted by
howlinwolf on Friday, March 06, 2009 10:07:28 PM
THE INFLUENCE GAME, give us our PORK, Lawmakers in stimulus dilemma
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090211/ap_on_go_co/stimulus_pressures_3
By JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS, Associated Press Writer Julie Hirschfeld
Davis, Associated Press Writer – Tue Feb 10, 11:48 pm ET
Featured Topics:
SERVING THE PUBLIC, OR THE PUBE?
Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., talks about the Senate's work to pass the
economic AP – Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., talks about the Senate's work to
pass the economic stimulus bill as Sen. Joe …
WASHINGTON – Vote for the $800 billion-plus economic stimulus bill and
you might buy yourself a nasty re-election contest against a conservative
opponent next year.
Say no and risk the wrath of powerful interest groups across the political
spectrum that help voters decide who to support, from the business lobby
to big labor.
What's a member of Congress to do?
Political activists and lobbying groups are applying competing pressures on
lawmakers as Congress prepares for final votes on President Barack
Obama's massive recovery bill. They are leaning particularly hard on
Republicans who have backed the measure — or might be toying with the
idea of doing so.
"If they support the stimulus package, we will make sure every voter in
their state knows how they tried to further bankrupt voters in an already
bad economy," said Scott Wheeler, the executive director of the National
Republican Trust PAC.
His group promised to spend millions over the next two years to back GOP
primary challenges to any House or Senate Republican who supports the
legislation. That includes the three Republicans who voted "yes" when the
package passed the Senate on Tuesday, including one, Sen. Arlen Specter of
Pennsylvania, who faces re-election in 2010.
The other GOP supporters, Maine Sens. Susan M. Collins and Olympia J.
Snowe, don't face voters again until 2012 and 2014.
"We just want to send a message that we're going to have a long
institutional memory, and we're going to remind your constituents of what
you did," Wheeler said.
That's a similar vow to the one the House Democrats' campaign arm made
earlier this week. It targeted seven newly elected Republicans with robo-
calls tattling to constituents about their congressman's "no" votes on the
measure. The automated messages noted how many jobs the bill could
create for each state.
Republicans have been remarkably united against the measure — not a single
one in the House backed an $819 billion version last week, while just three
in the Senate voted for the $838 billion bill that passed Tuesday. But an
array of outside groups are leaning on them to change their minds.
The labor-backed coalition Americans United for Change announced Tuesday
night it would single out 21 Republican lawmakers with a national TV and
radio ad campaign urging them to switch their "no" votes to "yes." Those
targeted include 18 House members in moderate districts and three
senators regarded as possible backers, including Sen. Lisa Murkowski of
Alaska, who is to face voters in 2010.
Business groups, traditionally the GOP's strongest supporters, also are
pressuring them to break ranks.
The National Association of Manufacturers wrote senators threatening to
designate votes on the stimulus bill as "key votes" — used to score members
of Congress each year on their records. Lawmakers who vote with the
association more than 70 percent of the time win an award from the group.
"It can count a lot in elections," said Laura Narvaiz, an NAM spokeswoman.
Trolling for converts to the measure this week, Collins circulated a letter
from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, another big business lobbying group,
urging support for a key modification that shrank the overall price tag by
about $100 billion. She said she was putting a copy of the missive on all
her colleagues' desks.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., on Tuesday circulated praise for the
bill from an array of business groups.
Still, budget watchdog groups like the Council of Citizens Against
Government Waste have been just as vocal in their lobbying efforts against
the measure. They urged supporters to contact Congress and urge
representatives to vote "no," generating more than 70,000 such e-mails to
lawmakers.
"There will be a second wave of e-mails and expressions of outrage,"
promised Tom Schatz, the group's president, particularly if the price tag
grows during final negotiations between the House and Senate. "Taxpayers
are angry."
Lawmakers pay attention to these outside groups, which often spend freely
to shape voters' perceptions of members of Congress. Some groups have
control over large amounts of campaign cash, either through political action
committees or simply by telling their members which members of Congress
are "friendly" to their interests — and which aren't.
"I don't make my decisions on who key-votes what and I don't expect that
many of my colleagues do either," said Sen. Ben Nelson, D-Neb. But he
said political groups that are threatening Republicans who back the stimulus
measure "certainly don't make it easier" to strike a bipartisan deal.
"It's unfortunate and it's had an effect," Nelson said.
Beyond pressuring lawmakers to vote yes or no, a wide array of lobbying
groups are leaning on lawmakers to add their pet items to the final package,
which will be the product of an intense round of behind-the-scenes
negotiations.
For the Chamber, it's a tax break for businesses that buy their own debt
at a discount.
Education groups are clamoring for the restoration of school construction
funds included in the House bill but slashed in the Senate at the behest of
GOP moderates. It's a position also supported by the lobbyist-in-chief,
President Barack Obama, as part of a two-day sales blitz that's taken him
to Indiana and Florida, and before a prime-time audience in a televised
news conference. AKA, UNIONS, NUMBER TWO DONOR TO DEMOCRATS
UNIONS ALSO THE NUMBER ONE WAY COMMUNISM HAS SPREAD
AROUND THE WORLD....
* Treasury Chief Aims to Restore ‘Lost Faith’ in Bailout New York Times
* Obama presser: Does Obama pay attention? Hot Air TV
* Senate Approves Stimulus Plan New York Times – Tue Feb 10, 9:57
am EDT
Senate Finance Committee Chairman Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., talks with
reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Feb. 10, 2009, following
the Senate's passage of the stimulus bill. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)
$3 trillion! — Senate, Fed, Treasury attack crisis
2 hrs 45 mins ago
* Senate approves stimulus; urgent final talks
* Clinton holds out hope for useful talks with Iran
* THE INFLUENCE GAME: Lawmakers in stimulus dilemma
* Geithner's big moment: a tough sell
SOMEONE GET A LIST OF THESE PAC'S AND BOYCOTT, GIVE ALL OF
EM ****
Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.