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The Elections

Dirty
Money 2000

Cartoon ©2000, Gary Huck

The 2000 elections are already the most cash-soaked in American history. According to the Federal Election Commission, in the first 15 months of the election cycle, the two big parties raised $163 million, a record sum that is up 94 percent from the scandalous levels of 1996.

We know, of course, where the vast bulk of that money’s coming from: corporations and the people behind them.

In the past few weeks, reform-minded think tanks and the occasional journalist have done a good job documenting this flood of corporate money. Below, some highlights.

CHINA TRADE

"It’s safe to say that tens of millions of dollars" in lobbying expenditures and campaign contributions have been spent in the cause of China trade, reports the Center for Responsive Politics (CRP). The China trade bill, which sailed through the House in May, is a pet project of the Business Roundtable, a D.C.-based lobbying coalition dominated by mega-corporations.

In March alone, CRP reports, Business Roundtable members made nearly $4.2 million in soft money contributions to the two parties. The biggest givers were companies with a stake in China trade: UPS ($1.8 million) wants China to gain entry to the World Trade Organization so that it can operate its own delivery service there. Boeing ($857,000) wants to get its hands on the $120 billion China is expected to spend on its aircraft fleet.

HIGH TECH

As in all things, Microsoft leads the way when it comes to soft money giving by new technology companies. By June, the company had contributed more than $2.2 million to federal parties and candidates, split almost evenly between Democrats and Republicans. The Financial Times reported on a passel of "New Democrats" wining and dining top high-tech execs in San Francisco, trawling for campaign contributions.

Not far away, in Silicon Valley, the Wall Street Journal reported, the head of Cisco Systems, John Chambers, threw open his doors for a fundraiser benefiting the GOP and George W. Bush. One day, the FEC received a report of a $100,000 check from the CEO to congressional campaign committees. The next day, two House leaders wrote to regulators urging them to delay new accounting rules Cisco doesn’t like.

SWEET TOOTH

From the Public Campaign, which produces an informative bulletin on money in politics called Ouch!: After a three-year study on the effects of sugar on our health, a group of leading nutritionists decided to recommend that the federal government change its dietary guidelines to urge that people "choose beverages and foods that limit your intake of sugars." (The language had been milder: "Choose a diet moderate in sugar.")

Fortunately for the sugar industry, it had paid for friends in high places. The Senate’s number one and number four top recipients of sugar industry money, Sen. Larry Craig (R-ID) and Sen. Kent Conrad of (D-NE), came to the rescue, circulating a letter to Agriculture Secretary Dan Glickman protesting the proposed change. Eventually, 30 senators signed it. The new regulatory language: "choose beverages and foods that moderate your intake of sugar."

JUST A LITTLE TIPSY

The restaurant and alcohol industries have another problem with the feds. In June, the Senate passed a bill setting a new federal blood-alcohol limit of .08 — lower than what most states now tolerate. The same bill passed the Senate two years ago and was killed in the House after some heavy lobbying by the restaurant and alcohol industries.

CRP reports that those two industries are on a buying spree of politicians this year, with contributions up almost a third from 1996. CRP’s prediction: The bill will get stopped in the House again this year. Cheers!

GREASY MONEY

Al Gore has been sounding almost like a populist lately when it comes to oil companies. The industry is "gouging" consumers with its high oil prices, Gore correctly charges. Oil companies’ first- quarter profits were as much as 500 percent higher than last year, according to Public Citizen.

But on closer inspection, Gore doesn’t look so folksy. We’ve noted before the Gore family connection to Occidental Petroleum. (Occidental pays Gore about $20,000 a year for the right to mine zinc on Gore’s land, but never actually mines it.) It gets worse. In the May 22 issue of The Nation, Ken Silverstein reports that the Clinton Administration has been quietly helping Occidental win support for its plan to drill oil in Colombia on land claimed by the U’wa tribe. In February, the Colombian government, which the Administration has been bolstering mightily both militarily and financially, sent soldiers in to spray teargas on anti-Occidental protesters.

DRUG MONEY

Drug companies are spending record sums on the campaign this year, reports Public Citizen. Pfizer leads the pack ($21.8 million), followed by Merck. Both Gore and Bush are benefiting from this largesse, although Bush is way out ahead, scoring $238,000 of drug money to Gore’s $53,000.

But the pharmaceutical industry is slipping a lot more cash into the process than we can count. Those ads with "Flo," the arthritic bowler who doesn’t want Congress to let "big government" affect her health care, were paid for by an organization called "Citizens for Better Medicare." Despite its name, the organization is largely sponsored by drug companies, reports the Center for Responsive Politics. But because it is classified as nonpartisan, it doesn’t have to report its expenditures to the FEC.

IT’S MY PARTY...

The GOP convention was brought to you by: Motorola, Verizon Communications (Bell Atlantic), and Comcast Corporation (all at $1 million each); and by US Airways, Philip Morris, Enron, and Blue Cross Blue Shield, among others. The Democratic convention will be sponsored by SBC Communications, UPS, United Airlines, and Boeing, among others.

Underwriting both conventions are: AT&T, American International Group, General Motors, Microsoft, Hewlett Packard, American Waterworks, and Lockheed Martin.

For more info: Center for Responsive Politics (www.opensecrets.org), Public Citizen (www.citizen.org), Public Campaign (www.publiccampaign.org).

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