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Interest Groups

Interest Groups. Chapter 11. Interest Group Power. Interest Groups = Organizations outside the government that attempt to influence the government’s behavior, decision-making, and allocation of resources

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Interest Groups

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  1. Interest Groups Chapter 11

  2. Interest Group Power Interest Groups = • Organizations outside the government that attempt to influence the government’s behavior, decision-making, and allocation of resources • Interest groups usually work within the framework of government and employ tactics such as lobbying to achieve their goals

  3. 1959: 5,843 1970: 10,308 1980: 14,726 Mid-1990s: 22,200 Why has there been such a large growth in interest groups over the last forty years? The Interest Group Explosion Number of national-level interest group organizations in the United States

  4. Major Organized Interest Groups

  5. Money and Politics PAC • Political arm of an interest group • Legally entitled to raise money in order to contribute funds to favored candidates or political parties • PACs representing business interests have grown the most since the 1970s Soft Money • Money raised in unlimited amounts by political parties for party-building purposes • Made illegal in 2002 by BCRA (McCain-Feingold Act) Hard Money • Political contributions given to a party or candidate • Limited in amount and fully disclosed

  6. Total PAC Contributions to Federal Candidates, 1979-2004 (in millions)

  7. Spending by Political Action Committees (PACs), 2003-2004

  8. PACs that Gave the Most to Federal Candidates, 2000-2004 (Millions of Dollars)

  9. All Time Big-Money Contributors

  10. Contributors to the Republican and Democratic Parties by Sector

  11. Union Membership in the United States Compared to Other Countries

  12. The Decline in Union Membership Historical Statistics of the United States, vol. 1, 178; Statistical Abstract of the United States, 1998, 444; U.S. Census Bureau; Statistical Abstract of the United States, 2003, 432, 433.

  13. Types of Interest Groups: Ideological or Single-Interest Groups The Christian Coalition distributes voter guides before elections as one means of influencing politics

  14. The National Rifle Association • After the Columbine High School tragedy, public opinion solidly favored stricter gun laws • NRA spent $3 million to fight gun control bills • Gun control legislation did not pass

  15. NRA Issue Ads

  16. AARP: The Nation’s Most Powerful Interest Group • 36 million members • Offers a wide array of material benefits like insurance and magazines • One of the most influential lobbying groups in Washington

  17. Divided We Fail AARP Ads

  18. Types of Interest Groups: Public Interest Groups Ralph Nader • Unsafe at Any Speed • (1965) • Ran for president as Green Party candidate in 1996 and 2000 and as independent in 2004and 2008

  19. Foreign Policy Interest Groups Council on Foreign Relations American-Israel Political Action Committee Public Sector Interest Groups National Governors Association National League of Cities National Educational Association Types of Interest Groups: Foreign Policy and Public Sector Interest Groups

  20. Interest Groups: Cohesiveness Types of members in an organization Ex.) National Education Association (NEA) Small number of formal members People intensely involved with the group People who are members in name only

  21. Interest Groups: Techniques Mass Mailing Publicity and Mass Appeals Influence on Rule Making Litigation Election Activities Forming a Political Party Cooperative Lobbying

  22. Who are the Lobbyists? The Iron Triangle Interest groups Bureaucratic leaders and experts Congress members

  23. The Iron Triangle • iron triangle – a policy-making alliance that involves very strong ties among a congressional committee, an interest group, and a federal department or agency (such as a House and/or Senate authorizing committee) • each side supports the other 2 • Ex.) Policy making for veterans is made thru iron triangle of Dept. of Veterans Affairs, House and Senate Veterans Committees, and a long list of interest groups that represent veterans

  24. The “Revolving Door” • Federal government workers leave to take more lucrative positions in private industry (lobbying, consulting, executive positions) • This may give private interests a way to improperly influence government decisions • Nearly half of all retiring congressmen have gone into lobbying in recent years, as have many high-level staffers

  25. Obama’s Ads on Lobbyists

  26. McCain’s Ad on Interest Groups

  27. What Do Lobbyists Do? • Techniques • Providing technical information at hearings (best way to influence legislators) • Grass-roots mobilization • Protests and demonstrations • Coalition building • Boycotts • Meeting with legislators at conferences • “Wining and dining”

  28. Soft Money and Issue Advocacy The 1996 election was a watershed in the involvement of interest groups and individuals in financing campaigns • Great increase in issue advocacy – • unlimited and undisclosed spending by an individual or group on communications that do not use words like “vote for” or “vote against,” although much of this activity is actually about electing or defeating candidates • serves as a way for interest groups to circumvent disclosure and contribution limits

  29. Born Alive Issue Ad

  30. Obama’s Response

  31. moveon.org

  32. BCRA and Interest Group Electioneering The Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act (BCRA) was passed and signed into law by President George W. Bush in February, 2002 Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., Sen. Russ Feingold, D-Wisc., and Rep. Christopher Shays (R-Conn.)

  33. The Effectiveness of Interest Group Activity in Elections • Tendency of PACs to give money to incumbents has meant that challengers face real difficulties in getting their campaigns funded • “Too often, members’ first thought is not what is right or what they believe, but how it will affect fundraising. Who, after all, can seriously contend that a $100,000 donation does not alter the way one thinks about--and quite possibly votes on--an issue?” - Former U. S. Senator Alan Simpson (R-WY)

  34. Sources of House Candidates’ Receipts, 2003-2004

  35. Sources of Senate Candidates’ Receipts, 2003-2004

  36. Federal and State Regulation • Serious campaign finance reform began in 1971 with the Federal Election Campaign Act (FECA) • Buckley v. Valeo (1976) – Supreme Court case that overturned several of FECA’s provisions on grounds that they violated 1st Amendment • said legislatures couldn’t limit how much of their own money people spend on their own campaigns independent of a candidate or political party, but Congress may limit how much people contribute to somebody else’s campaign

  37. Characteristics of Individual Political Contributors

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