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Political Interest Groups. Interest Groups in Texas Politics and Government. Topical Scenario Interest Groups Members and Goals Types and Influence Political Activities Media. Topical Scenario . Medical Liability Tort Reform New Judges
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Political Interest Groups
Interest Groups in Texas Politics and Government • Topical Scenario • Interest Groups • Members and Goals • Types and Influence • Political Activities • Media
Topical Scenario • Medical Liability • Tort Reform • New Judges • Proposition 12 – Amending the Constitution in 2003 limiting civil liability • Trial Lawyers and Consumer Groups • Save Texas Courts • Medical Industry • Texas Medical Association (TMA) • TEXPAC • Proposition passed – 51% to 49%
Interest Groups • A group of people who share an interest and organize to influence government. • Heritage • Slow Developing • Agriculture • Business • Ethnic and racial • Public Interests - Consumer rights, and environment • Regulation • 1957 and 1973 lobbying laws • Register and provide activity information • Constantly amended • Lobbyist expenses and gifts • Pleasure trips and honoraria • Conflict-of-interest issues
Primary goal - influencing the formation of public policy Secondary goals - Changing policy process (target government) Enhance group legitimacy Decentralize political authority Increase opportunity for policy input Change social values (target society) Consumer awareness Parental awareness Interest Group Goals
Types of Interest Groups • Business and Trade Associations • Texas Association of Business • lower taxes, favorable regulation • reduce labor union influence • Professional Associations • Texas Trial Lawyers Association • influence profession specific regulation • Labor groups • Texas AFL - CIO • Rights for collective bargaining • Occupational safety issues • minimum and increasing wages
More Types of Groups • Racial and Ethnic Groups • Freedom from discrimination • MALDEF - TAAS testing discrimination • NAACP - Education, segregation, employment • Public Interest Groups • Common Cause • Broad spectrum of social issues benefiting the public at-large • Environment • Consumer protection • Homeless, poor, elderly, disabled
Ideological Classification Favor Equality Regulation NAACP AFL-CIO MALDEF TSTA Abortion Rights TX Assoc of Bus Right to Life Take Back Texas Christian Coalition Oppose Govt Regulation Favor Order Regulation
Interest Group Influence • Money - staff salaries, research • Expertise, Skill, Information • Understand political situation and government • How it all relates to group goals • Cohesiveness - actively mobilize membership • Reputation - credibility, trustworthiness and political power
Direct Lobbying • Lobbyists provide information about groups concerns to government. • Influence through direct contact • 1521 registered lobbyists in 2005 • Spent $95 - 210,000,000 • Professional lobbyists increasing • More ethnic and gender diversity • Electoral activities • Campaign contributions (PACs) • Get out the vote • Administrators to legislative staff • Research information • “Revolving door” • From government to lobby groups
Indirect Lobbying • “Grassroots lobbying” • Mobilize member contact of officials • Use of TV for PR ads (issue advocacy) • Push polls • Use of online web sites
Other Group Activities • Electioneering • Campaign contributions (PACs) • $54,000,000 in 2000 • Primarily to incumbents • Get out the vote • Litigation • Becoming more common • More expensive tactic • Used as last resort • Use to slow changes taking place
Provides information public needs but wont research Media performs three roles Provides information about political events as as gatekeepers Provides conduit for public - government communication Performs watchdog function Adversarial or Symbiotic Relationship? Conflict of communication and watchdog More interdependent than antagonistic Political Role of the Media
Exactly what is news worthy Has to be relevant, exciting, familiar, timely Timeliness, proximity and conflict most important Values of Journalists Liberals who vote democratic, although in the South they tend to be more moderate. Journalist Creed Independence Objective Impartiality Factors Shaping the News
Tendency to pursue own agenda Agendas usually liberal in nature Economics versus objectivity Need for drama and problematic coverage Need for novel and current stories not those isolated and unrelated to audience Entertainment, sensational value rather the objective policy discussion Crime, disaster, and war are favorites Conflict Between Beliefs and Journalists Creed
The Media in Texas • 618 newspapers, 532 radio stations, 102 TV stations, 91 cable systems • TV most popular and trusted news source - 73% national & 53% local • Local news leaves room for improvement • KVUE is the one exception • Local news shows: • Don’t use multiple sources • Are usually not objective • Don’t plan ahead for issue coverage • Lack the research staff • Cable News Growth
Local News Schedules 7-8 minutes of Commercials 4-5 Minutes of Weather and Sports 17-19 Minutes of News National 7-9 Minutes Local 10-12 Minutes
More Texas Media • Newspapers second most popular 33% • Only one in each major market • Nationally controlled ( Cox, Hearst, Gannett) • Daily circulation decreasing • Radio - less than 10% use as source • Shift to talk show format • Predisposed ideological objectives • Magazines least used source • Used by those actively involved • Texas Monthly excellent example • Internet newest source • 95% of campaigns in 2006