Weekly Opinion Editorial
BAN TAX PAYER FUNDED LOBBYING!
by Steve Fair
A lobbyist is defined as a person who
takes part in an organized attempt to influence legislators. Most
lobbyists represent trade and industry groups or associations. They monitor
legislation that could impact their clients.
Lobbyists often get a bad rap, but in reality private sector lobbyists are
just representing groups of people. They
have a vested interest in making sure legislators are educated on their client’s
interests.
Several years ago, I wrote a column regarding
lobbying titled, “There is no Such Thing as a Free Lunch.” It pointed out the fundamental economic
principle that someone is always paying(there is no free) and the payor usually
expects a return on their investment.
When a lobbyist pays for the cheeseburger a legislator eats, it has
strings attached. So long as a
legislator understands that simple principle, then fine.
After I wrote the column, a prominent
lobbyist in OKC responded in a Letter to the Editor with outrage, writing that
he never expected a return on his investment and every lunch, dinner, ticket,
or trinket he gave a legislator had absolutely no strings attached. I responded that was likely not what he told a
potential client when he made his pitch to present them before the
legislature.
A popular vocation after leaving a
legislative body- both at the federal and state level- is lobbying. It makes sense. Former lawmakers understand the process. They have friends in the chamber and usually
have immediate access to them. The
Oklahoma constitution has a provision stating a former lawmaker can’t go to
work in a state agency or lobby until they have been out of office for two
years(not that it is enforced).
In February, the State Ethics Commission
voted unanimously to enforce a two year ban and to add state agency heads to the
prohibition. Last week, the Oklahoma
legislature voted overwhelmingly to reject the Ethics Commission’s
recommendations. There is bad blood
between the Commission and the legislature, but that is for another
column. Three observations about
lobbying:
First,
the Ethics Commission did overstep their authority. They were established to enforce the rules, not
establish them. While the idea of
expanding the ban to include agency bureaucrats makes sense, that reform should
be done by the legislature, not by the Commission.
Second, far too many elected officials
never return to the real private sector. Once they get a taste of the political
industry, most elected officials are hooked and finding a real job and
returning to the real private sector fades into the past. If the two year ban were enforced, it might
force some of the politicos to get a real job.
Third,
real reform would be banning taxpayer funded lobbying and lobbyists. When state agencies and other taxpayer funded
entities hire lobbyists with my tax dollars to lobby for more of my tax dollars,
it’s immoral. Thomas Jefferson said, "To compel a man to furnish funds for the propagation of ideas he
disbelieves and abhors is sinful and tyrannical." It is past time for
the state legislature to ban taxpayer funded lobbying.
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