Authors
Frank R Baumgartner, Jeffrey M Berry, Marie Hojnacki, David C Kimball, Beth L Leech
Publication date
2014/3/1
Journal
Election Law Journal
Volume
13
Issue
1
Pages
194-209
Publisher
Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.
Description
Based on a large-scale interview-based study of 98 randomly selected cases of lobbying in Washington from 1999 to 2003 (reported in Baumgartner et al. ), we found virtually no impact of money on outcomes. We believe that this counterintuitive finding derives from the huge business and corporate bias that permeates Washington and is already built into the policies of the status quo. Lobbying, it is important to remember, is generally about changing the status quo. The accumulated power of wealth, corporate organizational strength, and other factors keeping some actors out of Washington and giving others multiple and louder voices in the process is already reflected in the fabric of the status quo: they are “baked into the cake.” For reforms to have a significant impact, they should focus on who is at the table, not only on what they do once they are there. We found the biggest impact of money when we looked at the …
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Scholar articles
FR Baumgartner, JM Berry, M Hojnacki, DC Kimball… - Election Law Journal, 2014