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octoberlib

(14,971 posts)
Mon Apr 8, 2013, 03:48 AM Apr 2013

Big Businesses Beef Up on 'Revolving Door' Lobbyists

As Congress members prepare a rewrite of the nation's tax code, the New York Times reports Saturday that tax-evading corporations are taking advantage of the endless revolving door between government and big business by beefing up their arsenal of former aides turned lobbyists to ensure their profit-protecting loopholes remain intact.



Highlighting the connection between Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-Mt.)—who plays a "crucial role" in the upcoming debate—and big businesses like McDonald's, Altria, Sapphire Energy, the NRA, and liquor industry giant Beam, the Times reports that at least 28 of Baucus' former aids have lobbied on tax issues during the Obama administration, more than any other current member of Congress.

They write:

[M]any of those lobbyists have already saved their clients millions—in some cases, billions—of dollars after Mr. Baucus backed their requests to extend certain corporate tax perks, provisions that were adopted as part of the so-called fiscal cliff legislation in January. Baucus aides who later became lobbyists helped financial firms save $11.2 billion in tax deferments and helped secure a $222 million tax benefit that is shared with the liquor industry.
Writing about the endless revolving door between civil servitude and the "greener pastures" of million dollar lobbying salaries, Bill Moyers and Michael Winship note, "It’s a wonder all of Washington doesn’t lie prostrate in the streets, overcome by vertigo from all the spinning back and forth."

According to their reporting, Baucus' staff is already hosting meetings with industry lobbyists, academics and outside parties to "get advice on the tax package that the Senate Finance Committee is trying to create."


http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2013/04/07-3


Mr. Baucus, 71, the son of a wealthy Montana rancher, is somewhat of a wild card in the tax debate: he is the top Democrat in what arguably is the Senate’s most powerful committee seat. The finance panel helps dictate how the government raises almost all of its money, and spends nearly half of it.

But he often bucks his party’s leadership. Last month, for example, he voted against the Democrats’ budget proposal for 2014, which included nearly $1 trillion in new revenues. He also favored the Bush administration’s tax cuts in 2001 for Americans including the wealthy, putting him at odds with many Democrats.



http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/07/us/politics/tax-lobby-builds-ties-to-max-baucus.html?hpw&_r=0
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