Subject: Re: [EL] Electonlawblog news and commentary 2/2/11
From: "Smith, Brad" <BSmith@law.capital.edu>
Date: 2/2/2011, 12:24 PM
To: Election Law

 

"Is it Whom You Know or What You Know? An Empirical Assessment of the Lobbying Process"

Bertrand, Bombardini, and Tebbi have posted this draft on SSRN. Here is the abstract:

    What do lobbyists do? Some believe that lobbyists' main role is to provide issue-specific information and expertise to congressmen to help guide the law-making process. Others believe that lobbyists mainly provide the firms and other special interests they represent with access to politicians in their "circle of influence" and that this access is the be-all and end-all of how lobbyists affect the lawmaking process. This paper combines a descriptive analysis with more targeted testing to get inside the black box of the lobbying process and inform our understanding of the relative importance of these two views of lobbying.

    ...
This may be an interesting paper, but it sounds to me merely to confirm what we intuitively know.  When one says that the job of a loybbist is to provide information to members of congress, he is not speaking about detailed expertise of the kind that might typically be expected by, for example, a tenured professor specializing in the field. Rarely is it rocket science, and if it were, the typical representative wouldn't have time for it and wouldn't understand it anyway (I do not mean that as an insult - on the vast majority of subjects placed before the legislature, I wouldn't understand it either, nor, I venture, would most of us on this list). What policy officials typically need is not years of expertise built up over a painstaking career - that is, the kind of stuff most of us have gained - though that can be of value.  If anything, that is more useful to the administrative officials charged with implementing the law.  The expert briefs the lobbyist, the lobbyist briefs the representative by placing viewpoints, ideas, and potential end consequences before him or her. 

I also hope what they mean to say is "whom lobbyists are connected to, which we determine by looking at campaign contributions," rather than that, as the abstract implies, campaign contributions are themselves the connection that matters.  Correlation is not causation, as we all know, and contributions are rarely if ever what gives the lobbyists his or her contacts.  After all, if contributions made the connection, anybody could be a lobbyist and there would be no "premium" at all in hiring them - just hire a person, pay them enough to make some contributions, and voila!, you've got a first rate lobbyist.  
 
Bradley A. Smith
Josiah H. Blackmore II/Shirley M. Nault Designated Professor of Law
Capital University Law School
303 E. Broad St.
Columbus, OH 43215
(614) 236-6317
http://www.law.capital.edu/Faculty/Bios/bsmith.asp


From: election-law-bounces@mailman.lls.edu on behalf of Rick Hasen
Sent: Wed 2/2/2011 11:40 AM
To: Election Law
Subject: [EL] Electonlawblog news and commentary 2/2/11

February 02, 2011

Declaratory Judgments as Implicit Coercion: The Case of Judge Vinson's Health Care Decision

I always tell my Remedies students (following Laycock's formulation) that declaratory judgments are implicitly coercive---and that they are just one step away from an injunction. Jonathan Cohn explains how this logic is playing out in the most recent health care decision.

Posted by Rick Hasen at 08:37 AM

"Is it Whom You Know or What You Know? An Empirical Assessment of the Lobbying Process"

Bertrand, Bombardini, and Tebbi have posted this draft on SSRN. Here is the abstract:



I plan on giving this paper a very close read. One of the issues I've been pressed on as I have presented Lobbying, Rent Seeking, and the Constitution at workshops at Loyola, Irvine, USC, and Northwestern, is whether there's evidence that limits on lobbyist fundraising and a longer anti-revolving door period would in fact create a lobbying system more driven by a kind of information meritocracy than one that trades on personal relationships and favors. So this could be an important piece to that claim.
Posted by Rick Hasen at 08:32 AM

"Lobby Dollars Dip for First Time in Years"

Roll Call reports: "Some of this change may be attributed to a quirk in accounting practices under which lobbying expenditures are reported, but it is also indicative of several major players scaling back their Washington influence spending last year."

Posted by Rick Hasen at 08:26 AM

"CREW Asks IRS to Drop Tax Exemption Of American Future Fund for Political Activity"

BNA Tax Report offers this report.

Posted by Rick Hasen at 08:22 AM

"Emanuel's just one among record number of ballot challenges"

Medill reports.

Posted by Rick Hasen at 08:19 AM

"The Kochs Fight Back"

Politico offers this interesting report.

Posted by Rick Hasen at 08:15 AM

Congratulations to Jim Brudney....

Jim has made a lateral move to Fordham. Also, with Jim's permission I can now share the news that he will be coming on as a co-author of the Eskridge, Frickey and Garrett legislation casebook. That is great news for people (like me) who use this excellent casebook. Jim's work is among the most important (yet accessible) writing on statutory interpretation these days. Congratulations Jim!

Posted by Rick Hasen at 08:12 AM

"Ethics Committee Names Special Counsel to Aid in Ensign Investigation"

See here.

Posted by Rick Hasen at 08:07 AM

"Senate Won't Allow Earmarks in Spending Bills"

This item appears in NYT's "The Caucus" blog.

Posted by Rick Hasen at 08:03 AM

February 01, 2011

"Is a Bigger House a Better House?"

See these letters to the editor at the NYT.

Posted by Rick Hasen at 03:45 PM

"Few Obstacles Face Voter ID in the Legislature"

Must-read from the Texas Tribune.

Posted by Rick Hasen at 11:23 AM
--
Rick Hasen
Visiting Professor
UC Irvine School of Law
rhasen@law.uci.edu

William H. Hannon Distinguished Professor of Law
Loyola Law School
919 Albany Street
Los Angeles, CA 90015-1211
(213)736-1466
(213)380-3769 - fax
rick.hasen@lls.edu
http://www.lls.edu/academics/faculty/hasen.html
http://electionlawblog.org