In this Book

Revolving Door Lobbying: Public Service, Private Influence, and the Unequal Representation of Interests

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2017
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In recent decades Washington has seen an alarming rise in the number of “revolving door lobbyists”—politicians and officials cashing in on their government experience to become influence peddlers on K Street. These lobbyists, popular wisdom suggests, sell access to the highest bidder. Revolving Door Lobbying tells a different, more nuanced story. As an insider interviewed in the book observes, where the general public has the “impression that lobbyists actually get things done, I would say 90 percent of what lobbyists do is prevent harm to their client from the government.”

Drawing on extensive new data on lobbyists’ biographies and interviews with dozens of experts, authors Timothy M. LaPira and Herschel F. Thomas establish the facts of the revolving door phenomenon—facts that suggest that, contrary to widespread assumptions about insider access, special interests hire these lobbyists as political insurance against an increasingly dysfunctional, unpredictable government. With their insider experience, revolving door lobbyists offer insight into the political process, irrespective of their connections to current policymakers. What they provide to their clients is useful and marketable political risk-reduction. Exploring this claim, LaPira and Thomas present a systematic analysis of who revolving door lobbyists are, how they differ from other lobbyists, what interests they represent, and how they seek to influence public policy.

The first book to marshal comprehensive evidence of revolving door lobbying, LaPira and Thomas revise the notion that lobbyists are inherently and institutionally corrupt. Rather, the authors draw a complex and sobering picture of the revolving door as a consequence of the eroding capacity of government to solve the public’s problems.

Table of Contents

Cover

Title Page, Copyright, Dedication

pp. i-vi

Table of Contents

pp. vii-viii

List of Figures and Tables

pp. ix-x

Acknowledgments

pp. xi-xiv

Part I. The Politics of Washington’s Revolving Door

1. The Problem: The Alarming Rise of the Revolving Door

pp. 3-23

2. The Puzzle: The K Street Kingpin or the Librarian

pp. 24-51

3. The Model: Lobbying as Political Insurance

pp. 52-82

Part II. The Empirical Investigation of Washington’s Revolving Door

4. How Lucrative Is the Revolving Door? The Political Economy of K Street

pp. 85-102

5. Revolving Door Lobbyists Are the Unheavenly Chorus

pp. 103-130

6. Issue Politics on K Street

pp. 131-153

7. Policy Agendas, Legislative Priorities, and the Revolving Door Lobbying Strategy

pp. 154-178

Part III. The Policy and Normative Implications of

8. Reassessing Lobbying Regulation in Washington

pp. 181-201

9. Public Service, Private Influence, and the Unequal Representation of Interests

pp. 202-212

Appendix: Methodology

pp. 213-226

Notes

pp. 227-236

Bibliography

pp. 237-248

Index

pp. 249-258

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