Title: Interest/Pressure Groups
1Interest/Pressure Groups
- In the American Political System
2Interest Groups
- U.S. Government Chapter 6
3Interest Group - A Definition
- An interest group is a private organization of
like-minded people whose goal is to influence and
shape public policy. - Interest groups are extra-constitutional.
4The Nature of Interest Groups
- Interest groups are private organizations whose
members share certain views and work to shape
public policy. - Interest groups exist to shape public policy
Interest groups are extra-constitutional.
5Valuable Functions of Interest Groups
- Interest groups raise awareness of public
affairs, or issues that concern the people at
large, seek to influence legislation
6Early Development
- Date back to the time of the Founding Fathers
- Seen as power-hungry
- Believed to promote instability, injustice, and
confusion
7Criticisms
- Some groups have an influence far out of
proportion to their size or importance - In rare cases, groups use tactics such as
bribery, threats, and so on.
8Lobbying
- Lobbying is any activity by which a group
pressures legislators and influences the
legislative process
9Types of Interest Groups
- Economic
- Ideological or single-issue
- Public interest
- Foreign policy
- Governmental
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12Types of Interest Groups
- 1. Professional Such as the American Medical
Association - AMA building in
- Chicago
13Economic Groups
- Business
- Trade Associations
- Labor
- Professional Associations
14 15 16- Ideological A cause or idea such as
environmental organizations, issues such as gun
ownership
17Public Interest Groups
- Motivated by such issues as the environment, safe
energy, consumer protection, and good government.
18 19- 5. Certain group of people, such as retired
persons
20Foreign Policy Interest Groups
- Concerned with the relationship between the
United States and foreign nations. Examples
include the Council on Foreign Relations, and
AIPACthe American-Israel Political Action
Committee.
21Government Interest Groups
- Represent the interests of government employees,
as well as elected officials from state and local
governments.
22Characteristics and Power of Interest Groups
- Size and resources
- Cohesiveness
- Leadership
- Techniques
- Intensity
23Interest Group Techniques
- Appeals to the public and mass media
- Mass mailings
- Influence of rule making
- Litigation
- Election Activities/electioneering
- Forming a political party
- Lobbying
24Growth of Interest Groups
25Interest Groups vs. Political Parties
- Interest groups
- support candidates, but cannot nominate them
- take a narrow focus on most issues
- compete for influence over elected officials
26Interest Groups vs.Political Parties (cont.)
- Political parties
- can nominate candidates
- focus on a broad range of issues to appeal to a
broad range of people - compete for control of the branches of govt. to
control policy making
27Proposals for Reform
- Increasing the number of groups
- Full disclosure
- Increased federal and state regulations
28The Influence of Lobbyists
- A. Who are the lobbyists
- 1. Employees of associations who try to
influence policy decisions and positions in the
executive and especially legislative branches of
government. - 2. The revolving door is the employment cycle
from government to interest group.
29IRON TRIANGLES
- 3. Iron triangles are mutually supporting
relationships among interest groups,
congressional committees and subcommittees, and
the government agencies that share a common
policy concern
30B. What do Lobbyists do?
- 1. Provide money for congressional election
campaigns - 2. A third house of Congress, representing
people on the basis of interests - 3. Interest groups provide 2 types of info
- A. political-who supports/opposes legis.
- B. Substantive-impact of proposed laws
31Hard Money
- Contributions regulated by the federal government
that are given directly to a candidate
32Soft Money
- Previously unlimited and unregulated campaign
contributions to federal candidates and the
national parties - Supposedly for generic "party building"
activities (ex get-out-the-vote drives, bumper
stickers, yard signs, and issue ads"
33Federal Election Reform Act1974
- Created Federal Election Commission
- Required disclosure
- Limited amount of money that could be contributed
HARD MONEY - Individual contributions may not exceed 1000 per
candidate per election per year - No foreign contributions
- Soft Money unlimited
34Federal Election Reform ActUnintended
Consequences?
- The rise of Political Action Committees
- Millions of dollars of unregulated soft money
used to finance campaigns
35Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002a.k.a.
McCain-Feingold Bill
- Ban on national parties and officeholders raising
and spending soft money - Special interest groups can only use regulated
hard money for pro-candidate communications with
increased limits - Ban on non-partisan issue ads 60 days before
election
36B.C.R.A (McCain-Feingold)Unintended
Consequences?
- Rise of 527 tax exempt groups and ads
- Independent Expenditures
- Laundering of dirty money through political
parties that ends up with candidates
Former House Majority Leader Tom Delay indicted
for conspiracy and laundering of illegal
campaign funds
37527 s
- A 527 group is created primarily to influence the
nomination, election, appointment or defeat of
candidates for public office. - Tax-exempt organizations that engage in political
activities, often through unlimited soft money
contributions. - Most are advocacy groups trying to influence
federal elections through voter mobilization
efforts and so-called issue ads that tout or
criticize a candidate's record.
38Campaign Finance Reform Supreme Court Decisions
- Buckley v. Valeo (1976)
- McConnell v. Federal Election Commission (2003)
- Citizens United
39Presidential RacesTrends in Spending
- 1996
- 425.7 million.
- 2000
- 528.9 million.
- 2004
- Receipts
- George W. Bush 367,228,801
- John F. Kerry 328,479,245
- Overall 880.5 million.
- .
- 2008
- Obama 730 million spent http//www.opensecrets.o
rg/pres08/ - McCain 333 million spent
- FIRST BILLION DOLLAR PRESIDENTAL ELECTION
40Money and Politics
- A. Role of political action committees(PACs)
- 1. PACs link tow techniques of influence
- a. Giving and other political aid to
politicians - b. persuading office holders to act or vote
the right way on issues. - 2. PACs are categorized by the type of interst
they represent
41B. The Growth of PACs
- 1. The committee on Political Education(COPE)
model for most PACS - 2. The 1970s brought a near revolution in the
role and influence of PACs as a result of reforms
increase from 150-1970 - to over 4,000 today
42C. How PACs invest their
- 1. Main influence is in their contribution to
candidates - 2. The Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971
limits PACs to 5,000 per election or 10,000 per
election cycle individuals have limit of 2,000
per candidate per election - 3. Through bundling their contributions, PACs
increase their clout with elected officials
43The Effectiveness of PACs
- 1. Depends on the context in which money is
given and received - 2. Significant relationship between PACs and
outcome of elections - 3. PACs can help friendly incumbents with soft
money contributions - soft money-unlimited contributions that go for
party-building activities
44Curing the problem of factions 200 years after
Federalist 10
- A. Americans fears about the power of faction
- 1. The struggle among factions is not a fair
fight - 2. The interest group battle leads to great
inequities because lower-income people are
grossly underrepresented
45Fears contin
- 3. Single-issue groups have led to incoherent
policies, waste, delays, inability to plan and
react quickly - 4. The role of interest groups in elections has
made incumbents more secure and enhanced the
power of interest groups - 5. Safeguarding the value of liberty, but also
threatening equality
46B. Federal and state regulation
- 1. Federal legislation, 1925 Federal Corrupt
Practices Act and the 1946 Federal Regulation of
Lobbying Actnot effective - 2. FECA-Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971
- 3. Problems with FECA include the soft money
loophole and ineffective FEC
47Regulations contin
- 4. Lobbying Disclosure Act of 1995-definition of
lobbyist was expanded to include part-timers,
whose who deal with congressional staff/executive
branch agencies, and those who represent
foreign-owened companies and foreign entities. - 5. Clinton signed into law legislation expanding
disclosure requirements on issue ads(freedom of
speech issues involved)
48Regulations contin
- 6. Issue advocacy ads/soft money very important
in competitive elections
49C. The Effects of Regulation
- 1. Increased the number and importance of such
groups increased PACs, especially corporate PACs - 2. PAC money goes to incumbents(committee
chairs, party leaders) - 3. Disclosure of how politicians fund their
campaigns is issue, also their personal finances