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ALEC - Very Important Threat To US Liberties Exposed!
#11
And this:

http://alecexposed.org/w/images/3/3d/ALE...osed_2.pdf

http://www.commoncause.org/atf/cf/%7Bfb3...NDALEC.PDF

As another example, Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal has received $199,539 from ALEC-affiliated companies since 2003.
"Logic is all there is, and all there is must be logical."

"Truth is logic, and logic is truth."

"In a nation run by swine, all pigs are upward-mobile and the rest of us are fucked until we can put our acts together: not necessarily to win, but mainly to keep from losing completely." - Hunter S. Thompson

"A paranoid is someone who knows a little of what's going on. A psychotic is a guy who's just found out what's going on." - William S. Burroughs
Reply
#12
This is a list of the ALEC-affiliated corporations that have given money to Rick Perry since 1998, the year he became Lieutenant Governor of Texas. The sheer length of the list is stunning.


Quote:State Year Contributor Office Result Amount
Texas 2010 ENERGY FUTURE HOLDINGS CORP Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2010 MERCK & CO Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2010 ENERGY FUTURE HOLDINGS CORP Governor Won $13,000
Texas 2010 ENERGY FUTURE HOLDINGS CORP Governor Won $10,000
Texas 2010 ENERGY FUTURE HOLDINGS CORP Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2010 ENERGY FUTURE HOLDINGS CORP Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2010 ENERGY FUTURE HOLDINGS CORP Governor Won $10,000
Texas 2010 ENERGY FUTURE HOLDINGS CORP Governor Won $4,500
Texas 2010 NATIONWIDE Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2010 MOTOROLA Governor Won $3,000
Texas 2010 BANK OF AMERICA Governor Won $15,000
Texas 2010 UPS Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2010 GEICO Governor Won $1,500
Texas 2010 VERIZON Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2010 GENERAL ELECTRIC Governor Won $2,000
Texas 2010 AT&T Governor Won $50,000
Texas 2010 NATIONWIDE Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2010 TEXAS MEDICAL ASSOCIATION Governor Won $25,000
Texas 2010 VERIZON Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2010 HOFFMAN-LAROCHE Governor Won $3,500
Texas 2010 TEXAS MEDICAL ASSOCIATION Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2010 TEXAS MEDICAL ASSOCIATION Governor Won $2,500
Texas 2010 TEXAS MEDICAL ASSOCIATION Governor Won $2,500
Texas 2010 TEXAS MEDICAL ASSOCIATION Governor Won $2,500
Texas 2010 GENERAL ELECTRIC Governor Won $10,000
Texas 2010 TEXAS MEDICAL ASSOCIATION Governor Won $2,500
Texas 2010 PFIZER Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2010 TEXAS MEDICAL ASSOCIATION Governor Won $2,500
Texas 2010 CONOCOPHILLIPS Governor Won $10,000
Texas 2010 CONOCOPHILLIPS Governor Won $10,000
Texas 2010 TEXAS MEDICAL ASSOCIATION Governor Won $2,500
Texas 2010 TEXAS MEDICAL ASSOCIATION Governor Won $2,500
Texas 2010 GENENTECH Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2010 KOCH INDUSTRIES Governor Won $25,000
Texas 2010 EXXONMOBIL Governor Won $15,000
Texas 2010 PFIZER Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2010 KOCH INDUSTRIES Governor Won $25,000
Texas 2010 ALTRIA Governor Won $3,503
Texas 2010 ALTRIA Governor Won $6,500
Texas 2010 MICROSOFT Governor Won $1,000
Texas 2010 WAL-MART Governor Won $10,000
Texas 2010 TRAVELERS COMPANIES Governor Won $208
Texas 2010 TRAVELERS COMPANIES Governor Won $25,000
Texas 2010 CATERPILLAR Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2010 AT&T Governor Won $4,489
Texas 2010 AT&T Governor Won $100,000
Texas 2010 CHEVRON CORP Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2010 EXELON Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2010 EXELON Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2010 CHEVRON CORP Governor Won $2,500
Texas 2010 BOEING CO Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2010 WAL-MART Governor Won $10,000
Texas 2010 FEDERAL EXPRESS Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2010 AMERICAN COUNCIL OF LIFE INSURERS Governor Won $1,000
Texas 2010 AT&T Governor Won $12,000
Texas 2010 US SMOKELESS TOBACCO Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2010 COMCAST Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2010 US SMOKELESS TOBACCO Governor Won $10,000
Texas 2010 COMCAST Governor Won $2,500
Texas 2010 FEDERAL EXPRESS Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2010 DUPONT Governor Won $2,000
Texas 2010 UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD Governor Won $10,000
Texas 2010 ABBOTT LABORATORIES Governor Won $2,500
Texas 2010 GEO GROUP Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2010 GEO GROUP Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2010 NATIONAL RIFLE ASSOCIATION Governor Won $2,500
Texas 2010 BANK OF AMERICA Governor Won $15,000
Texas 2010 ENERGY FUTURE HOLDINGS CORP Governor Won $10,000
Texas 2010 ENERGY FUTURE HOLDINGS CORP Governor Won $10,000
Texas 2008 ALTRIA Governor Not Up For Election $2,500
Texas 2008 TEXAS MEDICAL ASSOCIATION Governor Not Up For Election $25,000
Texas 2008 GENENTECH Governor Not Up For Election $2,500
Texas 2008 CHEVRON CORP Governor Not Up For Election $5,000
Texas 2008 AT&T Governor Not Up For Election $50,000
Texas 2008 WAL-MART Governor Not Up For Election $10,000
Texas 2008 EXELON Governor Not Up For Election $5,000
Texas 2008 EXELON Governor Not Up For Election $5,000
Texas 2008 BOEING CO Governor Not Up For Election $5,000
Texas 2008 ABBOTT LABORATORIES Governor Not Up For Election $1,000
Texas 2008 UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD Governor Not Up For Election $25,000
Texas 2008 BANK OF AMERICA Governor Not Up For Election $15,000
Texas 2008 BLUE CROSS BLUE SHIELD OF TEXAS Governor Not Up For Election $1,000
Texas 2008 AT&T Governor Not Up For Election $5,000
Texas 2008 AT&T Governor Not Up For Election $250
Texas 2008 BLUE CROSS BLUE SHIELD OF TEXAS Governor Not Up For Election $1,000
Texas 2008 UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD Governor Not Up For Election $10,000
Texas 2008 MERCK & CO Governor Not Up For Election $2,500
Texas 2008 VERIZON Governor Not Up For Election $10,000
Texas 2008 ENERGY FUTURE HOLDINGS CORP Governor Not Up For Election $10,000
Texas 2008 ENERGY FUTURE HOLDINGS CORP Governor Not Up For Election $5,000
Texas 2008 UPS Governor Not Up For Election $5,000
Texas 2008 ENERGY FUTURE HOLDINGS CORP Governor Not Up For Election $5,000
Texas 2008 BANK OF AMERICA Governor Not Up For Election $15,000
Texas 2008 AT&T Governor Not Up For Election $50,000
Texas 2008 NATIONWIDE Governor Not Up For Election $5,000
Texas 2008 ENERGY FUTURE HOLDINGS CORP Governor Not Up For Election $10,000
Texas 2008 ENERGY FUTURE HOLDINGS CORP Governor Not Up For Election $5,000
Texas 2008 MOTOROLA Governor Not Up For Election $3,000
Texas 2008 MOTOROLA Governor Not Up For Election $1,000
Texas 2006 CONOCOPHILLIPS Governor Won $2,500
Texas 2006 CONOCOPHILLIPS Governor Won $2,500
Texas 2006 CONOCOPHILLIPS Governor Won $2,500
Texas 2006 TEXAS MEDICAL ASSOCIATION Governor Won $10,000
Texas 2006 TEXAS MEDICAL ASSOCIATION Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2006 TEXAS MEDICAL ASSOCIATION Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2006 TEXAS MEDICAL ASSOCIATION Governor Won $10,000
Texas 2006 CHEVRON CORP Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2006 TEXAS MEDICAL ASSOCIATION Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2006 TEXAS MEDICAL ASSOCIATION Governor Won $10,000
Texas 2006 TEXAS MEDICAL ASSOCIATION Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2006 GLAXOSMITHKLINE Governor Won $10,000
Texas 2006 GENENTECH Governor Won $2,500
Texas 2006 BOEING CO Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2006 HUMANA Governor Won $10,000
Texas 2006 MICROSOFT Governor Won $1,000
Texas 2006 MICROSOFT Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2006 SPRINT NEXTEL Governor Won $2,500
Texas 2006 JOHNSON & JOHNSON SERVICES Governor Won $1,000
Texas 2006 JOHNSON & JOHNSON SERVICES Governor Won $1,000
Texas 2006 PFIZER Governor Won $10,000
Texas 2006 UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD Governor Won $25,000
Texas 2006 PFIZER Governor Won $10,000
Texas 2006 UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD Governor Won $25,000
Texas 2006 ABBOTT LABORATORIES Governor Won $500
Texas 2006 ABBOTT LABORATORIES Governor Won $1,000
Texas 2006 EXELON Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2006 CATERPILLAR Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2006 EXELON Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2006 NATIONAL RIFLE ASSOCIATION Governor Won $2,500
Texas 2006 MERCK & CO Governor Won $1,000
Texas 2006 US SMOKELESS TOBACCO Governor Won $2,500
Texas 2006 MERCK & CO Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2006 BANK OF AMERICA Governor Won $15,000
Texas 2006 DUPONT Governor Won $2,000
Texas 2006 BANK OF AMERICA Governor Won $15,000
Texas 2006 AT&T Governor Won $25,000
Texas 2006 INTERNATIONAL PAPER Governor Won $2,500
Texas 2006 FEDERAL EXPRESS Governor Won $3,000
Texas 2006 UPS Governor Won $15,000
Texas 2006 CORRECTIONS CORP OF AMERICA Governor Won $10,000
Texas 2006 AT&T Governor Won $15,000
Texas 2006 AT&T Governor Won $15,000
Texas 2006 AT&T Governor Won $25,000
Texas 2006 AT&T Governor Won $40,000
Texas 2006 BLUE CROSS BLUE SHIELD OF TEXAS Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2006 BLUE CROSS BLUE SHIELD OF TEXAS Governor Won $500
Texas 2006 ALTRIA Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2006 ALTRIA Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2006 WAL-MART Governor Won $10,000
Texas 2006 MOTOROLA Governor Won $3,000
Texas 2006 EXXONMOBIL Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2006 EXXONMOBIL Governor Won $15,000
Texas 2006 KOCH INDUSTRIES Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2006 BP NORTH AMERICA Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2006 KOCH INDUSTRIES Governor Won $25,000
Texas 2006 TEXAS MEDICAL ASSOCIATION Governor Won $1,000
Texas 2006 TEXAS MEDICAL ASSOCIATION Governor Won $380
Texas 2006 CONOCOPHILLIPS Governor Won $2,500
Texas 2006 TEXAS MEDICAL ASSOCIATION Governor Won $1,000
Texas 2004 GLAXOSMITHKLINE Governor Not Up For Election $3,000
Texas 2004 GENENTECH Governor Not Up For Election $2,500
Texas 2004 BOEING CO Governor Not Up For Election $5,000
Texas 2004 MICROSOFT Governor Not Up For Election $1,000
Texas 2004 JOHNSON & JOHNSON SERVICES Governor Not Up For Election $5,000
Texas 2004 PFIZER Governor Not Up For Election $10,000
Texas 2004 UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD Governor Not Up For Election $10,000
Texas 2004 UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD Governor Not Up For Election $10,000
Texas 2004 UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD Governor Not Up For Election $5,000
Texas 2004 EXELON Governor Not Up For Election $2,500
Texas 2004 NATIONAL RIFLE ASSOCIATION Governor Not Up For Election $3,000
Texas 2004 EXELON Governor Not Up For Election $5,000
Texas 2004 MERCK & CO Governor Not Up For Election $10,000
Texas 2004 US SMOKELESS TOBACCO Governor Not Up For Election $5,000
Texas 2004 BANK OF AMERICA Governor Not Up For Election $15,000
Texas 2004 VERIZON Governor Not Up For Election $10,000
Texas 2004 DUPONT Governor Not Up For Election $1,000
Texas 2004 BANK OF AMERICA Governor Not Up For Election $10,000
Texas 2004 AT&T Governor Not Up For Election $10,000
Texas 2004 UPS Governor Not Up For Election $5,000
Texas 2004 AT&T Governor Not Up For Election $10,000
Texas 2004 INTERNATIONAL PAPER Governor Not Up For Election $5,000
Texas 2004 CORRECTIONS CORP OF AMERICA Governor Not Up For Election $5,000
Texas 2004 GENERAL ELECTRIC Governor Not Up For Election $1,000
Texas 2004 NOVARTIS PHARMACEUTICALS Governor Not Up For Election $5,000
Texas 2004 NATIONWIDE Governor Not Up For Election $1,000
Texas 2004 NATIONWIDE Governor Not Up For Election $1,500
Texas 2004 AMERICAN EXPRESS Governor Not Up For Election $2,000
Texas 2004 MOTOROLA Governor Not Up For Election $1,000
Texas 2004 TEXAS MEDICAL ASSOCIATION Governor Not Up For Election $1,000
Texas 2004 TEXAS MEDICAL ASSOCIATION Governor Not Up For Election $45
Texas 2004 KOCH INDUSTRIES Governor Not Up For Election $5,000
Texas 2004 TEXAS MEDICAL ASSOCIATION Governor Not Up For Election $25,000
Texas 2004 KOCH INDUSTRIES Governor Not Up For Election $5,000
Texas 2004 TEXAS MEDICAL ASSOCIATION Governor Not Up For Election $9,000
Texas 2004 TEXAS MEDICAL ASSOCIATION Governor Not Up For Election $15,000
Texas 2004 CONOCOPHILLIPS Governor Not Up For Election $2,500
Texas 2002 GLAXOSMITHKLINE Governor Won $10,000
Texas 2002 BOEING CO Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2002 BOEING CO Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2002 GENENTECH Governor Won $1,000
Texas 2002 MICROSOFT Governor Won $1,000
Texas 2002 MICROSOFT Governor Won $10,000
Texas 2002 MICROSOFT Governor Won $1,500
Texas 2002 MICROSOFT Governor Won $1,000
Texas 2002 MICROSOFT Governor Won $7,500
Texas 2002 ENRON CORP Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2002 JOHNSON & JOHNSON SERVICES Governor Won $2,000
Texas 2002 PFIZER Governor Won $10,000
Texas 2002 UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD Governor Won $25,000
Texas 2002 EXELON Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2002 NATIONAL RIFLE ASSOCIATION Governor Won $1,000
Texas 2002 NATIONAL RIFLE ASSOCIATION Governor Won $2,500
Texas 2002 CATERPILLAR Governor Won $4,000
Texas 2002 BANK OF AMERICA Governor Won $15,000
Texas 2002 BANK OF AMERICA Governor Won $2,000
Texas 2002 US SMOKELESS TOBACCO Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2002 BANK OF AMERICA Governor Won $15,000
Texas 2002 MERCK & CO Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2002 BANK OF AMERICA Governor Won $500
Texas 2002 VERIZON Governor Won $10,000
Texas 2002 VERIZON Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2002 DUPONT Governor Won $1,000
Texas 2002 AT&T Governor Won $25,000
Texas 2002 AT&T Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2002 PHARMACIA & UPJOHN Governor Won $500
Texas 2002 UPS Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2002 UPS Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2002 AT&T Governor Won $35,000
Texas 2002 INTERNATIONAL PAPER Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2002 INTERNATIONAL PAPER Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2002 INTERNATIONAL PAPER Governor Won $10,000
Texas 2002 BLUE CROSS BLUE SHIELD OF TEXAS Governor Won $2,500
Texas 2002 GENERAL ELECTRIC Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2002 NATIONWIDE Governor Won $2,500
Texas 2002 WAL-MART Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2002 WAL-MART Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2002 MOTOROLA Governor Won $1,000
Texas 2002 KOCH INDUSTRIES Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2002 EXXONMOBIL Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2002 KOCH INDUSTRIES Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2002 SHELL OIL Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2002 SHELL OIL Governor Won $2,000
Texas 2002 CONOCOPHILLIPS Governor Won $5,000
Texas 2002 BP NORTH AMERICA Governor Won $2,500
Texas 1998 CHEVRON CORP Lieutenant Governor Won $1,000
Texas 1998 BOEING CO Lieutenant Governor Won $5,000
Texas 1998 ENRON CORP Lieutenant Governor Won $2,000
Texas 1998 JOHNSON & JOHNSON SERVICES Lieutenant Governor Won $1,000
Texas 1998 UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD Lieutenant Governor Won $1,000
Texas 1998 UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD Lieutenant Governor Won $5,000
Texas 1998 AT&T Lieutenant Governor Won $5,000
Texas 1998 AT&T Lieutenant Governor Won $25,000
Texas 1998 DUPONT Lieutenant Governor Won $1,000
Texas 1998 INTERNATIONAL PAPER Lieutenant Governor Won $2,000
Texas 1998 FEDERAL EXPRESS Lieutenant Governor Won $1,000
Texas 1998 GENERAL MOTORS Lieutenant Governor Won $500
Texas 1998 AMERICAN COUNCIL OF LIFE INSURERS Lieutenant Governor Won $2,000
Texas 1998 BLUE CROSS BLUE SHIELD OF TEXAS Lieutenant Governor Won $2,500
Texas 1998 GTE CORP Lieutenant Governor Won $1,000
Texas 1998 GTE CORP Lieutenant Governor Won $250
Texas 1998 GTE CORP Lieutenant Governor Won $10,000
Texas 1998 NATIONWIDE Lieutenant Governor Won $2,000
Texas 1998 TEXAS MEDICAL ASSOCIATION Lieutenant Governor Won $25,000
Texas 1998 TEXAS MEDICAL ASSOCIATION Lieutenant Governor Won $2,813
Texas 1998 TEXAS MEDICAL ASSOCIATION Lieutenant Governor Won $2,000
Texas 1998 KOCH INDUSTRIES Lieutenant Governor Won $1,000
Texas 1998 KOCH INDUSTRIES Lieutenant Governor Won $10,000
Texas 1998 MOTOROLA Lieutenant Governor Won $2,000

Total $2,007,438
"Logic is all there is, and all there is must be logical."

"Truth is logic, and logic is truth."

"In a nation run by swine, all pigs are upward-mobile and the rest of us are fucked until we can put our acts together: not necessarily to win, but mainly to keep from losing completely." - Hunter S. Thompson

"A paranoid is someone who knows a little of what's going on. A psychotic is a guy who's just found out what's going on." - William S. Burroughs
Reply
#13
Texas sized list, for sure....they don't mess around when doing the dirt in Texas! :moon:
"Let me issue and control a nation's money and I care not who writes the laws. - Mayer Rothschild
"Civil disobedience is not our problem. Our problem is civil obedience! People are obedient in the face of poverty, starvation, stupidity, war, and cruelty. Our problem is that grand thieves are running the country. That's our problem!" - Howard Zinn
"If there is no struggle there is no progress. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and never will" - Frederick Douglass
Reply
#14
You got that right...and just look at the number of contributions over $10,000, and from whom. And almost a quarter of it ($481,739) from AT&T alone.

Peter Lemkin Wrote:Texas sized list, for sure....they don't mess around when doing the dirt in Texas! :moon:
"Logic is all there is, and all there is must be logical."

"Truth is logic, and logic is truth."

"In a nation run by swine, all pigs are upward-mobile and the rest of us are fucked until we can put our acts together: not necessarily to win, but mainly to keep from losing completely." - Hunter S. Thompson

"A paranoid is someone who knows a little of what's going on. A psychotic is a guy who's just found out what's going on." - William S. Burroughs
Reply
#15
Investigative Report: "Publicopoly: ALEC and the bid to make private all that is public"
Posted on July 8, 2011 by administrator
Publicopoly: ALEC and the bid to make private all that is public


Source: http://www.alec.org/AM/Template.cfm?Section=publicopoly

By Beau Hodai, July 11, 2011

"An exhaustive DBA Press analysis of thousands of pages of documents obtained through public records requests over the past several months has revealed the source of many of these suddenly-wildly-popular bills [aimed at weakening public employee unions] to be model legislation' disseminated primarily through one entity.

Ironically, as these bills have been batted around as the fulfillment of GOP promises to cut excessive government spending, pork barrel' handouts and backroom dealings, the group which has advanced much of this legislation, the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), is comprised of corporations (often with vested interests in privatization), special interest think tanks,' and member lawmakers (overwhelmingly Republican). As such, ALEC may be the ultimate portal for special interests to the "back rooms" of state government."

Download report in PDF format.

Jump to companion report on ALEC scholarship fund activities: "Legislative Laundry."

[URL="http://dbapress.com/front-page/brownskins-and-greenbacks-alec-the-for-profit-prison-industry-and-arizonas-sb-1070"]Jump to companion report on ALEC, the for-profit prison industry and Arizona's SB 1070
[/URL]
Jump to source materials directory.

Intro: "danged ornery critters"

November 2, 2010 saw an influx of public officials swept into officialdom on an unremitting wave of fevered rhetoric. Serving as the core of such rhetoric, with its attendant swirl of McCarthy-esque innuendos, was the promise to cut pork barrel' spending and to eliminate the special interest backroom dealings that have come to typify the American governmental landscape.

And, surely enough, with the outset of legislative sessions in January of this year, the American news-consuming public was both shocked and awed by the tenacity with which this new breed of Grand Old Partier (Montana Governor Brian Schweitzer (D) going so far as to label his own contingent of legislative combatants a rash of "danged ornery critters") set to their tasks of dismantling state government, seeking out deregulation in all its forms and pushing for unprecedented privatization of governmental functions. Key to this agenda as evidenced by the synchronous appearance of numerous bills seeking to accomplish this aim appears to have been the weakening of public employee unions.

While typically lax, the mainstream media sphere's attention peaked and came into brief focus with the culmination of the fight over collective bargaining rights in the Wisconsin legislature during February and March. During that time, the streets surrounding the capitol buildings of Madison played host to a sea of thousands of protesters, demanding that the collective bargaining ability and political viability of public employee unions be sparred the corrosive/deleterious influence of newly-elected Governor Scott Walker's budget repair bill, AB 11.

AB 11, along with Ohio's SB 5, were by far the most drastic examples of legislation aimed at restricting the collective bargaining rights, the political efficacy of unions and the restructuring of public employee pensions/benefits.

And, on March 9, the Wisconsin Senate, seemingly acting in violation of state open meetings law, pushed through a version of AB 11 stripped of fiscal material, rendering moot the fact that all of the Senate's Democrats had fled to neighboring states to avoid a quorum. (The law was subsequently enjoined by Dane County Circuit Court Judge Maryann Sumi, who ruled that lawmakers had indeed violated state open meetings law. In June, the Wisconsin Supreme Court overturned the injunction, reversing the lower court's decision).

While the actions of the legislative backers of AB 11 appeared to have been contrary to the system of democracy supposedly embraced in this nation, the spirit of the same anti-public employee union (or flat-out anti-union) agenda was felt simultaneously across the nation with similar legislation introduced in such states as: Ohio, Florida, Oklahoma, Kansas, Arizona, Michigan and Indiana.

A core feature of this nationwide movement has been the stated purpose of reducing state spending through cuts to both public employee positions and public employee pension and health care systems.

Often accompanying such bills in state legislatures are bills or provisions aimed at limiting the political viability of public employee unions whether through "paycheck protection" measures designed to limit campaign and/or lobbying expenditures, or through other agency restrictions on the use of state funds in lobbying.

And, as surely as these measures are touted by proponents as being effective ways of lessening state demands on taxpayers, these measures also effectively serve to weaken the ability of public employee unions to resist the swell of privatization measures which have accompanied these bills throughout the year.

An exhaustive DBA Press analysis of thousands of pages of documents obtained through public records requests over the past several months has revealed the source of many of these suddenly-wildly-popular bills to be model legislation' disseminated primarily through one entity.

Ironically, as these bills have been batted around as the fulfillment of GOP promises to cut excessive government spending, pork barrel' handouts and backroom dealings, the group which has advanced much of this legislation, the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), is comprised of corporations (often with vested interests in privatization), special interest think tanks,' and member lawmakers (overwhelmingly Republican). As such, ALEC may be the ultimate portal for special interests to the "back rooms" of state government.

It is worth noting that ALEC is the very same organization which promulgated the state-level GOP agenda throughout 2010, with the dissemination of pieces of model legislation which served as the basis of state challenges to Obamacare,' and of mimic legislation based on Arizona's SB 1070.

And, this extensive survey shows that this year's GOP/corporate agenda, as set forth through ALEC, is aimed predominately at two points: public employees/privatization (with public employees and agencies branded the gluttonous villains behind states flailing in budgetary crises) and state-level opposition to federal Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) greenhouse gas regulations.

What follows is a distillation of that pudding in which the proof was found. It should be stated at the outset, for the record, that ALEC refused to comment on any aspect of the material covered here.

(Listen to audio of ALEC Senior Director of Public Affairs Raegan Weber refusing to comment on any aspect of ALEC operations. Weber hotly accuses Hodai of being unfair and unbalanced and of working with National Public Radio. Note: Hodai has never worked for NPR, but NPR did release a story on ALEC in late 2010, based on an article Hodai had previously written for In These Times. Hodai was subsequently invited to speak on the issue on an NPR news program hence Weber's accusations).

The Roach Motel: ALEC defined

At 2:14 p.m., Wednesday, March 9, 2011, Wisconsin Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald (R-Juneau) requested that the Senate, then in special session, recess until 11:00 a.m., Thursday, March 10. Unanimous consent of senators present concluded the business of the day. Those conspicuously absent were 14 Democratic senators who had fled the state in order to assure no quorum could be reached for a vote on Governor Scott Walker's Budget Repair Bill, AB 11.

At 4:03 p.m., March 9, 2011, the Wisconsin Senate suddenly reconvened.

Senator Fitzgerald addressed the 19 Republican senators present, stating that the Senate had been blocked from passing AB 11 due to the actions of those missing senators. "It is time to move this process forward," concluded Fitzgerald.

A committee of conference, consisting of Sen. Fitzgerald, House Speaker Jeff Fitzgerald (R-Horicon), Senate President Michael Ellis (R-Neenah) and Representative Scott Suder (R-Abbotsford), then presented a draft of Conference Substitute Amendment 1 to AB 11. The amendment had been stripped of fiscal material requiring a quorum for vote.

A vote was taken without prior public notice, and without a finalized draft of the amendment having been prepared by the Wisconsin Legislative Reference Bureau (LRB).

It should be noted that LRB had not even received a drafting request for the amendment until 3:50 p.m., March 9 only moments before the senate reconvened to vote on the amendment. LRB records show that Conference Substitute Amendment 1 had actually been roughly carved out of AB 11 in February by the Joint Finance Committee so, while there was no official or publicly-available version of the amendment extant at the time of the vote, the Senate did have a marked-up version of AB 11 at their disposal.

18 of the 19 senators present voted for passage of the amendment. The amendment effectively limited much of the collective bargaining rights for most of the state's public employees (barring public safety' employees) and prohibited public employers from deducting union dues from employee pay.

Of those 18 senators who voted for passage of the amendment, 12 are members of the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC). Additionally, of those four lawmakers who comprised the conference committee, three (Sen. Fitzgerald, Rep. Fitzgerald and Rep. Suder) are ALEC members. (View full list of Wisconsin ALEC legislative members here).

Furthermore, Rep. Suder is one of the state's three ALEC public sector chairs' the other two being Rep. Robin Vos (R-Burlington, Assembly chair of the Joint Finance Committee and major proponent of AB 11), and Sen. Leah Vukmir (R-Wauwatosa, present at the March 9 Senate vote, voted for passage).

Rep. Vos' Senate counterpart on the Joint Finance Committee, the committee that called for and roughly drafted Conference Substitute Amendment 1, is Sen. Alberta Darling (R-River Hills), also an ALEC member.

Along with public sector leadership, ALEC's operations in Wisconsin are directed by a private sector chair.' According to materials obtained through public records requests, Amy Boyer, a lobbyist employed by the Madison lobby firm, The Hamilton Consulting Group, is likely the present Wisconsin private sector ALEC chair (ALEC records from the organization's State Chairs Meeting in December of 2008 show Boyer acting in this role). Boyer could not be reached for comment. (Further public records requests for communications between Boyer and the office of Rep. Vos are pending at this time).

Boyer's client list includes several corporations active in ALEC, such as Wal-Mart and Koch Companies Public Sector (Koch Industries). And, just as Koch's proprietors, energy/chemical manufacturing billionaires David and Charles Koch, reportedly backed Gov. Walker to the tune of $43,000 through the 2010 election cycle, AB 11 contained a no-bids provision to sell off, or contract out, state-run power plants (this provision was removed from the conference amendment).

ALEC is a 501 © (3) not-for-profit organization (reporting about $6.5 million in annual revenue in recent years) which claims more than 2,000 (roughly one third) of the nation's state-level lawmakers as members. (View ALEC IRS forms 990, 2002-2009, as well as articles of incorporation, here).

According to the group's promotional material, ALEC's mission is to "advance the Jeffersonian principles of free markets, limited government, federalism, and individual liberty, through a nonpartisan public-private partnership of America's state legislators, members of the private sector, the federal government, and general public."

ALEC currently claims over 250 corporations and special interest groups as private sector members.

While the organization refuses to make any complete list of these corporate members available to the public, some known members include: ExxonMobil, the American Bail Coalition, Blue Cross Blue Shield, Corrections Corporation of America (CCA), AT&T, Pfizer Pharmaceuticals, PhRMA, TimeWarner Cable, Comcast, Verizon, Wal-Mart, the National Rifle Association, Koch Industries, the Heritage Foundation (co-founded by ALEC founder Paul Weyrich), the Cato Institute (an offshoot of the Charles Koch Foundation), GlaxoSmithKline, Phillip Morris International, the National Federation of Independent Businesses (NFIB), and a slew of lobby firms representing scores of other corporate/special intereststo name a few.

ALEC is comprised of nine "task forces:" 1.) Public Safety and Elections, 2.) Civil Justice, 3.) Education, 4.) Energy, Environment and Agriculture, 5.) Commerce, Insurance and Economic Development, 6.) Telecommunications and Information Technology, 7.) Health and Human Services, 8.) Tax and Fiscal Policy, and 9.) International Relations.

Each task force is comprised of both public and private sector membersthe public sector members being elected lawmakers, the private sector members being corporate/'think tank' representatives.

These task forces serve as the core of ALEC's operations, generating "model legislation," which is then passed on to member lawmakers for introduction in their home assemblies.

According to ALEC promotional material, each year member lawmakers introduce an average of 1,000 of these pieces of legislation nationwide, 17 percent of which are enacted. For 2009, ALEC claimed a total of 826 pieces of introduced legislation nationwide, 115 of which were passed into lawslightly below the average at 14 percent.

ALEC does not offer model legislation for public inspection. (View ALEC model legislation here).

And, it is important to note that ALEC, as a 501 © (3) not-for-profit entity, is strictly prohibited by federal tax code from taking part in the formation of legislation. But, as ALEC has vociferously insisted over the past year (since falling under increased scrutiny as a result of an In These Times article documenting the organization's role in disseminating "model legislation" based on Arizona's SB 1070), the group simply passes "model" legislation along to help lawmakers. As such, the group claims it is not engaged in the crafting of actual legislation, nor is it engaged in lobbying.

If one were to follow a very narrow interpretation of what lobbying constitutes and close their eyes to the sheer number of pieces of "model" legislation popping up in real legislatures, this would be an accurate assessment.

ALEC itself, with a staff of less than 30 full-time employees, is in reality little more than a host organization that provides all-expenses-paid trips (funded by member corporations) for the nation's state-level lawmakers to meet with and be lobbied by the very same corporate/special interest lobbyists who pay for these so-called "scholarships," and who often contribute to the campaigns of member candidates.

By way of illustration, ALEC annually holds and disburses over $1 million in corporate/special interest "scholarship funds" for the travel of member lawmakers to and from sessions, or "summits," at top-notch resorts. These funds are listed on ALEC tax returns as being a "liability" (since a 501 © (3) cannot expend funds for the purpose of wining and dining of lawmakers). (For more information on the mechanics of ALEC scholarship fund activities, see companion report, "Legislative Laundry.")

And, in many states, these ALEC scholarship funds are exempt from gifting/lobbying reporting or restrictions, as they are purported by the lawmakers who have carved out this legal niche to be used for legitimate legislative purposes. Nevertheless, according to material obtained through public records requests, ALEC, along with Ohio ALEC private sector chair, Time Warner Cable, co-sponsored a Cincinnati Reds/Florida Marlins baseball game during a "task force summit" held in Cincinnati in late April with tickets reserved and disbursed to ALEC member lawmakers free of charge. What the legitimate legislative purpose of this event was remains unknown.

According to ALEC Communications Director Raegan Weber, the principal employed by ALEC which allows the organization to hold these scholarship funds aloft as a "liability" is Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) Generally Accepted Accounting Principal (GAAP) statement 136. FASB GAAP 136 essentially states that in order for ALEC, as a 501 © (3), to hold and disburse these funds in such a way, the organization must be considered to be controlled by the donor parties (read: corporate/special interest members). (This information was divulged by Weber in November, 2010 shortly before she refused to make any further comment to DBA Press).

And, at the end of the day, that is all ALEC truly is: a conduit, an intermediary between corporate America and our "public servants" or, simply put, a legislative roach motel controlled by corporate/special interests, through which lazy, incompetent, and/or corrupt lawmakers gather legislation authored, or otherwise influenced, by corporate special interests for introduction in their home legislatures.

Q.E.D.: ALEC, Koch and the GOP

While ALEC claims to be a non-partisan public-private legislative partnership, free of loyalties to any single party or interest, the reality of the organization is similar to that of an aspen grove. Ostensibly, an aspen grove is comprised of many densely clustered individual trees. However, an inspection below the soil reveals that each tree is in fact an offshoot of one large root network each tree a manifestation of the same organism. Such is the relationship between ALEC and much of its think tank/"public policy foundation" membership.

(View archived documents pertaining to the Koch Brothers, Koch Industries, Americans for Prosperity, Reason Foundation, Cato Institute, and other organizations discussed in this section, here).

ALEC, as an organization, has received significant funding from the Charles Koch Foundation and one of its member (and therefore "donor") organizations is the Cato Institute. According to Cato incorporation documents, the organization was initially incorporated as an offshoot of the Charles Koch Foundation in 1974. David Koch is currently a director of Cato.

A prominent ALEC member think tank, the Reason Foundation (a "libertarian" public policy institute devoted to promoting privatization of governmental functions) is funded in part by the Charles Koch Foundation. David Koch is also a Reason director. Michael Flynn, Reason's current director of government affairs, served as ALEC director of policy and legislative activities/strategic initiatives for several years, ending in 2003.

The Americans for Prosperity Foundation (AFPF, a prominent contributor to the ALEC/Koch public policy network initially incorporated as Citizens for a Sound Economy Educational Foundation), is funded largely by the Charles Koch Foundation and Koch Industries (whose capital is derived primarily from chemical manufacturing and energy production, as well as from diversified holdings in a number of other corporations).

David Koch is the chairman of AFPF, serving on the board alongside Koch Industries Executive Vice President Richard Fink. Fink also serves as president of the Charles Koch Foundation and is executive vice president of the Mercatus Center, yet another Koch-funded right-wing ALEC public policy member.

In 2003, AFPF spawned two more right-wing public policy foundations: Americans for Prosperity (AFP) and FreedomWorks.

From the AFPF/Citizens for a Sound Economy (CSE) rib which formed FreedomWorks was cut AFPF Chief Economist Wayne Brough (who today is FreedomWorks vice president of research and chief economist), and former AFPF/CSE Vice President Matt Kibbe (currently president of both FreedomWorks and the FreedomWorks Foundation).

As noted in AFPF 2003 tax records, the group paid $429,583 in "consulting" fees to former U.S. House Majority Leader Dick Armey (R-TX) through FreedomWorks. Armey had left the House in January of that year. This AFPF expenditure was essentially Armey's first year salary as chairman of FreedomWorks.

From January, 2009 through the November, 2010 midterm elections, FreedomWorks and AFP were instrumental in creating the false populist "Tea Party" movement. Through the orchestration of scores of national tax day protests, conventions and constant mainstream media coverage, FreedomWorks, AFP and other Koch-funded ALEC-member public policy groups (such as the National Taxpayers Union, currently headed by former ALEC executive director Duane Parde) were largely instrumental in ushering in unprecedented Republican legislative majorities nationwide.

And this track record is just what makes ALEC's constant assertions of non-partisanship so laughable.

To illustrate: according to District of Columbia incorporation papers filed for what is today FreedomWorks, the organization had undergone a series of name changes and mergers prior to reaching its current incarnation initially being incorporated as "Foundation for Freedom and Capitalism" (FFC) in 1987. The last stage of the organization's growth prior to becoming FreedomWorks was "Citizens for the Environment," (formerly "Taxpayer Action League") incorporated in 1995 by former AFPF/CSE president Paul Beckner.

According to these documents, one of FFC's founding directors was influential GOP strategist/lobbyist extraordinaire Ed Gillespie.

Gillespie served as an aide to House Majority Leader Armey (1995-2003) following the "Repulican Revolution" of 1994. As Communications and Policy Director of the House Republican Conference of 1994, Gillespie, along with such notables as Armey, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-GA, also very active in ALEC in recent years) and Grover Norquist (head of Americans for Tax Reform, also active in ALEC), is credited as being one of the authors of the 1994 GOP "Contract with America."

Following his time in House leadership, Gillespie served as press secretary to the failed presidential bid (1999) of current Ohio Governor John Kasich ®. Kasich, during his time in the Ohio Senate (1978-1982) is credited by ALEC as being one of the more active public sector members during the organization's "formative years" (ALEC was founded in 1973).

It should be noted that one of Kasich's first actions as governor of Ohio in 2011 was the unveiling of a plan to sell off and privatize a significant portion of Ohio's correctional infrastructure a course of action near and dear to both ALEC and its private prison industry donors. Significantly, Ohio's SB 5, sponsored by ALEC member Sen. Shannon Jones (R-Springboro), eliminated public employee collective bargaining rights as they pertained to issues of privatization.

Following his time with Kasich, Gillespie went on to found, along with former Vice President Al Gore (D) chief of staff John M. Quinn, the lobby firm of Quinn, Gillespie & Associates. The firm opened their doors in time to lobby for Enron (a former ALEC member corporation) in 2001 on issues of energy industry deregulation (another subject close to the hearts of the Koch network and ALEC). Shortly thereafter, Gillespie announced he would launch an organization dubbed "21st Century Energy Project" to include support from AFPF and CSE.

To be fair, Gillespie's lobbying activities on behalf of Enron/Koch energy interests were fairly limited (most likely curtailed by the demise of Enron) compared to lobbying performed on behalf of other clients such as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Diageo (a prominent ALEC member corporation) and AT&T (longtime chair of the ALEC Private Enterprise Board).

Following a stint in 2003 as Republican National Committee chairman, Gillespie went on, in 2007, to serve as an advisor to President George W. Bush, replacing Karl Rove in the twilight of that administration.

At the outset of 2011, Gillespie served as chairman of an RNC transitional team appointed to usher in the sweeping Republican majorities nationwide made possible to such a large degree by AFP and FreedomWorks.

Quod erat demonstratum.

"Paycheck Protection:" to defang and denature the opposition

On February 25, 2011, Florida State Representative Chris Dorworth (R-Lake Mary) introduced HB 1021.

HB 1021 sought to prohibit public employers (state, county, municipal and special district) from withholding any amount from public employee wages for the payment of union dues, other union assessments, or other contributions for the purpose of political activity (including contributions to individual candidates, political parties, political action committees, committees of continuous existence, 501 © (4) organizations, or for the purpose of electioneering communications).

As such, public employee unions would be forced to raise dues and funds for political purposes independently of the governmental agencies which employ their members.

Furthermore, HB 1021 stated that should a public employee union seek to use any funds collected from members for any form of political activity, the union must first have received a written authorization for such use from each individual member. Under HB 1021, these written authorizations must be submitted by union members annually and must be accompanied by a detailed account to be provided by the union of all the contributions and political expenditures made by the union within the past 24 months.

HB 1021 also provided that a union member may revoke their authorization at any time. Should a member revoke their authorization, the union would be compelled to issue a refund to that member for the portion of their dues expended for political activity within the fiscal year for which the authorization was issued.

HB 1021 stated that unions could not require such authorizations as a condition of membership and the bill laid out stiff penalties for unions found to have violated its provisions ranging from union decertification to a fine of $20,000 per day of violation.

In short, if a union member disagreed with a campaign contribution made on their behalf by the union, they could demand a refund; if a union failed to meet any of the reporting/collections/refund criteria laid out under HB 1021, it would face dire consequences.

As such, HB 1021 seemingly sought to fragment the political cohesion of public employee unions in Florida. And, it should be noted that Florida is a "right-to-work" state, meaning that no employee public or private can be forced to join a union as a condition of employment. So, HB 1021 targeted public employee unions comprised entirely of members who had joined wholly of their own volition.

On March 30, 2011, noting striking similarities between HB 1021 and a rash of similar bills aimed at public employee unions cropping up nationwide, DBA Press submitted a public records request to the office of Rep. Dorworth seeking copies of all documents in possession of the representative's office pertaining to the formation of HB 1021, as well as copies of any and all pieces of "model legislation" (from either ALEC or any other source) which may have served as a basis for HB 1021.

Within an hour of submitting this request, DBA Press received a response from Dorworth's office through Florida House Speaker Dean Cannon (R-Winter Park) Communications Director Katherine Betta.

"We received a note from Representative Dorworth's office regarding your request for records relating to the American Legislative Exchange Council and HB 1021," said Betta. "Please note that Mr. Dorworth's legislative offices did not receive any materials from ALEC relating to this bill or any model legislation' from other states."

Nevertheless, rather than taking our hats in our hands and going home, DBA Press persisted in this request. Two weeks later Dorworth's office delivered 87 pages of documents, mostly bill drafts and emails detailing the evolution of what was to become HB 1021.

Buried at the bottom of this stack was an 11-page bundle of neatly typed material, labeled "Paycheck Protection." This consisted of three pieces of model legislation, at the end of each were the words: "Copyright, ALEC."

Dorworth Legislative Aide Carolyn Johnson claims that, although Dorworth is an ALEC member (View full list of Florida ALEC member lawmakers here), neither she, nor the Representative, have any idea how the ALEC model legislation found its way into Dorworth's office. Dorworth could not be reached for comment.

The three pieces of model legislation contained in the ALEC "Paycheck Protection" bundle were entitled: "Employee Rights Reform Act," "Labor Organization Deductions Act" and "Political Funding Reform Act." (View "Paycheck Protection" model legislation here).

"Paycheck Protection" model legislation 1: Employee Rights Reform Act

The Employee Rights Reform Act (ERRA), in a nutshell, establishes limitations on fees which may be charged to non-union public employees who are part of a collective bargaining unit represented by a union, or by any other "exclusive representative" of public employees engaged in collective bargaining.

As such, ERRA states that no non-union public employee ("agency fee payer") may have more than a proportionate (pro rata) share of collective bargaining union costs withheld from their pay by a public employer.

To ensure the enforceability of this measure, ERRA lays out criteria for both "chargeable" and "non-chargeable" activities which an exclusive representative may be engaged in.

Essentially, chargeable activities are defined as follows: expenditures for purposes of collective bargaining, contract administration and grievance adjustment undertaken by the exclusive representative on behalf of the agency fee payer. All other activities are deemed to be non-chargeable.

ERRA is somewhat open-ended as to whether or not an agency fee payer may be charged for political activity undertaken on their behalf by unions while this type of activity is not included in the definition of chargeable activity, the model bill does contain a clause which states that whether or not political activity is chargeable is in the hands of "controlling court decisions."

"Paycheck Protection" model legislation 2: Labor Organizations Deductions Act

The Labor Organization Deductions Act (LODA) is the only piece of the "Paycheck Protection" trilogy which is not aimed specifically at public employee unions (though it is worth noting that the bill does specifically name both the National Education Association and the American Federation of Teachers as entities which must comply with restrictions). Rather, LODA , in a nutshell, seeks to establish an amazingly stringent set of criteria governing the means through which any labor organization may collect and use funds for political activity.

As set forth under LODA, unions may not expend any funds for lobbying, electoral, and political activities, including contributions to any candidate, party, voter registration campaign, "or any other political cause" unless said funds are kept in a segregated account which must be administered as a political action committee (PAC) by the labor organization.

LODA further establishes criteria for the collection and disbursement of these segregated funds, stating: A.) all contributions to the fund must be solicited separately and independently from other union fees collected, such as dues or other fees associated with collective bargaining; B.) no dues or other fees collected by a labor organization, or monies obtained by a union through any "commercial transaction," may be used for political purposes, transferred to the segregated fund, or "intermingled in any way with fund monies;" C.) that the cost of administering the segregated fund must not be paid with any dues or other fees collected as part of union membership.

Under LODA, union members may only have fees withheld from pay if each individual employee submits a signed authorization directing their employer to withhold a set sum for payment to a specific labor organization, union, or other "organization of employees." However, as stated by LODA, no employee may direct an employer to deduct funds for payment to: A.) a PAC, B.) any other "segregated fund," or C.) any intermediary that contributes to a PAC or segregated fund.

Furthermore, LODA establishes criminal penalties for any violation of its provisions. As such, LODA creates a misdemeanor offense for any labor organization, or representative thereof, found to have made a political contribution of any type if that contribution was found to have been obtained through any threat of reprisal, force, or discrimination.

Similarly, LODA creates a misdemeanor criminal offense for any labor organization, or representative thereof, found to have made a political contribution derived from dues or any other fee paid by members as a condition of representation/membership, or as a condition of employment or found to have been obtained through any commercial transaction.

Furthermore, LODA states that no labor organization may solicit funds for political use from any individual outside of members and their immediate family members.

And, lastly, LODA creates a misdemeanor criminal offense for any labor organization, or representative thereof, found to have compensated any member through any means in exchange for a written authorization of withholding for political purposes.

"Paycheck Protection" model legislation 3: Political Funding Reform Act

While ERRA and LODA seek to significantly limit the amount and type of funds which may be deducted from employee pay particularly as those funds may apply to union political activity the Political Funding Reform Act (PFRA) is designed to eliminate all withholding of public employee pay for use in any political activity.

Simply put, under PFRA public employers are strictly prohibited from collecting, deducting, or transmitting political funds derived from public employee pay.

As defined by PFRA, "political funds" are defined as any monies expended upon, or commingled with funds used for political activity, including: electioneering communications; participation in any candidate or ballot campaign; contributions (or operation expenses) to any PAC; involvement or contributions to any other organization which devotes a substantial amount of activity to "carrying on propaganda, or otherwise attempting to influence voters, legislation or ballot issues."

PFRA also provides penalties for any public employer found to have violated this total ban on political funds deductions from public employee pay.

Under PFRA, any public employer found to have violated any section of the prohibitions outlined therein will not be permitted, for a period of two years, to withhold any funds from employee pay for any purpose including union dues or any other fees used in labor organization activity, such as collective bargaining.

Additionally, PFRA provides that any public employee found to have had funds withheld for "political activity" may bring suit against their employer for damages, injunctive relief and litigation costs.

"The backbone and heartbeat:" the ALEC public resources double standard and "Right to Work" model legislation

Ironically, as PFRA states so succinctly, "necessary governmental functions do not include using government resources to confer a political benefit or advantage on any private individual or organization, including, but not limited to, public employee unions and their members," it should be noted that documents obtained by DBA Press through public records requests submitted to the offices of ALEC public sector chairs in numerous states (primarily Wisconsin, Ohio, Arizona and Florida) demonstrate that ALEC, a private organization, relies heavily on public employees (legislative staff and lawmakers) to carry out their work in states with active membership, primarily through the task of raising state ALEC scholarship' funds from private corporations, think tanks and their lobbyists.

These funds are then used to pay the travel and lodging expenses incurred through lawmaker attendance at ALEC events, hosted at resorts around the nation. During these events, lawmakers are educated,' wined (figuratively; ALEC scholarship funds are not used for the reimbursement of alcoholic beverages though private sector lobbyist do often pay for entire dinner parties of lawmakers at these events), dined, and otherwise honeymooned, often by the same lobbyists footing the bill.

Similarly, emails obtained from the offices of ALEC's Florida public sector chair Rep. Jimmy Patronis (R-Panama City), as well as from Ohio public sector chair Rep. John Adams (R-Sidney), and Wisconsin public sector chair Rep. Robin Vos, reflect a considerable amount of state time and resources expended in the recruitment and retention of member lawmakers.

And, as the so-called "Paycheck Protection" pieces of model legislation seek to limit the lobbying ability of public employee unions, records obtained through states surveyed demonstrate a clear tradition of ALEC model legislation (often in the form of packages containing several pieces of bundled model legislation) being passed from ALEC-member corporate/special interests lobbyists, or ALEC employees at the behest of task force members, through the offices of ALEC public sector chairs, and on to other lawmakers whether or not those other lawmakers are ALEC members.

In essence, ALEC has created a network of lawmakers and public employees who act on their behalf, and on the behalf of their corporate/special interest members.

Furthermore, in 2009, former ALEC Wisconsin public sector chair Rep. Phil Montgomery (R-Green Bay) worked with ALEC staff and representatives of longtime ALEC Private Enterprise Advisory Board Chair, AT&T, in developing and implementing a "pilot media project."

According to meeting minutes from the July 15, 2009 ALEC State Chairs Meeting, cooperation on this project was cause for AT&T Senior Vice President for Strategic Communications Jim Epperson to laud ALEC public sector state chairs as being the "backbone and heartbeat" of the organization.

According to these meeting minutes and other ALEC documents obtained by DBA Press, the aim of the pilot media project was to "help develop ALEC issue leaders in the states, and identify key state media outlets." At the 2009 meeting then-ALEC executive director Alan Smith stated that this pilot media program had performed so well in Wisconsin that it would be implemented nationwide.

As illustrated by materials obtained through public records requests in Ohio, Florida and Wisconsin, the ALEC media program now consists of items such as model press releases disbursed to ALEC members (complete with canned quotes attributable to lawmakers, praising ALEC initiatives), state lists of ALEC-friendly media outlets, media advisories to lawmakers on the activities of hostile media" (including scripted answers to questions regarding ALEC/Koch activity as may be posed by critical media and/or constituents), as well as coaching (in the form of "media training workshops") provided through public/media relations consultants (Vox Global, a subsidiary of Omnicom Group, Inc. one of the largest advertizing conglomerates in the world, reporting $12.5 billion in global operations revenue in 2010) employed by AT&T.

Such training is advertized, and offered free of charge, to member lawmakers as coaching on "how to deal with both friendly and hostile reporters, stay in control of an interview, and communicate the ALEC message effectively."

And, in one state, Indiana, the line between the public work of legislative offices and the private work of ALEC has become so blurred that the state's legislative counsel is no longer able to differentiate between the two.

On January 5, Indiana Representatives Eric Turner (R-District 32), Jerry Torr (R-District 39), Wes Culver (R-District 49) and Rebecca Kubacki (R-District 22) introduced HB 1043, a bill which bore a striking resemblance to yet another piece of ALEC anti-union model legislation, the "Right to Work Act" (RWA).

Both HB 1043 and RWA aimed to create a "right to work" provision in state law which would prohibit (public or private) employers from requiring employees join or retain membership in labor organizations (or pay any dues/fees to labor organizations) as a condition of employment. Additionally, RWA like ERRA and LODA requires union employees to submit written authorization for any deductions (union dues, assessments, etc.) to employers prior to withholding. This written authorization language did not appear in the Indiana bill.

Furthermore, both RWA and HB 1043 establish a misdemeanor criminal offense for any employer found to be in violation of these union restrictions.

On April 6, DBA Press submitted a public records requests to the offices of Reps. Culver, Kubacki, Torr, Turner and David Wolkins (one of two ALEC public sector chairs in the state; Wolkins co-chairs with Senator Jim Buck), seeking copies of: A.) documents (emails, drafting materials, etc.) pertaining to the formation of HB 1043, B.) any and all pieces of ALEC model legislation in possession of the representative's offices, and C.) any and all documents pertaining to ALEC in any way.

In a letter dated April 8, Indiana House Republican Caucus Chief Counsel Lesley Crane responded to these requests, stating:

"[Indiana Access to Public Records Law (APRA)] gives an agency the discretion to withhold certain records from public access. Among those records are, The work product of individual members and the partisan staffs of the general assembly [sic]."

"Clearly, your requests fall squarely in the nature of the work product of the members of the General Assembly, as the least two of your requests specifically contemplate legislation," continued Crane. "Your third request also would fall into this category as it targets the American Legislative Exchange Council ("ALEC"), which entity's mission (which can be viewed at http://www.alec.prg/AM/Template.cfm?Section=About) discusses the development of policies around the country with like-minded legislators. This is simply another way of getting at a legislator's work product as they develop policies through ALEC with other legislators that they may or may not choose to implement through legislation in Indiana [sic]."

As such, based on this interpretation of ALEC "model legislation" and other materials as the actual "work product" of lawmakers, Crane went on to flatly refuse to produce any documents respondent to requests submitted, either as they pertained to HB 1043 or ALEC.

Similarly, Indiana Senate Chief of Staff (and chief legal counsel) Jeff Papa, refused to return any records respondent to a public records request submitted to the office of ALEC state co-chair Sen. Buck (R-District 21), seeking copies of any and all documents relating to the Senator's role as the state's ALEC public sector chair (such records typically include ALEC model legislation, ALEC "issue alerts," information on corporate donors, correspondence with member lobbyists, correspondence with ALEC personnel, as well as legislative membership lists and scholarship fund disbursement information). (View Papa Senate letter here).

Though Indiana may have been the most extreme example of a state legislature denying access to public records originating from ALEC, or denying access to public records that illustrate the formation of a public law, legislative counsel and lawmakers in Ohio (SB 5 sought to reinforce existing sections of state law conspicuously similar to LODA) and Kansas (HB 2130 contained language identical to that contained in PFRA) similarly refused to return records pertaining to ALEC and the formation of legislation obviously based on ALEC "model legislation".

And, to illustrate the further blurring of lines between the private legislative services offered through ALEC and the role of public lawmakers, records obtained from the office of Florida ALEC state chair, Rep. Patronis, show that ALEC's private legal counsel is also active in fielding public records requests.

On January 10, then-Florida House of Representatives Office of Public Information Program Manager Melanie Phister notified the office of Rep. Patronis that the House had received a public records request (dated November 19, 2010) from ACLU Foundation of Florida attorney Benjamin Stevenson. The Stevenson request sought records identifying state ALEC legislative members, as well as records indicating how much those lawmakers had received in ALEC scholarship fund reimbursements during 2009 and 2010.

Rather than immediately compiling the records sought by Stevenson, Patronis Legislative Assistant Patti Butchikas then, on January 12, forwarded the ACLU records request to ALEC Senior Director of Policy and Strategic Initiatives Michael Bowman.

According to emails obtained from the office of Rep. Patronis, Bowman then dispatched an unnamed ALEC attorney to advise Florida House General Counsel George Levesque in the processing of the request.

Though it is unclear what counsel the ALEC attorney offered, Levesque went on to advise Butchikas not to request any list of legislative members from ALEC if one did not already exist presumably due to the fact that any such list in possession of the House would become a matter of public record.

Florida as an illustrative example of special interests behind "Paycheck Protection:" the face of Corporate America in miniature

In the case of Florida's HB 1021 "paycheck protection" law, records obtained from the office of Rep. Dorworth reflect that the initial version of the bill (evidently based on ALEC "paycheck protection" model legislation, as well as similar legislation previously introduced in Florida also closely mirroring the ALEC model laws) had been drafted by then-Florida Chamber of Commerce (FCoC) Vice President of Government Affairs Adam Babington. (Babington withdrew as a lobbyist representing FCoC on June 16, 2011). (View the Babington/Dorworth emails here).

As for Johnson's assertion that it is a total mystery as to how the ALEC "paycheck protection" model legislation arrived in Rep. Dorworth's office, it should also be noted that the gap between FCoC and ALEC is an especially short one; Florida ALEC private sector chair, Cindy Marsiglio, senior manager of public affairs and government relations in Florida for Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., is a FCoC Foundation board of trustees member.

Following Babington's initial draft submission to Dorworth's office in January, the bill underwent a series of drafts and revisions. The most notable of these revisions were made by Florida State Senate staff working in concert with Babington to create a Senate companion version of the bill.

This companion bill, SB 830, was sponsored by Sen. John Thrasher (R-Jacksonville).

It is worth noting that Thrasher, prior to joining the Senate, served as general counsel to the Jacksonville Chamber of Commerce in 2009. What's more, upon disembarking from public service as speaker of the Florida House (1998-2000), Thrasher commenced work (in 2002) for the the influential Tallahassee lobby firm of Southern Strategy Group, Inc. From 2002 through to his election to the Florida Senate in 2009, Thrasher lobbied on behalf of several FCoC member corporations, as well as corporations active in ALEC (such as AT&T) many of which have current interests in the privatization of governmental functions (particularly in mental health/health care service contracting).

The primary actor on the Senate end of HB 1021′s formation was Andy Bardos, special counsel to Senate President Mike Haridopolos. Records obtained from Dorworth's office reflect that Bardos' primary contributions to the bill were stringent union dues collection provisions which sought to prohibit public employers from withholding any union dues or other union fees from employee pay, as well sections dealing with penalties and enforcement.

Of this more agrressive tack under Bardos (which Babington referred to as paycheck protection "on steroids"), Babington went on to tell Dorworth and Johnson, "I think it's perfect, so I suppose y'all should pull the language over and roll."

Not surprisingly, there are few degrees of separation between the special counsel to the Florida Senate President and FCoC.

Bardos, prior to joining the office of Senate President Hardidopolos in early 2011, had been employed (since 2005) for the Florida law firm of GrayRobinson as an attorney specializing in governmental affairs.

GrayRobinson is currently represented as a member of the board of directors of FCoC by former Bardos GrayRobinson colleague, Fred Leonhardt.

In addition to being a past chair of FCoC himself, Leonhardt is a member of Enterprise Florida, Inc., a "public-private partnership" which works as the economic development arm of the state. (It should also be noted that Leonhardt is also a prolific lobbyist, representing dozens of public and private principals throughout the state).

Another director of Enterprise Florida, alongside Leonhardt and Florida Governor Rick Scott ®, is former Florida House Speaker Allan Bense. Bense is the present chairman of FCoC. What's more, Bense is chairman of the Florida-based, Koch-funded and ALEC-member public policy foundation, the James Madison Institute (JMI).

Leonhardt, serves on the JMI board of directors alongside Bense.

Dr. Barry Poulson, a professor of economics at the University of Colorado, also works though JMI with Bense and Leonhardt as a JMI "research fellow" on the institute's "research advisory board."

Poulson also serves as a "distinguished scholar"/"research fellow" with Americans for Prosperity (Americans for Prosperity Foundation tax records indicate that Poulson received $269,730 from the foundation from 2005, through 2007), and has been active as a prominent ALEC speaker in recent years, appearing before gatherings of member lawmakers to expound on the need to cut state spending/relieve tax burdens through cuts to public employee benefits.

Nevertheless, as deep as the manifold rabbit holes of Floridian political intrigue go, it is important to note that neither JMI nor FCoC have any public agencies, nor public employee unions, as members.

When asked why FCoC was so deeply concerned with protecting the paychecks of public employees from political expenditures made on their behalf (to the point where FCoC's top lobbyists was drafting legislation to such effect), FCoC Director of Public Affairs Edie Ousley declined to comment. Neither Babbington nor Bardos responded to requests for comment.

It should be noted here that both HB 1021 and SB 830 died in their respective chambers following pressure exerted on FCoC by public employee union members who had begun pulling their money out of FCoC member banks in protest.

According to materials returned through a public records request to the office of Rep. Dorworth, news of the opposition action had made it back to the representative. The news came in the form of one solitary, terse, press release (from an unidentified source) emailed by Ousley to Babington, forwarded on to Dorworth:

"Here's the issue," Ousley headed the email. "For immediate release…Wednesday, April 20…Workers respond to attacks from the Chamber of Commerce… Labor organizations and members withdrew close to $10 million in funds from the Chamber's largest banks…"

The press release went on to indicate that "Floridians outraged at the Chamber of Commerce's attack on workers" were prepared to issue further "wave(s) of withdrawals" if the FCoC campaign was not abandoned. (View the Ousley email, as well as other letters/emails to the office of Dorworth regarding HB 1021, here).

Subsequently, both bills were quietly withdrawn from legislative hearings calendars by their sponsors on May 7.

Privatization and the State Agency Lobbying Reform Act.

A clue to FCoC and FCoC member corporations' possible motives in their zeal to eliminate the political efficacy of public employee unions may be found in the form in which the ALEC "Paycheck Protection" model legislation was delivered to the office of Rep. Dorworth.

The bundled "Paycheck Protection" package containing ERRA, LODA and PFRA was derived from a collection of ALEC model legislation distributed by Associated Builders and Contractors, Inc. (ABC), as that organization's 2010 "Legislative Handbook." Also present in this 182-page field guide for the anti-worker lawmaker are such ALEC favorites as RWA.

ABC is a private association of non-union builders and contractors, and a leading proponent of "merit-shop" (independent of labor union affiliation) contract awards. Perhaps more importantly, ABC bills itself as being the non-union "construction industry's voice within the legislative, executive and judicial branches" of government. ABC, as evidenced by their wholesale distribution of ALEC model legislation, is also active in ALEC initiatives.

And, as a lobby organization with such a large interest in "free-enterprise" contract awards, it comes as no surprise that ABC of Florida, Inc. lobbyist, Richard Watson, is also the sole lobbyist in Florida representing GOP operative Grover Norquist's Americans for Tax Reform (an organization which is currently very active in ALEC criminal justice legislative initiatives, among others).

More interesting, however, is the fact that Bense derives the bulk of his annual income from two entities, Bense Enterprises, Inc. and GAC Contractors, Inc. (GAC) both of which he owns and operates with prominent Florida businessman (and prominent GOP donor) L. Charles Hilton, Jr..

Hilton also serves on the board of JMI alongside Bense and Leonhardt.

As reported in his latest available statement of financial interests (filed for 2009, pursuant to his quasi-public stature with Enterprise Florida) Bense held nearly $5 million in assets in GAC that year much of which was derived from state and federal road rehabilitation contracts (worth nearly of $10 million in public revenue) awarded through the Florida Department of Transportation.

And, GAC is a prominent member of ABC, which, through its legislative efforts with ALEC, seeks to encourage the free flow of public sector cash to non-union private sector companies.

Several pieces of ALEC model legislation circulated in tandem with "paycheck protection" and other bills aimed at public employees over the past few years clearly outline this intent to purge and outsource public employee positions wherever possible and replace them with for-profit actors.

It is worth noting that several of these pieces of model legislation have been jointly circulated to lawmakers as a budget reform packages through National Taxpayers Union and ALEC, and that many of these bills have been widely touted or introduced (if not authored) through ALEC by Reason Foundation Director of Government Reform Leonard Gilroy.

It is also worth noting that the sudden popularity of these pieces of model legislation has also occurred in tandem with the introduction of new pieces of ALEC model legislation aimed at further weakening the ability of public employees to resist the impending wave of privatization. The piece of model legislation which most clearly seeks to accomplish this goal is the State Agency Lobbying Reform Act (SALRA), introduced to ALEC member lawmakers in April at the Cincinnati Spring Task Force Summit by Evergreen Freedom Foundation (EFF) Economic Policy Center Director Amber Gunn. (View model legislation here).

Washington state-based EFF both as an ALEC-member think tank and independently has a long history of opposition to the political activity of public employee unions.

In 1992, following the passage of the first known version of "paycheck protection" in Washington state (though a ballot initiative funded in large part by state Republican Party PACs and corporate donors), EFF engaged several prominent state teacher's unions in a lengthy legal battle over the use of union dues in political activity.

Furthermore, EFF President Bob Williams introduced the Defined Contribution Pension Reform Act (DCPRA) model legislation to ALEC lawmakers during the organization's December, 2010 States and Nation Policy Summit in Washington, D.C..

DCPRA, along with another piece of ALEC model legislation aimed at curbing state spending on public employee benefits, the Unfunded Pension Liabilities Act (UPLA introduced as a piece of model legislation to ALEC members by Williams in April), were common features of legislative skirmishes throughout 2011 sessions. (View model legislation here).

It should also be noted that Williams, Gunn and Gilroy were all contributing authors to ALEC's "State Budget Reform Toolkit" (Gilroy also served as a managing editor of the publication), released and distributed to lawmakers in early 2011, and which called for many of the actions taken against public employees and towards privatization in the first quarter of the year. It is also worth noting that Gunn, prior to joining EFF, was a Charles Koch fellowship recipient for work conducted in partnership with the State Policy Network (another ALEC member public policy foundation).

SALRA essentially bars state agencies (and any employees thereof) from lobbying their own state governments in virtually any form. Additionally, SALRA bars state agencies from contracting out lobbying work and prohibits state agencies from payment of "dues for membership in any organization, public or private, that engages in lobbying activities" effectively severing state agency employees from unions engaged in political activity.

The only exemption for state agency lobbying activities provided under SALRA is that the director and deputy director of a state agency may engage in "lobbying" given the tight definition of "lobbying" provided in SALRA, agency directors and deputy directors would be unable to perform the duties of their office (such as recommendations to the governor and legislature) without this exemption.

Compulsory privatization: efficient and competitive councils on outsourcing the public sector

With meddlesome state agency lobbying eliminated, other pieces of ALEC model legislation currently circulated to member lawmakers aim to compel the wholesale privatization of state functions. Three of these bills the Council on Efficient Government Act (CEGA), State Council on Competitive Government Act (SCCGA) and the Public-Private Fair Competition Act (PPFCA) call for the creation of state councils' or committees' tasked with streamlining state agency performance and identifying services to be outsourced to the private sector. (View model legislation here).

Perhaps the most interesting of these pieces of model legislation is PPFCA. This "model" act calls for the broadest scope of privatization by seeking to prohibit state governments from "engaging in any commercial activity of any goods or services to or for government agencies or for public use
"The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways. The point, however, is to change it." Karl Marx

"He would, wouldn't he?" Mandy Rice-Davies. When asked in court whether she knew that Lord Astor had denied having sex with her.

“I think it would be a good idea” Ghandi, when asked about Western Civilisation.
Reply
#16
Well worth reading the pdf report on ALEC [in the post just above]. All good...here is an interesting sample from it:

"Q.E.D.: ALEC, Koch and the GOP
While ALEC claims to be a non-partisan public-private legislative partnership, free of loyalties to any single party or interest, the reality of the organization is similar to that of an aspen grove. Ostensibly, an aspen grove is comprised of many densely clustered individual trees. However, an inspection below the soil reveals that each tree is in fact an offshoot of one large root network-- each tree a manifestation of the same organism. Such is the relationship between ALEC and much of its think tank/"public policy foundation" membership.
ALEC, as an organization, has received significant funding from the Charles Koch Foundation and one of its member (and therefore "donor") organizations is the Cato Institute. According to Cato incorporation documents, the organization was initially incorporated as an offshoot of the Charles Koch Foundation in 1974. David Koch is currently a director of Cato.
A prominent ALEC member think tank, the Reason Foundation (a "libertarian" public policy institute devoted to promoting privatization of governmental functions) is funded in part by the Charles Koch Foundation. David Koch is also a Reason director. Michael Flynn, Reason's current director of government affairs, served as ALEC director of policy and legislative activities/strategic initiatives for several years, ending in 2003.
The Americans for Prosperity Foundation (AFPF, a prominent contributor to the ALEC/Koch public policy network-- initially incorporated as Citizens for a Sound Economy Educational Foundation), is
funded largely by the Charles Koch Foundation and Koch Industries (whose capital is derived primarily from chemical manufacturing and energy production, as well as from diversified holdings in a number of other corporations).
David Koch is the chairman of AFPF, serving on the board alongside Koch Industries Executive Vice President Richard Fink. Fink also serves as president of the Charles Koch Foundation and is executive vice president of the Mercatus Center, yet another Koch-funded right-wing ALEC public policy member.
In 2003, AFPF spawned two more right-wing public policy foundations: Americans for Prosperity (AFP) and FreedomWorks.
From the AFPF/Citizens for a Sound Economy (CSE) rib which formed FreedomWorks was cut AFPF Chief Economist Wayne Brough (who today is FreedomWorks vice president of research and chief economist), and former AFPF/CSE Vice President Matt Kibbe (currently president of both FreedomWorks and the FreedomWorks Foundation).
As noted in AFPF 2003 tax records, the group paid $429,583 in "consulting" fees to former U.S. House Majority Leader Dick Armey (R-TX) through FreedomWorks. Armey had left the House in January of that year. This AFPF expenditure was essentially Armey's first year salary as chairman of FreedomWorks.
From January, 2009 through the November, 2010 midterm elections, FreedomWorks and AFP were instrumental in creating the false populist "Tea Party" movement. Through the orchestration of scores of national tax day protests, conventions and constant mainstream media coverage, FreedomWorks, AFP and other Koch-funded ALEC-member public policy groups (such as the National Taxpayers Union, currently headed by former ALEC executive director Duane Parde) were largely instrumental in ushering in unprecedented Republican legislative majorities nationwide.
And this track record is just what makes ALEC's constant assertions of non-partisanship so laughable.
To illustrate: according to District of Columbia incorporation papers filed for what is today FreedomWorks, the organization had undergone a series of name changes and mergers prior to reaching its current incarnation-- initially being incorporated as "Foundation for Freedom and Capitalism" (FFC) in 1987. The last stage of the organization's growth prior to becoming FreedomWorks was "Citizens for the Environment," (formerly "Taxpayer Action League") incorporated in 1995 by former AFPF/CSE president Paul Beckner.
According to these documents, one of FFC's founding directors was influential GOP strategist/lobbyist extraordinaire Ed Gillespie.
Gillespie served as an aide to House Majority Leader Armey (1995-2003) following the "Repulican Revolution" of 1994. As Communications and Policy Director of the House Republican Conference of 1994, Gillespie, along with such notables as Armey, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-GA, also very active in ALEC in recent years) and Grover Norquist (head of Americans for Tax Reform, also active in ALEC), is credited as being one of the authors of the 1994 GOP "Contract with America."
Following his time in House leadership, Gillespie served as press secretary to the failed presidential bid (1999) of current Ohio Governor John Kasich ®. Kasich, during his time in the Ohio Senate (1978¬
1982) is credited by ALEC as being one of the more active public sector members during the organization's "formative years" (ALEC was founded in 1973).
It should be noted that one of Kasich's first actions as governor of Ohio in 2011 was the unveiling of a plan to sell off and privatize a significant portion of Ohio's correctional infrastructure-- a course of action near and dear to both ALEC and its private prison industry donors. Significantly, Ohio's SB 5, sponsored by ALEC member Sen. Shannon Jones (R-Springboro), eliminated public employee collective bargaining rights as they pertained to issues of privatization.
Following his time with Kasich, Gillespie went on to found, along with former Vice President Al Gore
(D) chief of staff John M. Quinn, the lobby firm of Quinn, Gillespie & Associates. The firm opened their doors in time to lobby for Enron (a former ALEC member corporation) in 2001 on issues of energy industry deregulation (another subject close to the hearts of the Koch network and ALEC). Shortly thereafter, Gillespie announced he would launch an organization dubbed "21st Century Energy Project"-- to include support from AFPF and CSE.
To be fair, Gillespie's lobbying activities on behalf of Enron/Koch energy interests were fairly limited (most likely curtailed by the demise of Enron) compared to lobbying performed on behalf of other clients such as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Diageo (a prominent ALEC member corporation) and AT&T (longtime chair of the ALEC Private Enterprise Board).
Following a stint in 2003 as Republican National Committee chairman, Gillespie went on, in 2007, to serve as an advisor to President George W. Bush, replacing Karl Rove in the twilight of that administration.
At the outset of 2011, Gillespie served as chairman of an RNC transitional team appointed to usher in the sweeping Republican majorities nationwide-- made possible to such a large degree by AFP and FreedomWorks.
Quod erat demonstratum. " Pirate
"Let me issue and control a nation's money and I care not who writes the laws. - Mayer Rothschild
"Civil disobedience is not our problem. Our problem is civil obedience! People are obedient in the face of poverty, starvation, stupidity, war, and cruelty. Our problem is that grand thieves are running the country. That's our problem!" - Howard Zinn
"If there is no struggle there is no progress. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and never will" - Frederick Douglass
Reply
#17

Council for National Policy


The Council for National Policy is a secretive forum that was formed in 1981 by Tim LaHaye as a networking tool for leading USconservative political leaders, financiers and religious right activist leaders. The group, which meets three times a year, promotes "Educational conferences for national leaders in the fields of business, government, religion and academia to explore national policy alternatives. Weekly newsletters are distributed to all members to keep them apprised of member activities and public policy issues. A semi-annual journal is produced from membership meeting speeches."[SUP][1][/SUP]
In 2001, ABC News reported: "The CNP describes itself as a counterweight against liberal domination of the American agenda."[SUP][2][/SUP]
Others are not so kind to the organization and its motives. Mark Crispin Miller states that the CNP is a "highly secretive... theocratic organization -- what they want is basically religious rule" (A Patriot Act). Barry W. Lynn, the executive director of Americans United for Separation of Church and State, told the New York Times about the CNP meeting ahead of the 2004 Republican National Convention, "The real crux of this is that these are the genuine leaders of the Republican Party, but they certainly aren't going to be visible on television next week."[SUP][3][/SUP]
Their Executive Director from 1981 until 1985 was Woody Jenkins. [SUP][4][/SUP]

2006 Meeting

An example of the group's far-reaching influence on the conservative movement in the United States is their May 9, 2006, meeting where speakers included NRA President Sandra Froman, Sen. Rick Santorum (R-Pa.), DHS Secretary Michael Chertoff, Heritage Foundationpresident Edwin Fuelner Jr., Phyllis Schlafly, Grover Norquist, U.S. Ambassador John Bolton, Oliver North and Robert Bork.[SUP][5][/SUP]

Membership

"The media should not know when or where we meet or who takes part in our programs, before of after a meeting," the New York Timesreported in August 2004.[SUP][3][/SUP]

Board of directors

The 2002 calendar year Form 990 return filed with the IRS lists the board of Directors as: Staff members of the Board of Directors are:

Other Members

A copy of the membership roster obtained by Institute for First Amendment Studies, listed current and former members as including: Other members who list their membership in their biographical profiles include: Mark Crispin Miller adds the following members: Addressed the CNP:

Funding

CNP is a 501©(3) non-profit organization. For the year ending December 31, 2002, CNP income was $1,240,377.[SUP][1][/SUP]
According to Media Transparency, between 1995 and 2002 the CNP received $125,000 (unadjusted for inflation) from the Richard and Helen DeVos Foundation and the Castle Rock Foundation. In 2000 the Castle Rock Foundation paid a membership fee of $10,000.[SUP][8][/SUP]
The CNP also has a related 501©(4) organisation CNP Action Inc.. CNP Action re-imbursed CNP $16,563 for the use of its facilities with and $39,457 of staff time.
Joseph Coors gave start-up funding, according to Washington Babylon (p. 11).

Books mentioning CNP

  • Russ Bellant, The Coors Connection, How Coors Family Philanthropy Undermines Democratic Pluralism, South End Press, 2nd edition October 1991. ISBN 0896084167 ISBN 13 978-0896084162

Contact details

10329-A Democracy Lane
Fairfax, Virginia 22030
Phone:
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[COLOR=#49535A !important][B]703 890 0113[/COLOR]
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Journal website: http://www.policycounsel.org/

Resources

Related SourceWatch articles

References

External articles

"The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways. The point, however, is to change it." Karl Marx

"He would, wouldn't he?" Mandy Rice-Davies. When asked in court whether she knew that Lord Astor had denied having sex with her.

“I think it would be a good idea” Ghandi, when asked about Western Civilisation.
Reply
#18

ALEC: The Behind the Scenes Player in the States' Fight Against the Middle Class

Posted: 03/ 7/11 06:01 PM ET






It is no coincidence that Republican legislators and governors -- not just in Wisconsin, but in Ohio, Indiana, Iowa, Tennessee and many other states -- are rushing to pass laws to undermine the collective bargaining rights of both public sector and private sector unions and pass budgets to drastically cut funding for education and other services that serve the broad middle class. It is part of a concerted corporate-funded campaign to continue shifting power and wealth from middle class majority to the richest 1%.
It includes conservative think tanks, lobbying organizations, corporate campaign cash, and corporate-funded astroturf organizations. While the Koch Brothers are poster boys for this campaign, it goes far beyond the Koch Brothers and includes some of the largest corporations headquartered in America from the energy sector to health care to telecommunications.
One of the most influential organization which connects state legislators with corporate money and corporate think tanks to influence pro-corporate, anti-union state legislation is the secretive American Legislative Exchange Council, often known as ALEC. Funded by some of the largest corporations based in the United States, ALEC takes the policy ideas of corporate-friendly think tanks, turns them into hundreds of "model legislation" bills undermining unions, blocking environmental protections, opposing health care reform, and supporting the tobacco and private prison industries.
ALEC then sponsors junkets, such as one recently " target="_hplink">reported by the Arizona Republic, which bring together state legislators (and often their families) with corporate executives and lobbyists to participate in meetings where participants endorse ALEC's model legislation, share meals, enjoy cocktail parties and booze, and often play golf and engage in other recreational activities. Although this sounds an awful lot like lobbying, somehow ALEC is able to skirt the legal label of a lobbying organization and keep its tax status which allows corporate contributions to be tax deductible.
Not surprisingly, ALEC has been active in sponsoring legislation to rein in the influence of unions at the state level, both public sector unions through banning collective bargaining and private sector unions through "right to work" (i.e. right to freeload) legislation. ALEC has been successful in passing hundreds of state laws based exactly or closely on its model legislation. The American Prospect labeled ALEC "The Most Powerful lobby you've never heard of."
So what is ALEC, who funds it, how does it get hundreds of corporate-friendly bills passed in state legislatures throughout the country, and why is it a key player -- perhaps THE key player -- in efforts by Republican Governors and legislatures in numerous states to bust unions?
The vice president of the environmental group, Defenders of Wildlife, which issued a critical report on ALEC along with the National Resources Defense Council called ALEC a "Trojan Horse" that allows "corporate America to exercise significant influence over state legislation in almost every statehouse in the country".
ALEC has two kind of members:
1. State legislators who pay $50 per year in dues and in exchange get junkets to luxury resorts, free or heavily subsidized vacations for their families, and other fringe benefits including free child-care and medical tests, Broadway shows, and dinners at expensive restaurants. ALEC's membership includes 2,400 state legislators, which is over 30% of all state lawmakers in the country.
2. Over 300 corporate sponsors who pay up to $50,000 per year in dues plus up to $5,000 to sit on industry-specific task forces in their areas of interest such as energy, healthcare, telecommunications and taxes. The task forces write and approve the model legislation that conforms to the business interests of their corporate members. Tax records indicate that corporations collectively pay as much as $6 million a year. The corporate executives and their lobbyists then get substantial face time with the state legislators at ALEC's retreats and other events.
According to its website, the corporate funders currently on ALEC's Private Enterprise board include Koch Industries, Altria, Pfizer, GlaxoSmithKlein, Pfizer, Reynolds American Inc. (the parent company of cigarette maker R.J. Reynolds), Energy Future Holdings, Peabody Energy, PhRMA, AT&T, UPS, Wal-Mart Stores Inc., and State Farm Insurance.
A striking example of how ALEC's corporate sponsors work hand in glove with conservative legislators and governors to pass legislation is Arizona's "breathing while brown" anti-immigration law which allows police officers to stop anyone they believe might be an illegal immigrant and imprison him if their papers aren't in order. The model legislation on which the law was based was written by an ALEC task force which included the Corrections Corporation of America, the largest private prisons corporation in the country which financially benefits from imprisoning immigrants. Arizona Governor Jan Brewer's current spokesman is the former chief Arizona lobbyist for the Corrections Corporation of American. According to a report on NPR:
A review of two dozen states now considering Arizona's immigration law shows many of those pushing similar legislation across the country are ALEC members. In fact, five of those legislators were in the hotel conference room with the Corrections Corporation of America the day the model bill was written.
A senior ALEC staffer says that over 200 of ALEC's model bills became law over the past year.
According to In These Times, following are some of ALEC's other legislative initiatives:
"Backed by the oil industry, ALEC has lined up legislators to lower taxes on gasoline and to undermine regulations aimed at curbing the carbon dioxide emissions leading to global warming.
Backed by the drug companies, ALEC has mounted a full-scale campaign to defeat initiatives by cities and states to promote importing lower-priced select medicines from Canada.
Backed by low-wage employers, ALEC has promoted legislation to block local governments from raising local minimum wages or even requiring government contractors to pay a fair wage to their employees.
Backed by the telephone companies, ALEC has worked to bar or hamstring cities that have sought to build cheaper or even free Internet services for their residents.
Backed by the insurance companies, ALEC has been promoting a campaign to stop state insurance commissioners from requiring insurance companies to meet the same accountability and auditing rules that were imposed on publicly-traded corporations in the wake of the Enron debacle."
Bringing it all back to Wisconsin and the other states which are today trying to limit or take away worker rights, ALEC has been a key driver of most of these campaign anti-union initiatives.
ALEC has been at the forefront of attacking state minimum wage laws, blocking cities from implementing living wage laws, and leading efforts to privatize government services in order to turn them over to non-union for-profit contractors. It has also been active in undermining the pensions of government workers and in providing private school vouchers in order to weaken the public school system and its unionized teachers.
Even more crucially, it has in years past been active in "right to work campaigns" which would undermine unions by allowing employees to gain the benefits of union contracts without having to pay union dues, and "paycheck" protection which prevents unions from using dues for political purposes without specific authorization from each member each year, which, where implemented, has drastically reduced the political clout of unions.
Wisconsin Gov. Walker claims to have campaigned on taking away the collective bargaining rights of public works. But while he did campaign on having state employees pay more for their health insurance and their pensions, he suspiciously didn't make his proposals to take away collective bargaining rights until after the election. Rather, after the election, according to Wisconsin's Capitol Times, Walker and Wisconsin Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald jetted off to an ALEC conference where they met with Governors from states where labor rights are weak such as Mississippi's Haley Barbour and Louisiana's Bobby Jindal. Commenting on the ALEC session on right-to-work legislation and other anti-union legislation, Fitzgerald commented that "he was surprised how much momentum there was around that discussion." In the infamous prank phone call in which Gov. Walker believed he was talking to David Koch, Walker bragged of being in daily contact with other Governors proposing anti-union legislation.
ALEC's finger prints are all over the current anti-union legislation being proposed not only in Wisconsin, but in Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, Tennessee, Oklahoma, and numerous other states.
Along with corporate-funded think tanks, corporate PACS, and astroturf organizations like the Koch-backed Americans for Prosperity, ALEC is a key link in the chain of corporate-funded organizations trying to break the back of unions in states throughout the country
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/miles-mogu...#undefined
"The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways. The point, however, is to change it." Karl Marx

"He would, wouldn't he?" Mandy Rice-Davies. When asked in court whether she knew that Lord Astor had denied having sex with her.

“I think it would be a good idea” Ghandi, when asked about Western Civilisation.
Reply
#19
Wednesday, November 30, 2011
O'odham Pepper Sprayed in Phoenix ALEC Protest

By Brenda Norrell
Censored News

David Ortega, Tohono O'odham, suffered a stroke after being pepper sprayed by police and is now at the hospital.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. -- Tohono O'odham protesters at the ALEC protest in Scottsdale, Ariz., in the Phoenix Valley, were pepper sprayed directly in their faces by police. O'odham were non-violent and singled out because police viewed them as key to the protest.
Ofelia Rivas, Tohono O'odham and founder of O'odham VOICE against the Wall, said, "There is a lot of unnecessary police brutality."
O'odham from Tohono O'odham, Salt River and Gila River have joined Navajos resisting relocation from Big Mountain on the Navajo Nation at the protest to battle the corporate influences underway of legislators and lobbyists.
Police helicopters are hovering overhead.
Native American protesters are battling mining interests, the theft of water and land rights, abuse by US Border Patrol agents, desecration of sacred lands and the militarization of the border. On the Navajo Nation, Peabody Coal, responsible for orchestrating the so-called Navajo Hopi land dispute, continues to poison the land, water and air with coal mining for power plants. On the US/Mexico border, the US Border Patrol continues to beat and abuse O'odham and other Indigenous Peoples in their homelands. Uranium mining continues to target the Grand Canyon and Indian lands, while radioactive tailings from the Cold War remain.
In Arizona, corporate profiteers continue to push copper, coal and uranium mining, devastating the land, water and air, and resulting in widespread health problems for the people.
The US/Mexico border wall, and its non-functioning spy towers, has been a source of corporate profiteering for US corporations including Boeing, who entered into a contract with the Israeli Apartheid defense contractor Elbit Systems for the border wall and security systems.
The US is now asking Tohono O'odham to approve new US spy towers on their lands, after the last billion dollar boondoggle of the US, failed spy towers on the Arizona border which did not function.
Further, as the media fans racism which aids border profiteers, G4S based in London, profiteers from transportation contracts for the Wackenhut buses transporting detained migrants from the Arizona border.
Decades of mining has poisoned the water throughout Indian country in Arizona. Meanwhile, corporate interests scheme behind closed doors to seize Indian water rights, working in collusion with the US and state governments.
corporations including Boeing, who entered into a
Livestream:
http://www.justin.tv/occupyphoenix#/w/2162408064
Background:
The American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) begins their meeting today in Scottsdale, in the Phoenix Valley, for their annual State and National Policy Summit from November 30-December 2 2011. Indigenous Peoples, including O'odham, are part of the movement to shut down ALEC.
Protesters in the ALEC march were reported pepper sprayed by police and two arrests made on Wednesday morning. (Please check for updates atwww.bsnorrell.blogspot.com )
"ALEC itself is a tool for hundreds of corporations to use for the sole purpose of obtaining access to thousands of legislators and then exploiting that access to pass profit-making legislation. ALEC works like a think tank, devising legislation that benefits the corporate elite at the cost of the masses and then putting that model legislation in the hands of legislators along with gifts and incentives to urge their passing and now more than 200 of ALEC's model bills have become actual laws throughout the country over the past year," protest organizers said in a statement.
"The links between corporate greed, state oppression, and you have never been clearer. This website is dedicated to the rising resistance against ALEC, their planned summit, and all corporate greed that would serve to perpetuate state oppression in already impoverished communities on already occupied land."
"Let me issue and control a nation's money and I care not who writes the laws. - Mayer Rothschild
"Civil disobedience is not our problem. Our problem is civil obedience! People are obedient in the face of poverty, starvation, stupidity, war, and cruelty. Our problem is that grand thieves are running the country. That's our problem!" - Howard Zinn
"If there is no struggle there is no progress. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and never will" - Frederick Douglass
Reply
#20
Tens Of Thousands March On Koch Industries For Suppressing Voting Rights | This past Saturday, tens of thousands of civil rights activists marched on the New York offices of Koch Industries to protest the Koch brothers' support of restrictive voting laws that disenfranchise millions. In dozens of states, Republican politicians have pushed laws that disproportionately keep Democratic voters, including blacks, Latinos, students, and the poor, from the polls. U.S. Rep. Charles Rangel (D-NY) was among the lawmakers and labor leaders who locked arms and led the march on Madison Avenue. The billionaire Koch brothers help fund the shadowy corporate front group ALEC (the American Legislative Exchange Council) that has modeled restrictive voting legislation.
"Let me issue and control a nation's money and I care not who writes the laws. - Mayer Rothschild
"Civil disobedience is not our problem. Our problem is civil obedience! People are obedient in the face of poverty, starvation, stupidity, war, and cruelty. Our problem is that grand thieves are running the country. That's our problem!" - Howard Zinn
"If there is no struggle there is no progress. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and never will" - Frederick Douglass
Reply


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