| Foreword
Defenders of Wildlife and the Natural
Resources Defense Council assembled this unprecedented, jointly produced
report to help shine the public spotlight on a corrosive, secretive and
highly influential power in state capitals around the nation — the American
Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC). As documented in the pages that follow,
while ALEC purports to be a “good-government” group operating in the public
interest, its sole mission is to advance special-interest legislation across
the nation on behalf of its corporate sponsors and funders. The organization’s
behind-the-scenes advocacy has been surprisingly effective – leading, according
to ALEC material, to the enactment of more than 450 state laws during the
1999 and 2000 state legislative sessions.
ALEC would have the public believe
that it’s an association of elected members of the 50 state legislatures
with varying political and public policy philosophies. However, ALEC is
nothing less than a tax-exempt facade for the country’s largest corporations
and kindred entities. Companies likes Enron, Amoco, Chevron, Shell, Texaco,
Coors Brewing, Koch Industries, Nationwide Insurance, Pfizer, National
Energy Group, Philip Morris, and R. J. Reynolds pay for essentially all
of ALEC’s expenses. The payments might be membership dues, fees to sit
on nine industry-specific committees that approve “model” bills, expenditures
for lavish parties and entertainment, or “scholarships” to pay for targeted
legislators to attend ALEC’s junket-like meetings.
ALEC’s role is especially insidious
because state law-making bodies are even Foreword more vulnerable to secretive
and well-financed corporate advocacy than the U.S. Congress. Many states
have little or no public reporting requirements that would require disclosure
of junkets and gifts awarded to legislators by ALEC, and little or no lobbying
disclosure laws requiring public release of information about ALEC’s funding
support and methods of operation. State legislatures are often made up
primarily of underpaid, under-appreciated, part-time lawmakers with few
if any personal staff to help research, evaluate and enact complex laws,
and are notoriously parsimonious in providing for their own analytical
needs. Meanwhile, the public advocacy groups most likely to oppose corporate
excesses are too thinly funded to compete effectively in most states. For
all of these reasons, ALEC’s approach of brazenly promoting a corporate
agenda as the product of a supposedly objective, nonprofit organization
is especially effective in state legislatures, and especially attractive
to the corporations that set its advocacy agenda.
Environment is an especially popular
target for ALEC, which is currently promoting more than two dozen industry
bills related to energy and environmental protection. According to one
staff
member, the goal is “...to break the stranglehold of the command-and-control
policies promoted by the EPA (Environmental Protection Agency) and the
extremist environmental lobby.” But this is only one aspect of ALEC’s reach.
While our organizations are of course especially concerned about ALEC’s
destructive environmental initiatives, the organization’s “model” bills
cover the full range of subjects on which business has a state legislative
interest, including health care, land use, tobacco restrictions, mandated
employee benefits, utility regulation, agriculture, tax policy, education
and much more.
American capitalism has helped give
this country the highest standard of living in history, and its potential
to continue to do the same is remarkable if the rules within which government
requires that it compete, grow and evolve are properly drawn to protect
our environment and quality of life against corporate excesses. These protections
are essential in part because it is the nature of the corporate ethic to
continually fight to obtain the most lenient regulatory environment possible
in order to maximize profits and stock price. The resulting pressures can
create an attitude that whatever is possible within the law is justified,
as is re-shaping the law to make it increasingly more permissive.
Due to the magnitude and visibility
of the Enron collapse, the public can hope for some remedial action at
the federal level. But that is not sufficient. Polluters, developers, and
their big business allies will use their extensive resources to finance
a corporate takeover of state government if we continue to turn a blind
eye to the deceptive and insidious work of the American Legislative Exchange
Council. It is time to hold this group, and its members, accountable for
the greater public interest.
Rodger Schlickeisen
President
Defenders of Wildlife |
John Adams
President
Natural Resources Defense Council |
|