For the first 52 months of the Bush presidency (January 2001 to May 2005), private sector jobs are down 24,000. Since the Great Depression no other president who served at least 52 months has overseen a net loss in private sector jobs through this point.
Yet, the news is not all bad. The good news is that while the private sector’s job market has been bleak since Bush’s inauguration, there is at least one sector that’s been hiring like crazy. The bad news is the sector is Washington’s powerful lobbying industry.
To the great growth industries of America such as health care and home building add one more: influence peddling.
The number of registered lobbyists in Washington has more than doubled since 2000 to more than 34,750 while the amount that lobbyists charge their new clients has increased by as much as 100 percent. Only a few other businesses have enjoyed greater prosperity in an otherwise fitful economy.
The lobbying boom has been caused by three factors, experts say: rapid growth in government, Republican control of both the White House and Congress, and wide acceptance among corporations that they need to hire professional lobbyists to secure their share of federal benefits.
“There’s unlimited business out there for us,” said Robert L. Livingston, a Republican former chairman of the House Appropriations Committee and now president of a thriving six-year-old lobbying firm. “Companies need lobbying help.”
And when Livingston says “help,” he means corporate clients hire Republican lobbyists to help generate generous benefits for Big Business from Congress.
As Jeffrey Birnbaum noted today, lobbying was a reactive response during the Clinton years, because “corporations had to fend off proposals that would have restricted them or cost them money.” Now, Republicans are running the show and corporate interests know it’s a unique opportunity — to get new tax breaks, loosen regulations, and receive “other government goodies that increasingly are available.”
It’s created a K Street environment in which lobbying firms can’t hire people fast enough. Starting salaries have risen to about $300,000 a year and nearly half of all lawmakers who return to the private sector when they leave Congress have become lobbyists. And, of course, all the new lobbyists are Republicans — by congressional fiat.
When I said it’d be nice to see someone get a private sector job in Bush’s America, this isn’t exactly what I had in mind.