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Top Lobbying Spenders of 2017

Top 50 Lobbying Spenders of 2017

March 25,2018

the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, according to Open Secrets a government watchdog , the NRA is nowhere near the top lobbyist in Washington DC . Even though , “the NRA reported $779,000 in individual contributions in February. It was the most money raised in 11 months and more than the total raised in November, December and January combined.”

US Chamber of Commerce $82,190,000
National Assn of Realtors $54,530,861
Business Roundtable $27,380,000
Pharmaceutical Research & Manufacturers of America $25,847,500
Blue Cross/Blue Shield $24,330,306
American Hospital Assn $22,074,214
American Medical Assn $21,535,000
Alphabet Inc $18,150,000
AT&T Inc $16,780,000
Boeing Co $16,740,000
Open Society Policy Center $16,110,000
DowDuPont $15,877,520
National Assn of Broadcasters $15,460,000
Comcast Corp $15,310,000
Lockheed Martin $14,464,290
Amazon.com $13,000,000
Southern Co $12,970,000
National Retail Federation $12,890,000
NCTA The Internet & Television Assn $12,790,000
Oracle Corp $12,385,000

Data for the most recent year was downloaded on February 28, 2018.
Feel free to distribute or cite this material, but please credit the Center for Responsive Politics. For permission to reprint for commercial uses, such as textbooks, contact the Center: info@crp.org

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Pitching a gas tax hike and more: Who shelled out the most to sway N.J. lawmakers

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Updated March 05, 2017
Posted March 05, 2017

Hey big spenders

Special interests spent $68.3 million last year lobbying the public, state lawmakers and Gov. Chris Christie’s administration. While total spending was down 2.5 percent from 2015, “spending to promote more funding for state transportation improvement kept lobbying expenditures relatively high,” according to the Election Law Enforcement Commission, which compiled the data.

You remember that one: the fight to replenish the broke fund that pays for road and rail improvements by hiking the gas tax for the first time since Ronald Reagan was president.

Health care was another issue that prompted lots of lobbying.

Here are the top 10 spenders:

https://www.nj.com/politics/index.ssf/2017/03/gas_tax_to_health_care_where_big_money_went_to_woo.html

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SPEAKER BOEHNER PUSHES FOR ONE MORE BAD DEAL BEFORE LEAVING HOUSE

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BY ANDREW TAYLOR AND ERICA WERNER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON (AP) — Speaker John Boehner is trying to make one last deal as he heads for the exits, pushing to finalize a far-reaching, two-year budget agreement before handing Congress’ top job over to Paul Ryan this week, congressional officials said Monday.

The deal, in concert with a must-pass increase in the federal borrowing limit, would solve the thorniest issues awaiting Ryan, who is set to be elected speaker on Thursday. It would also take budget showdowns and government shutdown fights off the table until after the 2016 presidential election, a potential boon to Republican candidates who might otherwise face uncomfortable questions about messes in the GOP-led Congress.

Congress must raise the federal borrowing limit by Nov. 3 or risk a first-ever default, while money to pay for government operations runs out Dec. 11 unless Congress acts. Top House and Senate aides have been meeting with White House officials in search of a deal that would give both the Pentagon and domestic agencies budget relief in exchange for cuts elsewhere in the budget.

The measure under discussion would suspend the current $18.1 trillion debt limit through March 2017. After that it would be reset by the Treasury Department to reflect borrowing over that time.

https://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_CONGRESS_BUDGET?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2015-10-26-12-34-27

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A limit to pension investing oversight as political donations from executives can go unchecked

New-Jersey-State-Capitol

A limit to pension investing oversight as political donations from executives can go unchecked

MAY 27, 2014, 11:10 PM    LAST UPDATED: TUESDAY, MAY 27, 2014, 11:11 PM
BY MELISSA HAYES AND JOHN REITMEYER
STATE HO– USE BUREAU
THE RECORD

Last year, nearly 2,000 businesses doing $6.4 billion in public work reported — as required by state law — that they made $10.1 million in contributions to New Jersey’s various political parties and candidates.

But when it comes to New Jersey’s pension fund — and the increasing share of the nearly $77 billion in assets going to hedge funds, private equity and venture capital funds — such disclosures aren’t so clear-cut.

The pay-to-play law makes it clear that executives and their employees working on the state’s pension fund investments cannot make political contributions to New Jersey candidates and political committees. But those venture capital firms and hedge funds often take the state pension dollars and invest them in other companies whose executives do not have to disclose their political donations.

Now the pension fund’s directors are putting more money into those alternative investments. The complex nature of those investments, the inability of the pay-to-play law to cover all their financial relationships and the lack of any accompanying public database like the one for state contractors make tracking political connections difficult. That comes as Governor Christie has built a national fundraising network that includes donors with backgrounds in the finance industry.

And the state Department of Treasury relies on the investment firms themselves to determine which employees are covered by the law, and to disclose any political contributions made by them. The Election Law Enforcement Commission, which regulates other businesses with state contracts, also relies on companies to self-report contributions. But the commission also maintains a public database of campaign donations and state contractors that allows for increased scrutiny of the donors doing public business.

The council that oversees the state’s investments will meet today for the first time since Christie announced last week that he would cut nearly $900 million from this year’s pension payment to close a budget gap.

The New Jersey State Investment Council, which manages the $76.76 billion pension system, is set to discuss three alternative investment proposals and get an update on its plan for the coming fiscal year. The meeting comes as questions have been raised over the legality of Christie’s scaled-back pension payments and amid claims that the state awarded investments to campaign contributors who support the governor.

From the council’s agenda, it’s unclear whether it will discuss Christie’s reductions or the pay-to-play allegations. A spokesman did not respond to a request for comment Tuesday.

The New Jersey Education Association and the Communications Workers of America, which represents state employees, are already threatening to sue Christie after he signed an executive order last week setting the pension payment for this year at $696 million, down from $1.58 billion. The governor is also calling on lawmakers to approve a $681 million payment for the fiscal year beginning July 1, down from the $2.25 billion the state was supposed to contribute under phased-in payments Christie signed into law in 2010.

The governor said the state cannot afford to pay for the “sins of the past” and acknowledged that the contributions he agreed to are too burdensome. Christie said he plans to announce additional changes to public employee pensions next month.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/news/a-limit-to-pension-investing-oversight-as-political-donations-from-executives-can-go-unchecked-1.1024284#sthash.0VZzacRs.dpuf