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The startling story of the monumental growth of lobbying in Washington, D.C., and how it undermines effective government and pollutes our politics.
A true insider, Robert G. Kaiser has monitored American politics for The Washington Post for nearly half a century. In this sometimes shocking and always riveting book, he explains how and why, over the last four decades, Washington became a dysfunctional capital. At the heart of his story is money—money made by special interests using campaign contributions and lobbyists to influence government decisions, and money demanded by congressional candidates to pay for their increasingly expensive campaigns, which can cost a staggering sum. In 1974, the average winning campaign for the Senate cost $437,000; by 2006, that number had grown to $7.92 million. The cost of winning House campaigns grew comparably: $56,500 in 1974, $1.3 million in 2006.
Politicians’ need for money and the willingness, even eagerness, of special interests and lobbyists to provide it explain much of what has gone wrong in Washington. They have created a mutually beneficial, mutually reinforcing relationship between special interests and elected representatives, and they have created a new class in Washington, wealthy lobbyists whose careers often begin in public service. Kaiser shows us how behavior by public officials that was once considered corrupt or improper became commonplace, how special interests became the principal funders of elections, and how our biggest national problems—health care, global warming, and the looming crises of Medicare and Social Security, among others—have been ignored as a result.
Kaiserilluminates this progression through the saga of Gerald S. J. Cassidy, a Jay Gatsby for modern Washington. Cassidy came to Washington in 1969 as an idealistic young lawyer determined to help feed the hungry. Over the course of thirty years, he built one of the city’s largest and most profitable lobbying firms and accumulated a personal fortune of more than $100 million. Cassidy’s story provides an unprecedented view of lobbying from within the belly of the beast.
A timely and tremendously important book that finally explains how Washington really works today, and why it works so badly.
From the Hardcover edition.
a fascinating book…[So Much Damn Money] will help us understand national politics by giving us a close-up look at a key lobbying firm that pioneered the expansion of earmarks.
More Reviews and RecommendationsRobert G. Kaiser, with The Washington Post since 1963, has covered Congress, the White House, and national politics; reported from abroad as the Post’s correspondent in Saigon and Moscow; served as the paper’s national editor and managing editor; and is now associate editor and senior correspondent. He has written for Esquire, Foreign Affairs, and The New York Review of Books, and is the author or coauthor of six books, including Russia: The People and the Power. He has received awards from both the Overseas Press Club and the National Press Club. He lives in the town where he was born: Washington, D.C.
From the Hardcover edition.
The startling story of the monumental growth of lobbying in Washington, D.C., and how it undermines effective government and pollutes our politics.
A true insider, Robert G. Kaiser has monitored American politics for The Washington Post for nearly half a century. In this sometimes shocking and always riveting book, he explains how and why, over the last four decades, Washington became a dysfunctional capital. At the heart of his story is money—money made by special interests using campaign contributions and lobbyists to influence government decisions, and money demanded by congressional candidates to pay for their increasingly expensive campaigns, which can cost a staggering sum. In 1974, the average winning campaign for the Senate cost $437,000; by 2006, that number had grown to $7.92 million. The cost of winning House campaigns grew comparably: $56,500 in 1974, $1.3 million in 2006.
Politicians’ need for money and the willingness, even eagerness, of special interests and lobbyists to provide it explain much of what has gone wrong in Washington. They have created a mutually beneficial, mutually reinforcing relationship between special interests and elected representatives, and they have created a new class in Washington, wealthy lobbyists whose careers often begin in public service. Kaiser shows us how behavior by public officials that was once considered corrupt or improper became commonplace, how special interests became the principal funders of elections, and how our biggest national problems—health care, global warming, and the looming crises of Medicare and Social Security, among others—have been ignored as a result.
Kaiserilluminates this progression through the saga of Gerald S. J. Cassidy, a Jay Gatsby for modern Washington. Cassidy came to Washington in 1969 as an idealistic young lawyer determined to help feed the hungry. Over the course of thirty years, he built one of the city’s largest and most profitable lobbying firms and accumulated a personal fortune of more than $100 million. Cassidy’s story provides an unprecedented view of lobbying from within the belly of the beast.
A timely and tremendously important book that finally explains how Washington really works today, and why it works so badly.
From the Hardcover edition.
a fascinating book…[So Much Damn Money] will help us understand national politics by giving us a close-up look at a key lobbying firm that pioneered the expansion of earmarks.
The life story of Washington lobbyist Gerald Cassidy is used to "illuminate how Washington has changed over the past three decades" in this bleak but informative book. Kaiser, an associate editor at the Washington Post, traces the ascendance of Cassidy, from his rough childhood in the 1950s to the incorporation of his lobbying firm, a pioneer in winning congressional earmarks for its clients, which Cassidy cofounded with Kenneth Schlossberg in 1975. The relationship between the two partners was dissolved in 1984, but Cassidy continued to build what became one of the most powerful and wealthy firms in the industry before it slipped from its vanguard status in the last few years. The author also lays out a larger history of influence peddling in federal politics, stretching back to the Civil War era, and examines the evolution of today's "permanent campaigns." The author's gestures to a broader historical narrative-often in alternating chapters-sometimes distract from his nuanced examination of the rise and decline of Cassidy and Associates, but Kaiser manages to vividly elaborate the firm's history while placing it in the context of a degenerating political culture. (Jan.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.Evenhanded study of the role of special-interest dollars in contemporary governance. The average cost to mount a Senate campaign in 1974 was $437,000, notes Washington Post associate editor Kaiser (Why Gorbachev Happened, 1991, etc.). In 2006, that number was $7.92 million. Not coincidentally, the intervening period saw the rise of highly paid political consultants, expensive think tanks and lobbyists whose main job was to funnel money from one favored party to another while diverting substantial portions of it for overhead costs in ways that would make a pirate blush. Kaiser opens with the noted scoundrel Jack Abramoff, a protege of former House powerbroker Tom DeLay, who in turn masterminded an arrangement with K Street that "was both brazen and remarkably successful." If those lobbyists supplied the Republican Party with millions of dollars, then they would be allowed to participate in the legislative process and even propose bills on their own hook. Abramoff would become infamous for taking DeLay at his word, notably by bilking American Indian tribes out of vast fees for little in return. As Kaiser notes, however, lobbying of this sort was not the exclusive province of the Republicans. One of the recurrent figures in the book, Gerald Cassidy, was a Democratic Party stalwart who practically invented modern big-ticket lobbying, getting things done by becoming "a huge financial resource for members of Congress," though Kaiser credits Cassidy with motives that, unlike most of those who followed him, were not entirely self-serving. The flood of money introduced into the political system through lobbying firms has been damaging to the political process, Kaiser maintains, if only because itputs politicians at that much more remove from the very real fiscal concerns of their constituents. The author offers a telling quote from Sen. Chuck Hagel: "We've blown past the ethical standards, we now play on the edge of the legal standards." Apparently, laws are made only for those who can afford them. Eye-opening, and a key to understanding how money works in Washington-for the most part, corruptly. First printing of 60,000. Author tour to New York and Washington, D.C.
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