Lobbyist-Bashing by Obama Doesn’t Dim Industry’s Boom Forecast
Lobbyists Heather and Tony Podesta took over a Denver restaurant during the Democratic National Convention in August to host a party for lawmakers and other power brokers. Their guests wore Barack Obama buttons. The Podestas were wearing a label of their own: a scarlet “L.”
The tags were an allusion to President-elect Obama’s demonization of lobbyists throughout the campaign, even banning them from raising money for him or making contributions.
Now, with Obama ready to take office in January, lobbyists aren’t quavering with fear. Many view the changed political landscape in Washington as a potential boon for their firms, which will be called upon to help clients navigate Congress and a new administration.
“We’re not worried,” said former Democratic Representative Vic Fazio of California, now a senior adviser at the law and lobbying firm Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP. “We will do well.”
Obama has a number of people affiliated with lobbying firms on his transition team, and yesterday, former Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle accepted an offer to be secretary of Health and Human Services. Daschle, who will lead the new administration’s effort to revamp the U.S. health-care system, works for Alston & Bird LLP.
Daschle has been able to serve as an Obama campaign adviser because he wasn’t registered as a lobbyist, though his firm earned $3.5 million this year lobbying for the health industry, including companies such as Woonsocket, Rhode Island-based CVS/Caremark Corp. and Birmingham, Alabama-based HealthSouth Corp. The health industry accounted for 60 percent of the firm’s lobbying revenue during the first nine months of 2008.