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Austin’s Oldest Profession: Texas’ Top Lobby Clients & Those Who Service Them
2002 Edition

III. Lobbyists

B. Fattest Lobby Contracts
PACs2000
Lobbyists reported 17 mega-contracts in 2001 worth unspecified amounts of “more than $200,000.” The public has no way of knowing whether these contracts were worth $200,001 apiece or $5 million. In another disclosure failing, only five of these 17 mega-contracts revealed full information about both sides of a conventional lobby-client relationship. Eleven lobbyists who reported huge contracts listed their own lobby firm as the source of their mega-contract. For another such contract, the Texas Association of Realtors listed itself as both the lobbyist and client. There is no way to know if unethical lobbyists and firms abuse this kind of disclosure to conceal the identities of other paying clients. Texas’ No. 1 hired gun, Baker Botts’ Pamela Giblin, is the only lobbyist who reported two mega contracts: one with her employer and one with the Brownsville Public Utilities Board.
Fattest Contracts With Real Clients
(Contract Value Exceeds $200,000)
Client Lobbyist
Assoc. General Contractors Karen A. Johnson
Brownsville Public Utilities Bd Pamela M. Giblin
Swisher International, Inc. Jim Short
TX Association of Realtors ????
TX Electric Cooperatives Campbell McGinnis
TX Trial Lawyers Assoc. Nicholas K. Kralj
Fat Contracts With Lobby Firm 'Clients'
(Contract Value Exceeds $200,000)
Lobby Firm 'Client' Lobbyist
Baker Botts Robert Strauser
Baker Botts Kim Sherman
Baker Botts Larry F. York
Baker Botts Pamela M. Giblin
Baker Botts Mary Keller
Bicameral Consultants, Inc. Johnnie Rogers Jr.
Locke Liddell & Sapp Gary D. Compton
McGinnis Lochridge & Kilgore Robert C. Wilson
McGinnis Lochridge & Kilgore Gaylord Armstrong
Vinson & Elkins Joe Bill Watkins
Winstead Sechrest & Minick Kent A. Caperton

Sweet Victory
The nation’s top producer of premium snuff and chaw tried to snuff out its competitors in 2001. Since U.S. Tobacco’s (UST’s) Skoal and Copenhagen brands sell for much more than competing discount brands, it would benefit if Texas taxed these goods by weight rather than price. 

Spending up to $360,000 on Texas lobbyists in 2001, UST (backed by its McLane Co. distributor and Texas Comptroller Carole Keeton Rylander) floated such a tax bill (HB 3382). A year earlier, Rylander broke from her predecessors by agreeing to settle a $27 million lawsuit over smokeless tobacco taxes with the McLane Co., which was owned by Rylander campaign Treasurer Drayton McLane. 18

Yet the UST tax give away was defeated with opposition from the Smokeless Tobacco Council trade group and Swisher International. Having never hired a Texas lobbyist before, the producer of Swisher Sweets cigars and many smokeless tobacco products suddenly took out a mega-contract of “more than $200,000” with Houston lobbyist Jim Short.



Copyright © 2002 Texans for Public Justice