[ Austin’s Oldest Profession: Texas’ Top Lobby Clients & Those Who Service Them 2002 Edition II. Lobby ClientsC. Million-Dollar Clients |
The remainder of this report analyzes Texas lobby contract data that were current in July 2001, after the close of the 77th Texas Legislature. By that time, 1,400 lobbyists had registered 6,007 paid lobby contracts with the Texas Ethics Commission. These lobbyists reported receiving between $95 million and $211 million for these contracts.By the end of the 2001 legislative session, 14 clients had maximum lobby expenditures of more than $1 million apiece (see the appendix for Texas’ top 105 lobby clients). Together, these mega-clients took out 409 lobby contracts—or 6 percent of the state total. These clients paid up to almost $25 million for these contracts, accounting for 11 percent of all the lobby money spent in Texas in 2001. Southwestern Bell was far and away the largest lobby force, spending up to almost $7 million on 96 lobby contracts (see below). Many of Texas’ biggest lobby clients will be discussed further in the pages to come.
2001 Lobby Client |
Value (Max.) |
Contracts |
Interest Category |
SBC Corp (Southwestern Bell) |
|
|
Communications/Electronics |
Electronic Data Systems Corp |
|
|
Communications/Electronics |
DuPont |
|
|
Energy/Natural Resources |
Reliant Energy |
|
|
Energy/Natural Resources |
TXU |
|
|
Energy/Natural Resources |
ExxonMobil |
|
|
Energy/Natural Resources |
Assoc. of Electric Co's of TX |
|
|
Energy/Natural Resources |
Baker Botts |
|
|
Lawyers/Lobbyists |
TX Municipal League |
|
|
Ideological/Single-Issue |
City of Austin |
|
|
Ideological/Single-Issue |
AT&T |
|
|
Communications/Electronics |
City of Houston |
|
|
Ideological/Single-Issue |
TX Assoc. of Realtors |
|
|
Real Estate |
Verizon |
|
|
Communications/Electronics |
|
Weighing in again as Texas’ top lobby interest,
Southwestern Bell parent company SBC Corp. spent up to $7 million on 96
lobby contracts in 2001. The company’s 2001 lobby spending was up 38 percent
from the up to $5 million that it spent on 127 contracts in the 1999 legislative
session.
In 2001, when it hired ex-Senator John Montford as its vice president of external affairs and outgoing Public Utility Commissioner Judy Walsh as its vice president of regulatory policy, Bell had seven former state legislators on its lobby payroll.3 It also was one of the top clients that paid Dan Morales a total of more than $1.1 million in 1999. Although Morales said he did not lobby, this money fueled a scandal because—as state attorney general two years earlier—Morales backed a Southwestern Bell lawsuit that sought entry to long-distance phone markets before Bell complied with a federal mandate to open its local phone network to competition. On Bell’s dime, Morales later backed the company’s Ameritech merger before federal regulators.4 Bell’s lobby clout is legendary. A 1999 telecommunications
law (SB 560) invited Bell to jack up fees on many services such as caller
identification. A provision that Bell did not like, however, required companies
that sell advanced telecommunications services to offer these services
in rural areas at reasonable rates. In a rare defeat in 2001, Bell lobbyists
failed to pass a bill that would have watered down this rural-service mandate—even
as it offered state subsidies to comply with it (SB 1783).
|