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CONGRESSIONAL
LOBBYING
REFORM LEGISLATION
THREATENS FREEDOM OF
SPEECH
by John
Loeffler
Contributor, Steel on
Steel Radio Program
Co-host, Financial Sense Newshour
January 18, 2007
Senate Bill 1
and House Resolution 4682 under Fire
Bad things
often come in good packages. Currently both houses of congess are
considering ethics bills to provide for much-needed lobbying and earmark
reform. However, buried in one section of both house and senate bills
are provisions to severely restrict the ability of grassroots
organizations to monitor the actions of their elected representatives
and report on these to their clients. In reality, it will achieving
exactly the opposite of ethics reform because it allows for more
congressional acvitivty away from public scrutiny.
The advent of
alternative media has had a major impact on U.S politics for the last
twenty years. Slowly but surely the exclusive chokehold the country's
national information gatekeepers -- major radio and TV networks plus the
major newswire services -- previously held on the flow of news has been
eroded by talk radio, both on-air and internet, weblogs and online
newspapers.
A decade ago
politicians discovered with much chagrin that this "alternative
media" was actually affecting the outcomes of elections and
limiting what they could get away with once in office. Statements and
actions by politicians which the mainliners left unchallenged were
examined minutely in the alternative media. Even small sections of
pending bills lawmakers hoped wouldn't be noticed have made it into
blogs and on the air in record time, resulting in angry calls to force
removal of the offending provisions. There are too many people watching
them carefully and reporting through the relatively inexpensive medium
of the internet.
Now it seems
some congressmen want to fight back. Buried within Senate Bill One,
which as we pointed out promotes long-sought lobbying reform, exists
Section 220 defining individuals or organizations reaching more than 500
people on a grassroots level with information about political issues as
lobbying organizations, if the information can be construed as urging
people to contact congress.
These
individuals or groups would be required to register and subsequently
file unwieldy amounts of paperwork, whenever they transmit political
information to their subscribers. Failure to do so would result in
$50,000-$100,000 fines per violation plus jail time for willful failure
to comply. This would be a staggering burden of proof and compliance
to small grass roots individuals or organizations affected by the new
requirements.
Depending on
how the language of the bill is interpreted, groups affected by this
opprobrious legislation includes publishers of small newsletters and
financial publications, websites, broadcast and internet talk show
hosts, alternative radio shows, public interest organizations, civic
organizations, even churches and religious denominations, and other
nonprofit groups. The definitions include even private individuals, who
might voluntarily pay for media space to distribute important messages
to the general public on political matters with which they are
concerned.
Under Senate
Bill One and its House companion bill H.R. 4682 an organization is
classified as a “grassroots lobbying firm” if it attempts to
influence the general public to contact federal officials in order to
express their own views on a federal issue. It must spend only only
$50,000 ($25,000 under the House bill) for such efforts in a quarterly
period, it will be required to register as lobbyists. Many radio
programs and websites easily spend that amount of money in the course of
their activities.
This is not
the first time Congress has sought to impede freedom of speech. Every so
often an attempt is made to revive the Fairness Doctrine, which requires
broadcasters to provide equal time and balanced viewpoints for political
and social issues. While this sounds fair, and it worked when only
editorials were involved, in reality it creates a nightmare for radio
and TV station licensees that engage in talk formats, because the
paperwork and logistics required to comply with such a law make it
impossible for the stations to function. As such the Fairness Doctrine
is a stealth way to suppress free speech on radio stations by making it
very difficult for them to function. As such, even the Financial Sense
Newshour might be forced "off the air."
Providing
this type of compliance for talk shows is impossible and the risk of
large fines for violations of arbitrary stipulations is so great, that
stations tend to cancel talk shows and run programming they consider to
be less "risky." In essence the talk shows can be chased off
the air just with the threat of arbitrary fines and penalties. Senate
Bill One will have the same effect on small grassroots publishers,
websites, radio shows and organizations if it passes as is. Remember,
failure to jump through all the paperwork hoops properly for Senate Bill
One could result in $50,000-$100,000 fines per violation!
Currently, an
amendment to Senate Bill One been proposed by Senator Robert Bennett
(R-UT) to remove Subsection 220 from the bill, which includes grassroots
organizations among those classified as lobbying organizations. Persons
concerned about the loss of alternative media and the danger to free
speech should contact their senators and urge them to vote for the
Bennett amendment. Members of the House should be urged to vote against
provisions in House Resolution 4682, which included grassroots
organizations.
It's
interesting to note that if Senate Bill One were currently law, writing
this would be illegal because we had not filed the proper paperwork with
the federal government. Assaults like this on the First Amendment and
the right of the people to have free speech and seek redress must not to
be tolerated in whatever form they appear.
There is
debate among legal experts as to exactly how the provisions of Senate
Bill One could ultimately be interpreted and applied, which brings us
down to a rule of thumb: If we can't agree what this means as a bill
now, we definitely don't want it as law later.

© 2007 John Loeffler
Editorial Archive
In addition to
co-hosting the Financial Sense Newshour, as a 40-year broadcast news
veteran John Loeffler is also host of the nationally-syndicated news
program Steel on Steel, which can be heard at www.steelonsteel.com. The
weekly program monitors geopolitics, religious and worldview issues, as
well as early-warning intelligence on global trends.
Copyright
© 2007 by John Loeffler, Email
John Loeffler is host of the weekly syndicated talk show, Steel on Steel,
which can be heard at www.steelonsteel.com
Online subscriptions to the show or by tape are available.
John can be reached at (800) 829-5646
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