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Following the ALEC laws

 
 
BumbleBeeBoogie
 
  1  
Reply Wed 18 Apr, 2012 08:24 am
@Lustig Andrei,
Striking Back Against Corruption and Greed
Suzanne Merkelson, United Republic [email protected] to me

Spread the Word

Dear BumbleBeeBoogie,

How does corruption actually work? How do corporations control our politics on a daily basis? They do it through front groups, organizations that bring lawmakers together with corporate officers to craft and plan legislation in secret. One key front group that has been doing this since the 1970s is the American Legislative Exchange Council, better known as ALEC.

Under massive public pressure, 11 of ALEC's biggest corporate funders have dropped out, including Coke, Pepsi, Kraft, and Wendys. More are leaving every day.

Click here to try out this handy scorecard where you can see who's in and who's out, and tell those still funding ALEC that it's time to quit.

ALEC is best known for promoting the “Stand Your Ground Law” that allowed the man who shot Trayvon Martin’s killer to escape prosecution for 40 days. But that’s just a small part of ALEC’s reach. The group actually allows corporations to vote on its model laws, which it then promotes to state legislators all over the country. These laws poison our air, raise prices on a whole set of goods and services, while depressing wages, stop people from voting, and make our lives worse.

ALEC and its corporate members didn’t want you to know that.

Corporations like Wal-Mart, Johnson & Johnson, FedEx, and ExxonMobil all fund ALEC through membership dues. It doesn’t make sense to us that these corporations support laws that hurt their customers, employees, and shareholders. So we organized a letter asking the members of ALEC’s Private Enterprise Board to quit the organization. 6,937 of you signed the letter in support of our action.

And it’s worked.

Over the past week, Coca-Cola, PepsiCo, KraftFoods, Wendy’s, Intuit, and McDonald’s have all announced that they’ve left ALEC. This is thanks to people like you who told the corporations who make the things you love that it’s not okay for them to spend your money promoting laws like Stand Your Ground. It’s also thanks to hardworking groups like ColorofChange and the Center for Media and Democracy, who put pressure on these corporations to drop out.


Share the success on your Facebook wall and Twitter feed or email your friends to let them know that you helped and they can too. If you haven’t signed the letter yet, now is your chance. Sign here.

You can also tweet at the corporations who’ve left ALEC — and those still funding it and its harmful agenda — what you think here.

We’re continuing to track this story on Republic Report. You can sign up to receive daily updates here.

Regards,

Lee Fang
David Halperin
Zaid Jilani
Suzanne Merkelson
Matt Stoller

Editors, Republic Report
0 Replies
 
boomerang
 
  1  
Reply Wed 18 Apr, 2012 08:50 am
@dlowan,
Bill Gates is the front-runner in the race to decimate America's public school system, with Eli Broad and the Walton (Walmart) family close behind.

They fund ALEC to further their goals.

I loved it when Gates tried to call out Diane Ravitch and she responded....
http://voices.washingtonpost.com/answer-sheet/diane-ravitch/ravitch-answers-gates.html
BumbleBeeBoogie
 
  1  
Reply Wed 18 Apr, 2012 02:29 pm
@boomerang,
Apr. 18, 2012
American Legislative Exchange Council to abandon gun rights, other social causes
Toluse Olorunnipa and Erika Bolstad | McClatchy Newspapers

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. -- ]

The organization that helped spread Florida's controversial Stand Your Ground law across the country is halting its push for gun rights in the wake of the national outcry over Trayvon Martin's shooting death.

The American Legislative Exchange Council said Tuesday that it would shift focus from social to economic issues, abandoning causes like gun rights and voter identification laws.

"Today we are redoubling our efforts on the economic front, a priority that has been the hallmark of our organization for decades," ALEC national chairman and Indiana state lawmaker David Frizzell said in a statement. "We are eliminating the ALEC Public Safety and Elections task force that dealt with non-economic issues, and reinvesting these resources in the task forces that focus on the economy."

Sparked by several defections by a number of large companies in recent weeks, ALEC's announcement signaled a major about-face for an organization that wielded considerable sway in changing the way 25 states deal with deadly encounters and self-defense.

ALEC, an organization of hundreds of state legislators and private companies, also supported the recent wave of voting law changes that critics decry as voter suppression.

"The American public has wised up to ALEC's misguided and secretive attempts to co-opt state legislators for corporate profit," said Common Cause President Bob Edgar. "In folding its Public Safety and Elections Task Force, ALEC is abandoning under pressure the most controversial part of its agenda; that's an important victory for the American public."

In 2005, the National Rifle Association - a strong ALEC supporter - helped usher the Stand Your Ground law through Florida's Legislature, broadening the state's self-defense provisions to shield people who use deadly force outside of their homes.

The NRA celebrated the law's passage in Florida, and immediately set its sight on spreading the provision nationwide. The group's executive vice president, Wayne LaPierre, told The Washington Post in 2005 that the Florida Legislature represented the "first step of a multistate strategy."

After Florida Gov. Jeb Bush signed the bill, NRA lobbyist Marion Hammer kicked off the multistate plan, pitching the Stand Your Ground law language to ALEC during a closed-door meeting, where members drafted model laws for other state legislatures.

Within a year, nearly a dozen states, from Alabama to Oklahoma, had passed legislation similar or identical to Florida's new statute, with ALEC and the NRA working behind the scenes.

"After 2005, the Stand Your Ground law jumped into 15 other states, overnight practically," said Arthur Hayhoe, executive director of Florida Coalition to Stop Gun Violence. "And ALEC was right there."

The NRA has spent more than $2 million on political contributions at the state level since 2005, with Florida receiving a large chunk, according to National Institute on Money in State Politics records.

As the money flowed into state legislatures, more and more states adopted ALEC's Stand Your Ground language in lopsided, bipartisan votes.

By the time 17-year-old Trayvon was shot dead Feb. 26 in Sanford, 25 states had created Stand Your Ground laws, and the statute had been used in more than 100 cases in Florida.

Since Trayvon's death, Florida's Stand Your Ground law has been lambasted by national commentators and editorial boards across the country. Florida Gov. Rick Scott created a task force to review the law, and some state lawmakers vowed to repeal it all together next year.

"Now that the Trayvon Martin case is out there, the concern is how many copycats are we going to get?" said Sen. Chris Smith, D-Fla., who created a task force to review the law. "Now is really a time to look at this law."

That national spotlight turned to ALEC in recent weeks, with interest groups and media outlets highlighting the group's role in spreading the law across the nation.

Organized campaigns by left-leaning groups targeted ALEC's corporate members like Coca Cola, McDonalds and Johnson & Johnson. Several of those companies have since cut ties with the organization in recent weeks. ColorOfChange, an online civil rights group, led much of the charge.

ALEC called it a "coordinated intimidation campaign," and criticized members of the media and interest groups who put pressure on its corporate members.

"In the end, we will always respect people who disagree with us in matters of policy, but it is simply wrong to try to score political points by taking advantage of a great tragedy like Trayvon Martin's death," the group said last month in a statement.

While some groups welcomed ALEC's move, others said it was not enough and pushed for a full repeal of the Stand Your Ground law.

"A simple disavowal of their misguided activities will be insufficient to correct the damage they have caused," Marc H. Morial, president of the National Urban League, said in a statement. "We call upon ALEC to lead the charge on our campaign to reform or repeal these laws."
0 Replies
 
FreeDuck
 
  1  
Reply Fri 20 Apr, 2012 07:17 am
Conservative Group's Charity Status Draws Questions
Quote:

...

As a 501(c)(3)charity — similar to the Red Cross or a religious congregation — ALEC is allowed to do some lobbying. The rule of thumb is up to about 20 percent of the budget. But on ALEC's annual tax returns, where it asks if the organization engaged in any lobbying activities, ALEC officers check "no."

Marcus Owens, a tax attorney and the former head of the Internal Revenue Service division on tax-exempt organizations, says it seems that "what ALEC does is either lobbying, or it isn't. And it appears to be all of what ALEC does. So it's kind of ... a zero-sum game here."

ALEC said it's being demonized by its ideological opponents.

...
0 Replies
 
msolga
 
  2  
Reply Fri 20 Apr, 2012 08:54 pm
For anyone else having a bit of trouble keeping up (like me) I found this this article on ALEC really helpful, in the Sydney Morning Herald, of all places!
A good insight into the background & the latest developments.:

The loaded gun - how a US lobby group wrote the laws:
http://www.smh.com.au/world/the-loaded-gun--how-a-us-lobby-group-wrote-the-laws-20120420-1xcg5.html
FreeDuck
 
  2  
Reply Thu 26 Apr, 2012 01:40 pm
@FreeDuck,
FreeDuck wrote:

I should say that I don't know for certain this is an ALEC law. I guessed that it was because it fits the pattern of their legislation: being considered in more than one state with similar language, opposed by constituents, no clear impetus for the bill in the state it was introduced. If I find confirming documentation I'll provide it.


I believe I have pretty strong evidence that the drug testing bills are from ALEC. Georgia just passed a similar bill (which will be challenged in court as soon as the rubber hits the road) and the senate version of the bill was introduced by one Senator John Albers of Roswell who is a member of ALEC. However the virtually identical house bill was sponsored by Rep. Jason Spencer who does not appear to be an ALEC member, though he did work closely with Albers to draft his bill.

When signing the bill into law, our governor cited bad research from the Foundation for Government Accountability, whose website indicates links to ALEC. Sadly, the bills sponsors did not wait for data released from Florida that showed that the program actually cost them more money than they saved.
0 Replies
 
FreeDuck
 
  1  
Reply Thu 26 Apr, 2012 01:48 pm
@msolga,
That's a good one, msolga. Thanks for posting it.
0 Replies
 
Advocate
 
  1  
Reply Fri 27 Apr, 2012 10:57 am
I wonder whether ALEC has a hand in the new GOP war on youth.

Obama is trying to stabilize the interest rates on loans to college students, while the GOP is obstructing this.
FreeDuck
 
  1  
Reply Fri 27 Apr, 2012 11:58 am
Looks like this is something I can fight locally on since my state seems to be infected pretty deeply. Notice the language used. I think it indicates fear.

Georgia Republicans defend ALEC
Quote:
MARIETTA — Some longtime Cobb Republicans are lashing back at critics of the American Legislative Exchange Council, a Washington-based nonprofit that touts itself as a group where business interests and lawmakers can “exchange practical, state-level public policy issues.”

Earlier this month, Coca-Cola dropped its ties to ALEC amid pressure from activists over legislation like Florida’s “Stand Your Ground” law, which is blamed in part for the controversial shooting death there of a black teenager, Trayvon Martin.

State Sen. Chip Rogers, of Woodstock, is the national treasurer of ALEC. He is also one of two state chairs of the group for Georgia, with Rep. Calvin Hill (R-Hickory Flat).

Just six years ago, Cobb’s own Earl Ehrhart, a state representative from Powder Springs, was the national chairman of ALEC. Ehrhart says those who criticize the non-partisan group “hate free markets and individual liberties.”

ALEC, he said, “operates completely transparently and upfront, spending non-taxpayer money — unlike the avowed crazies who are part of the groups that don’t like ALEC,” Ehrhart said. “We’re not communists. We have Jeffersonian principles. It’s in the mission statement. Individual liberty. Free markets. That’s the basic stated, four-decades-old mission of ALEC, and it’s basically a restatement of our founding fathers. I’ll put that up against communists and socialists and crazed Occupy bath-needing leftists. I think the majority of the people in this state will side with ALEC.”

Rogers said the same thing in an interview with the Journal’s sister publication, the Cherokee Tribune.

“ALEC is the leading conservative legislation organization in the nation,” Rogers said. “It will continue to stand for free markets, less government and federalism. These are the principles on which America was founded, and we need more lawmakers to stand by them.”

State Rep. Ed Setzler (R-Acworth) has been a member of ALEC since he was elected to the General Assembly, and said most of Cobb’s Republican state lawmakers are members. State Rep. Judy Manning, a Marietta Republican, is also a member.

State lawmakers from around the United States pay about $50 per year to be a member of the group, while corporations pay between $2,500 and $25,000 a year for membership in ALEC. But the group’s membership list is private, spokeswoman Kaitlyn Buss said. ALEC holds three meetings each year.

“Do the private sector members get things into the ALEC conversation that the private sector wants?” Setzler said. “Absolutely they do. Just like they get it into regular legislation. They’ve got a First Amendment right to advocate anything, be it in Congress or be it through ALEC. But because of that dimension, the left has seen that as this chink in their armor that they can take a crack at ALEC. But the real motivation is because ALEC is so successful at promoting limited government, free markets and Jeffersonian federalism.”

One of those critics is Bryan Long, the executive director of another nonprofit group, Better Georgia, which says it works “for elected officials to pass sensible laws and policies that make Georgia a better state.” His organization is affiliated with a national progressive grassroots group called ProgressNow.

Long has called ALEC a “radical, right-wing group that operates in the shadows of the government,” and criticized some of its model legislation on such issues as voter ID, school choice and illegal immigration.

Ehrhart responded: “Mr. Long doesn’t like free speech, doesn’t like advocacy for anything other than what he wants. The majority of the citizens in this county and this state are going to agree with the principles of ALEC. Again, back to the founding principles of this country. I’ll stand them up against his tent principles all day long. I’m not afraid of some Occupy pansy sitting in a tent without a bath, I’m sorry.”


I think it will be interesting to see if he's right -- that most of the people in the state will support their involvement with ALEC. It seems to me like such an obvious violation of government ethics and transparency, democratic principles, and yes even free markets (it's not a free market if your legislating yourself profits) that I can't see that a majority of Americans who have a handle on the basic facts could support it.
sozobe
 
  1  
Reply Fri 27 Apr, 2012 12:02 pm
@FreeDuck,
FreeDuck wrote:
Looks like this is something I can fight locally on since my state seems to be infected pretty deeply


Good for you. (Think globally, act locally 'n' all that.)

"Crazed Occupy bath-needing leftists" is a nice turn of phrase, though, I'll give them that. Smile
FreeDuck
 
  1  
Reply Fri 27 Apr, 2012 12:09 pm
@sozobe,
Yeah, I like how he crammed as much into one sentence as he could. The funny thing is that the more extreme he paints his critics the more he sounds like the crazed one. Anyhow, I'd love to see a poll of how most Americans actually feel about it -- before the spin tells the Republicans what to think.

Buzz Brockaway (R-Lawrencevill), another defender, is actually accessible via the Peach Pundit blog site and I've already tangled with him directly.
0 Replies
 
FreeDuck
 
  1  
Reply Fri 27 Apr, 2012 12:28 pm
@Advocate,
This might satisfy your curiosity, Advocate.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/davidhalperin/alec-for-profit-colleges_b_1457181.html
0 Replies
 
ehBeth
 
  1  
Reply Fri 27 Apr, 2012 12:42 pm
@FreeDuck,
I'm going to have to tell the folks in my office who supported the local Occupy groups that they need baths. One in particular will be surprised (she likes to bathe in bottled water).
0 Replies
 
FreeDuck
 
  2  
Reply Mon 30 Apr, 2012 05:40 pm
I just stumbled on this good read:

http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2012-04-30/did-the-american-legislative-exchange-council-give-me-the-full-story
FreeDuck
 
  1  
Reply Mon 30 Apr, 2012 05:42 pm
@FreeDuck,
It's starting to look worse than a lobbyist front to me. It's looking more like a vehicle to coordinate and push a national agenda by using state governments that get less scrutiny.
boomerang
 
  0  
Reply Mon 30 Apr, 2012 06:52 pm
@FreeDuck,
I haven't had a chance to read your link yet (but I will read it) but lately I've been looking into ALEC connections to Pearson Learning (publisher of almost all textbooks and makers of almost all standardized tests (and in charge of grading them), etc., etc., etc.) after "the talking pineapple" question on the NY state exams blew the lid off of Pearson's involvement with "school reform".

Right now I just happen to have this site up on my web browser: http://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2012/04/pearson-alec-and-brave-new-world.html

I not familiar with the site so I can't speak for it's reliability but they list these connections:

Quote:
Connections Academy - ALEC’s private-sector chairwoman, Mickey Revenaugh, is a co-founder and executive vice president of the Baltimore-based Connections Academy, which operates online classes in numerous states – recently acquired by Pearson.

America’s Choice – recently acquired by Pearson. America’s Choice is directly associated with Lumina, and the Broad and Walton Foundations, all active members of ALEC. They promote educational “innovations” that favor corporate-model reform.

University of Phoenix – recently acquired by Pearson. U of P is the largest for-profit online private university system.

Connections Academy was, and University of Phoenix still is, subsidiaries of the Apollo Management Group. CEO of Apollo Charles (Chaz) Edelstein was Managing Director of Credit Suisse and Head of the Global Services group within the Investment Banking division, based in Chicago. He is also on the Board of Directors for Teach for America.

Bryan Cave LLP is the lobbyist firm for Pearson. Edward Koch is currently one of the partners at Bryan Cave. Edward Koch also conveniently sits on the board for StudentsFirst of NY, a state-level branch of Michelle Rhee’s brainchild StudentsFirst initiative.

Pearson also has a business agreement with Stanford University to deliver the Teacher Performance Assessment (TPA) – a nationally available, web-based performance assessment for measuring the effectiveness of teacher candidates nationally – which means that Pearson will now oversee teacher preparation assessments as well.

Sir Michael Barber is the current Chief Education Advisor for Pearson. Research (in the supporting document to this letter) shows that Barber is a powerful advocate for the free-market approach to education including union busting, merit pay, and turning public schools into privately run charters.

Pearson contracts with PARCC which was developed by Achieve. Achieve is funded by Lumina, State Farm (both are members of ALEC), and The Alliance for Excellence in Education (AEE). AEE chairman Bob Wise is a regular contributor to and participant with the ALEC educational agenda.

The Tucker Capital Corporation acted as exclusive advisor to The American Council on Education (ACE) and Pearson on the creation of a ground-breaking new business that will drive the future direction, design, and delivery of the GED testing program.

The Council of Chief State School Officers (CCSSO) – CCSSO partners with a whole cast of other “non profit” organizations who promote a corporate anti-public education reform measures. CCSSO central “partners” include (among others) McGraw-Hill and Pearson. CCSSO Director Tom Luna works closely with Jeb Bush and whose associations with ALEC and corporate-reform are too numerous to mention.

GradNation – GradNation is a special project of America’s Promise Alliance, sponsored by Alma and Gen Colin Powell. Among other things, they advocate for the Department of Defense to help manage the Common Core Standards and student testing data. Grad Nation sponsors include State Farm (ALEC), Walmart Foundation (ALEC), AT&T (on the corporate board of ALEC), The Boeing Company ALEC), the Pearson Foundation, and Philip Morris USA (ALEC)


I think our kids are being educated by ALEC.
FreeDuck
 
  2  
Reply Tue 1 May, 2012 09:20 am
@boomerang,
They really are everywhere. If you click my link, the better article is actually the original that is linked to in the first paragraph. I hadn't read it yet when I posted or I would have just posted that one because it is so so so much more in-depth. I can't remember if it was that article or another one I read recently that described ALEC as not only a giant lobby but a bill launderer. Meaning once they are introduced, the public doesn't see the finger prints of the industry that pushed it.
0 Replies
 
FreeDuck
 
  1  
Reply Mon 21 May, 2012 04:55 pm
Just found a really good, big picture article about ALEC's influence in Wisconsin -- one of the hot states of ALEC activity. Actually probably the hottest.

ALEC's agenda in Wisconsin
0 Replies
 
JPB
 
  1  
Reply Wed 25 Jul, 2012 12:26 pm
Just saw this on FB. Excellent summary.

0 Replies
 
boomerang
 
  2  
Reply Sat 29 Sep, 2012 07:53 am
Bill Moyer's short documentary about ALEC is set to air this weekend but you can see it all here, now:

http://www.democracynow.org/2012/9/27/the_united_states_of_alec_bill

Good stuff!
0 Replies
 
 

 
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