-Caveat Lector-

Republicans = Big Business's A team.
DemocRATS  = Big Business's B team.

When the Democrats are in power, Big Business is limited to cruising speed.
When the Republicans move in, Big Business operates in overdrive.

Since both parties are almost entirely funded by the the Rich and their
corporations, it becomes only a question of speed with which corporations
extract the labor and wealth from our society.

There is no difference between DemocRATS and Republicans. But there is a good
chance that as the Republican wing of the Big Business Party encourages their
bosses to pig out at the public trough this time around, people will finally
get the point.

The reason our schools are crap, and our health care is crap, and our society
is crap, is because everything is ultimately run by businessmen directly or
through their politicians. This is also why, not so coincidentally, the Rich
have gotten obscenely richer at the same time that the DemocRATS have thrown
the poor off of welfare. There simply is not enough money in our 8 trillion
dollar economy to accommodate the poor's need AND the Rich's greed.

This will NEVER be rectified by either wing of the Big Business Party.

DUMP THE DUOPOLY! They don't represent you.

Bill

=================================================================
March 18, 2001

Corporate Power in Overdrive

By ROBERT B. REICH

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. ó With last week's reversal of his campaign
pledge to limit power plants' emissions of carbon dioxide, a key
contributor to global warming, President Bush surrendered to coal
companies and utilities dependent on coal. He had little choice.
It's payback time, and every industry and trade association is
busily cashing in.

There's no longer any countervailing power in Washington.
Business is in complete control of the machinery of government.
The House, the Senate and the White House are all run by
business-friendly Republicans who are deeply indebted to American
business for their electoral victories. If corporate America
understood its long-term interest, it would use this unique
moment to establish in the public's mind the principle that
business can be trusted. But it's doing the opposite, and the
danger for American business as a whole is profound.

Credit-card companies are getting a bankruptcy bill that will
make it harder for overstretched people who succumbed to these
companies' blandishments ever to get out from under the resulting
debts. Oil companies are on the way to obtaining rights to drill
on Alaska's coastal plain. Cigarette manufacturers are confident
the administration will drop the federal lawsuit against them.
Pharmaceutical companies are hoping to get longer patent
protections. Big, labor-intensive businesses want to get rules
that weaken unions, and they've already killed the Labor
Department's ergonomics rules, which would have protected workers
against repetitive-stress injuries. Airlines with labor problems
can count on White House actions to ward off strikes. And so on.

In normal times ó when business has to cope with some political
resistance ó its leaders are forced to set strict priorities.
There is only a fixed amount of political capital to spend. The
Business Roundtable, comprising the chief executives of large
American companies, typically establishes at the start of a new
Congress a legislative agenda reflecting what its members
consider the most important issues. The United States Chamber of
Commerce, after canvassing its mostly small and medium-sized
member businesses to determine their priorities, also develops a
strategy. The National Association of Manufacturers weighs in
with its wish list. And the National Federation of Independent
Business, composed of small firms, sets its goals.

These groups do not always see eye to eye, but under normal
circumstances they understand that legislative success requires
coordination. Separately, they lack the political clout to
overcome determined resistance in one or both houses of Congress
or from a president at least partly dependent for his political
future on organized labor, environmentalists and other interests
besides business.

The trade associations representing specific industries ó
coal-powered utilities, pharmaceuticals, hospitals, electronics,
securities, oil and gas, for example ó typically play supporting
roles. Their own parochial legislative goals can't interfere
directly with the priorities of business as a whole because the
industries often have to depend on the larger business groups to
be heard. Specific firms may retain their own Washington
lobbyists, but they, too, have to work with others in order to
have significant effect.

Political resistance, in other words, forces the business
community to decide what's most important to it. It thereby
enables corporate America to exert some discipline over itself.
Business leaders can prevent or at least distance themselves from
excesses by any single company or industry that might otherwise
taint business as a whole in the minds of the public.

American business notably did not come to the aid of cigarette
manufacturers when lawsuits against them began several years ago.
Nor has corporate America as a whole fought on behalf of the gun
lobby. Labor and environmental rules with broad consequences
typically become high priorities for legislative attack, but not
all such rules. In the first Clinton administration, the business
community was quite happy to let the Labor Department target
apparel manufacturers and major retailers in its crackdown on
sweatshops. I recall a number of White House meetings in which
the leaders of major business organizations quietly assented to
the administration's plans to block subsidies flowing to a
particular industry, or to impose new clean-air rules on another
industry, or to move aggressively with an antitrust complaint.

With political resistance gone, the business community can,
paradoxically, no longer discipline itself. Every business
lobbyist on K Street is under enormous pressure from clients to
reap something from the new bonanza. Every trade association must
demonstrate to its members large returns from their investments
in getting an all-Republican business-friendly government. And
the pressure only ratchets upward: Every time one company or one
industry receives its reward, other Washington lobbyists,
representing other firms or industries, come under even more
pressure to score victories.

Nor can the Republicans themselves provide any discipline.
Washington is awash in corporate i.o.u.'s, all waiting to be
cashed in, and George W. Bush can't argue that the Democrats will
block the payoffs. Under these circumstances, the Bush forces are
finding it next to impossible to maintain order. Demands for
regulatory relief are growing louder, and most will have to be
met. Corporate welfare will flow ever more freely. Once the tax
bill is open to amendment, corporate tax breaks will blossom like
the cherry trees.

At some point ó perhaps as soon as the 2002 midterm elections,
surely no later than the next presidential election ó the public
will be aghast at what is happening. The backlash against
business may be thunderous. Hence the great danger that corporate
American confronts.


Robert B. Reich, former labor secretary, is professor of economic
and so- cial policy at Brandeis University and author of "The
Future of Success."


==============================================================

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