Florida Republican Forgets To Remove ALEC Mission Statement From Anti-Tax Bill

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Wazzim

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Progressives have long tried to expose the influence the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) wields in state house across the country, but one Florida lawmaker is making it too easy.
Funded almost entirely by large corporations, ALEC produces “model legislation” favorable to industry that state lawmakers can introduce as their own bills. Usually, the legislators tweak the language of the bills to make them state-specific or to obfuscate their origins. Usually, but apparently not always.
In November, Florida state Rep. Rachel Burgin (R) introduced a resolution (PDF here) that would officially call on the federal government to reduce corporate taxes, but she apparently forgot to remove ALEC’s mission statement from the top of the bill, which she seems to have copied word-for-word from ALEC’s model bill:
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As the government transparency group Common Cause reports, “Burgin quickly withdrew the bill hoping that no one had noticed and then re-introduced it 24-hours later, with a new bill number (HM 717), but now without the problematic paragraph.” Apparently no one noticed until this week.
While it’s no secret by now that conservative lawmakers in state capitals everywhere have used ALEC’s legislation to tear down environmental and labor regulations, curb voting rights, and coordinate a business-friendly agenda nationwide, it’s rare to see it on display so clearly.

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It's hard not to get the impression that a large majority of people who run for office have very little interest in doing the actual job and just enjoy sitting in a seat of power.
 
It's hard not to get the impression that a large majority of people who run for office have very little interest in doing the actual job and just enjoy sitting in a seat of power.
No, they have interest in doing the job, just not the slightest idea of how to do it properly. That's what ALEC tries to capitalize on.
 
Legislative equivalent of:

*accidentally sends email to wrong person*
fuck fuck fuck fuck I didn't mean to send that

*googles whether or not it's possible to unsend an email*

*sends followup email with subject "Ignore previous email" and revised text, hope person will delete previous email without reading*
 
It's hard not to get the impression that a large majority of people who run for office have very little interest in doing the actual job and just enjoy sitting in a seat of power.

Well, yeah. Our country is like one big high school, where all the rich popular kids run the show and call all the shots, helping each other out while having no interest for everyone else.
 
So with lobbies like this, how does the recompense work exactly?

Do they contribute to the campaign? Hookers and blow? Promise them cushy jobs for their buddies? Or just a briefcase filled with 100s?
 
Am I the only one who feels sorry for the woman? Poor girl did not mean to expose their Zimbabwean level of corruption to the public like this.
 
So with lobbies like this, how does the recompense work exactly?

Do they contribute to the campaign? Hookers and blow? Promise them cushy jobs for their buddies? Or just a briefcase filled with 100s?

Donations to the campaign, trips on private jets, that sort of thing. Officially anyway. The whole "hookers and blow" angle may not be far off, but where's the proof?

Oh, and cushy jobs for themselves after they're done in congress. Not just their buddies.

Not to mention sweetheart loans, and the aforementioned insider trading
 
Why the fuck don't these people get charged for corruption or kicked out instantly? If you did shit like that in anywhere else, you're fucked, but politics? Nah nah nah, it's all good.
 
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