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Interest Groups Politics of Influence

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5. Interest Groups Politics of Influence. 5. Video: The Big Picture. http://media.pearsoncmg.com/ph/hss/SSA_SHARED_MEDIA_1/polisci/presidency/Magleby_Ch05_Interest_Groups_Seg1_v2.html. 5. Video: The Basics. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Interest Groups Politics of Influence
Page 2: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

5Interest GroupsPolitics of Influence

Page 3: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

http://media.pearsoncmg.com/ph/hss/SSA_SHARED_MEDIA_1/polisci/presidency/Magleby_Ch05_Interest_Groups_Seg1_v2.html

Video: The Big Picture 5

Page 4: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

http://media.pearsoncmg.com/ph/hss/SSA_SHARED_MEDIA_1/polisci/presidency/Seg2_InterestGroups_v2.html

Video: The Basics 5

Page 5: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

I. Interest Groups Past and President: “Mischiefs of

Faction”

5.1 Learning Objective:Explain the role of interest groups and social

movements in American politics

When a group of people share a common interest, they can form interest groups or even political parties to enact their goals into public

policy. The Founders called these groups “factions,” and they worried that majority factions

might trample on the rights of minorities.

5.1

Page 6: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

A. A Nation of Interests

1. Interest groups: People that come together with similar goals or ideas who want to influence government.

a. Demographic distinctions such as race, ethnicity, age, gender, religion, occupation, sexual orientationb. Ideology/policy preferences such as gun control or tax reformc. “Special interests” is a derogatory term used for groups whose policy goals are contrary to the public interest

5.1

Page 7: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

http://media.pearsoncmg.com/ph/hss/SSA_SHARED_MEDIA_1/polisci/presidency/Seg3_InterestGroups_v2.html

Video: In Context 5.1

Page 8: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

B. Social Movements

1. Origin of interest groupsa. Social movements begin when people join together and take action for a significant issue, idea, or concern: Women’s, animal, civil, gay, immigration, environment, etc.

2. Bill of Rightsa. Free speechb. Free assemblyc. Due process

5.1

Page 9: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

5.1Arab Spring

Page 10: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

5.1 What is a modern term for faction?

a. Special interest

b. Political party

c. Interest group

d. All of the above

5.1

Page 11: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

5.1 What is a modern term for faction?

a. Special interest

b. Political party

c. Interest group

d. All of the above

5.1

Page 12: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

II. Types of Interest Groups

5.2

Lesson Objective: Categorize American interest groups into

types

Page 13: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

A. Economic Interest Groups (most numerous)

1. Businessa. Large corporations such as auto and banking industries b. Small Business Federation

2. Trade and Other Associationsa. National Association of Realtorsb. Chamber of Commerce

3. Labor, began with industrialization a. Unions form to improve wages, benefits & working cond.b. AFL-CIO ¾ of unionized labour 13% of populationc. Open v. closed shopd. Democratic Party

5.2

Page 14: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

4. Professional Associations1. AMA and ABA2. State-level lobbying

A. Economic Interest Groups

5.2

Page 15: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

FIGURE 5.1: Union membership in the United States compared to other countries

5.2

Page 16: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

FIGURE 5.2: Labor force and union membership, 1930-2011

5.2

Page 17: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

http://media.pearsoncmg.com/ph/hss/SSA_SHARED_MEDIA_1/polisci/presidency/Seg4_InterestGroups_v2.html

Video: Thinking Like a Political Scientist

5.2

Page 18: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

B. Ideological and Single-Issue Interest Groups

5.2

1. Members share common viewpointa. Single-issue groups (abortion, gun control, taxes) b. Unwilling to compromise

2. National Rifle Association (NRA)a. Largest and most powerful with 4 million members

Page 19: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

C. Public Interest Groups

1. Claim to represent public interest such as Common Cause. Emerged from 1960’s social movements.

a. Conducts and publish researchb. Educates the publicc. Lobbies politicians

5.2

Page 20: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

http://media.pearsoncmg.com/ph/hss/SSA_SHARED_MEDIA_1/polisci/presidency/Seg5_InterestGroups_v2.html

Video: In the Real World 5.2

Page 21: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

D. Foreign Policy Interest Groups1. Council on Foreign Relations

http://www.cfr.org/about/

2. Israel-Arab relations subject of many groupsa. AIPAC http://www.aipac.org/

3. Nongovernmental organizations (NGOs)a. Greenpeaceb. Amnesty International

5.2

Page 22: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

E. Public Sector Interest Groups

1. Governments are interest groups a. National Governors Associationb. National League of Citiesc. National League of Counties

2. Government employeesa. National Education Association (NEA) 3.2 million members

5.2

Page 23: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

E. Other Interest Groups

1. Why we join groupsa. Common interestb. Shared identificationc. Shared issue or concern

2. What groups doa. Educate publicb. Lobby elected officialsc. Provide information

5.2

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TABLE 5.1: Environmental groups’ resources and strategies

5.2

Page 25: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

5.2 Which type of interest group is the most numerous?

a. Economic

b. Human rights

c. Environmental

d. Labor unions

5.2

Page 26: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

5.2 Which type of interest group is the most numerous?

a. Economic

b. Human rights

c. Environmental

d. Labor unions

5.2

Page 27: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

III. Characteristics and Power of Interest Groups

Lesson Objective: Analyze sources of interest

group power

http://www.opensecrets.org/industries/

5.3

Page 28: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

A. Size and Resources

1. Size mattersa. Offer incentives

2. So does spreadb. Concentration helps at state and local level versus dispersal which has members in every congressional district

3. Resources matter, too! Broader its reach into centers of power

a. Moneyb. Volunteersc. Expertisec. Reputation

5.3

Page 29: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

B. Cohesiveness and Leadership

1. Types of membersa. Formal leadersb. actively-involved membersc. Members in name only

2. Single-issue group = stronger cohesiona. planned Parenthood

3. Leadershipa. Tricky when group is diverse

5.3

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5.3AARP

Page 31: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

C. Techniques for Exerting Influence

1. Publicity, mass media, and the Interneta. Influencing the public to contact representativesb. Businesses have financial advantagec. Social media (moveon.org) d. Internet increases civic participation because communication is faster and cheaper

2. Mass mailing/E-mailing1. Facilitated by computer technology

5.3

Page 32: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

C. Techniques for Exerting Influence

3. Direct contact with governmenta. Federal Registerb. “Notice and comments period”

4. Litigationa. Civil rightsb. Amicus curiae briefs (friend of the court)

5.3

Page 33: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

C. Techniques for Exerting Influence

5.3

5. Protesta. Demonstrationsb. Occupy Wall Street

6. Contributions to campaigns a. PAC v Super PAC

http://www.opensecrets.org/pacs/superpacs.php

Page 34: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

C. Techniques for Exerting Influence

5.3

7. Nonpartisana. Donate to incumbentsb. Endorsementsc. Score cards

8. New political partiesa. Green Party

9. Cooperative lobbyinga. Like-minded groups work together in order to have more influence

Page 35: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

Vote 4 Energy 5.3

Page 36: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

5.3 What are PACs?

a. A coalition of labor unions

b. The interest group that represents public

employees

c. The political arm of an interest group

d. None of the above

5.3

Page 37: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

5.3 What are PACs? 5.3

a. A coalition of labor unions

b. The interest group that represents public

employees

c. The political arm of an interest group

d. None of the above

Page 38: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

Explore the Simulation: You Are a Lobbyist

http://media.pearsoncmg.com/long/long_longman_media_1/2013_mpsl_sim/simulation.html?simulaURL=16

5.3

Page 39: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

IV. Influence of Lobbyists

Learning Objective: Describe lobbyists and the

activities through which they seek to influence

policy

5.4

Page 40: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

A. Who Are the Lobbyists?http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MjY5Zkt51wY

5.4

1. Revolving doora. Former public servants (50% of former congress people

work in the lobbying industry)

b. Tools of influence: Money, Charm, Personal influence,

Persuasiveness, Knowledge, Issue networksc. Issue Networksd. Special relationships among interest groups, congressional

committees and subcommittees, and government agencies that

share a common policy concern.

Page 41: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

B. What Do Lobbyists Do?http://www.opensecrets.org/lobby/

1. Competition limits influence2. Money most important for re-election

a. Volunteersb. Incumbent advantage

3. Types of informationa. Political: consists of who supports what, and how strongly

b. Substantive: impact of proposed laws and technical language to

go into the legislation.

4. Taking their message to the people

5.4

Page 42: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

5.4 Who is most likely to become a lobbyist?

a. A former teacher

b. A former judge

c. A former elected official

d. A former farmer

5.4

Page 43: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

5.4 Who is most likely to become a lobbyist?

5.4

a. A former teacher

b. A former judge

c. A former elected official

d. A former farmer

Page 44: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

V. Money and Politics

Learning Objective: Identify ways interest groups use money in

elections and assess efforts to regulate this spending

5.5

Page 45: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

A. Political Action Committees (PACs)

1. Political arm of interest group a. What PACs do

1. Give money to politicians2. Persuade politicians to act or vote a certain way

b. Interests represented by PACs 1. Corporations, trade, health, unions, ideological

5.5

Page 46: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

FIGURE 5.3: Total PAC contributions to candidates for U.S. Congress, 1975-2010

5.5

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TABLE 5.2: PACs that gave the most to federal candidates, cumulatively, 2000-2010 (millions of dollars)

5.5

Page 48: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

A. Political Action Committees (PACs)

3. Super PACs Citizens United v. FEC (2010)

5.5

Page 49: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

5.5TABLE 5.3: Candidate supportive Super PACs and money they spent in 2011-2012

Page 50: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

B. How PACs Invest Their Money

1. Incumbentsa. PACs provide 42% of campaign funding

5.5

Page 51: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

FIGURE 5.4: PAC contributions to Congressional candidates, 1998-2010

5.5

Page 52: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

B. How PACs Invest Their Money

2. Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2004 (BCRA) 3. Contributions to leadership

a. Committee chairs, party leaders

5.5

Page 53: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

C. Mobilizing Employees and Members and Other Modes of Electioneering

1. Persuading members how to vote that is consistent with the interest of the group or corporation

2. Soft money used to bypass rules and give money to parties rather than candidates

3. Issue ads have unlimited access to funding due to Citizens United v. FEC

5.5

Page 54: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

5.5Todd Akin and abortion controversy

Page 55: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

D. Independent Expenditures

1. Unlimited campaign money as long as that expenditure doesn’t directly contribute funds to a candidate or party

a. Disclosure requirements

2. Recent examplesa. Super PAC spent $4.5 million in 2010 Illinois Senate race attacking Democratic candidateb. Super PAC spent $6 million in 2010 Colorado Senate race attacking Democratic candidate

5.5

Page 56: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

TABLE 5.4: Independent expenditure by top interest groups, 2004-2010

5.5

Page 57: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

E. Campaigning Through Other Groups

1. Issue advocacy: political contributions that avoid disclosure if ads do not use “vote for” or “vote against”

2. 527 organizations: political groups who can spend unlimited amounts of money on election activities.

5.5

Page 58: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

5.5 Which type of interest group has the most PACs?

a. Environmental groups

b. Ideological groups

c. Corporations

d. Unions

5.5

Page 59: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

5.5 Which type of interest group has the most PACs?

5.5

a. Environmental groups

b. Ideological groups

c. Corporations

d. Unions

Page 60: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

Explore Interest Groups: Can Interest Groups Buy Public Policy?

http://media.pearsoncmg.com/long/long_magleby_mpslgbp_25/pex/pex5.html

5.5

Page 61: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

VI. How Much Do Interest Groups Influence Elections

and Legislation?

Learning Objective: Evaluate the effectiveness of interest groups in influencing

elections and legislation

5.6

Page 62: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

A. Curing the Mischiefs of Faction—Two Centuries Later1. What would Madison think?

a. Influence unequalb. Gridlockc. Incumbent advantage

2. Can we regulate factions and preserve liberty?

a. Disclosure

3. Interest groups foster self-government

5.6

Page 63: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

5.6 How can Super PACs sidestep financial disclosure regulations?

5.6

a. Take out ads that do not endorse a specific

candidate

b. Wait to disclose donors until the election is

over

c. Both A and B

d. Neither A nor B

Page 64: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

5.6 How can Super PACs sidestep financial disclosure regulations?

5.6

a. Take out ads that do not endorse a specific

candidate

b. Wait to disclose donors until the election is

over

c. Both A and B

d. Neither A nor B

Page 65: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

How does money exert influence over public policy? Does the interest group with the most money always get its preferred public policies? What are some arguments for and against restricting the amount of money that groups can contribute to political campaigns?

Discussion Question 5

Page 66: Interest Groups Politics of Influence

Video: So What?

http://media.pearsoncmg.com/ph/hss/SSA_SHARED_MEDIA_1/polisci/presidency/Magleby_Ch05_Interest_Groups_Seg6_v2.html

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