Business Groups See Loss of Sway Over House G.O.P. - The Chamber, along with other lobbying groups, helped create the conditions for Washington’s impasse.
From The New York Times:
As the government shutdown grinds toward a potential debt default, some of the
country’s most influential business executives have come to a conclusion all but
unthinkable a few years ago: Their voices are carrying little weight with the
House majority that their millions of dollars in campaign contributions helped
build and sustain.
Their frustration has grown so intense in recent days
that several trade association officials warned in interviews on Wednesday that
they were considering helping wage primary campaigns against Republican
lawmakers who had worked to engineer the political standoff in Washington.
Such an effort would thrust Washington’s traditionally
cautious and pragmatic business lobby into open warfare with the Tea
Party faction, which has grown in influence since the 2010 election and won
a series of skirmishes with the Republican establishment in the last two years.
“We are looking at ways to counter the rise of an
ideological brand of conservatism that, for lack of a better word, is more
anti-establishment than it has been in the past,” said David French, the top
lobbyist at the National Retail Federation. “We have come to the conclusion that
sitting on the sidelines is not good enough.”
Some warned that a default could spur a shift in the
relationship between the corporate world and the Republican
Party. Long intertwined by mutual self-interest on deregulation and lower
taxes, the business lobby and Republicans are diverging not only over the fiscal
crisis, but on other major issues like immigration reform, which was favored by
business groups and party leaders but stymied in the House by many of the same
lawmakers now leading the debt fight.
Joe Echevarria, the chief executive of Deloitte, the
accounting and consulting firm, said, “I’m a Republican by definition and by
registration, but the party seems to have split into two factions.”
While both parties have extreme elements, he
suggested, only in the G.O.P. did the extreme element exercise real power. “The
extreme right has 90 seats in the House,” Mr. Echevarria said. “Occupy Wall
Street has no seats.”
Moreover, business leaders and trade groups said, the
tools that have served them in the past — campaign contributions, large
memberships across the country, a multibillion-dollar lobbying apparatus — do
not seem to be working.
“There clearly are people in the Republican Party at
the moment for whom the business community and the interests of the business
community — the jobs and members they represent — don’t seem to be their top
priority,” said Dan Danner, the head of the National Federation of Independent
Businesses, which spearheaded opposition to President
Obama’s health
care law among small businesses. “They don’t really care what the N.F.I.B.
thinks, and don’t care what the Chamber thinks, and probably don’t care what the
Business Roundtable thinks.”
The lawmakers seem to agree. Representative Randy
Neugebauer, Republican of Texas and a Tea Party caucus member, said in an
interview on Wednesday that if American corporations wanted to send their money
elsewhere, that was their choice.
“We have got to quit worrying about the next election,
and start worrying about the country,” said Mr. Neugebauer, who sits on the
House Financial Services Committee and is a recipient of significant donations
from Wall Street.
Few of the most conservative House lawmakers draw
substantial support from business political action committees, and business
lobbyists acknowledged that the mere suggestion they were considering backing
primary challenges next year could enhance grass-roots support for the very
lawmakers they want to defeat. But the dysfunction in Washington has now turned
so extreme, they said, that they had few other options.
“What we want is a conservative business person, but
someone who in many respects will be more realistic, in our opinion,” said Bruce
Josten, the top lobbyist at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the single biggest
lobbying organization in Washington.
In the two previous battles over the debt
limit, many chief executives were reluctant to take sides, banding together
in groups like Fix the Debt, which spent millions of dollars on a campaign
urging Democrats and Republicans to work toward a “grand bargain” on the budget.
But with shutdown a reality, and the clock ticking toward default, some of those
same executives now place the blame squarely on conservative Republicans in the
House.
“It’s clearly this faction within the Republican Party
that’s causing the issue right now,” said David M. Cote, the chief executive of
Honeywell and a steering board member of Fix the Debt.
The rift, these industry executives acknowledge,
reflects longstanding tensions that sometimes emerge between the agendas of
corporate executives and those embraced by the conservative wing of the
Republican Party.
“We ask them to carry our water all the time,” said
one corporate sector lobbyist, who demanded anonymity in order to speak frankly
about the relationship with Republicans. “But we don’t necessarily support them
100 percent of the time. And what has happened is the rise of an ideological
wing that is now willing to stand up to business interests.”
Despite their diminished leverage, business leaders
said they would step up their appeals for an agreement.
Most of the officials said they agree in principle
with conservative lawmakers about the need to cut federal spending or roll back
parts of Obamacare, but said using the threat of shutdown — or worse, of a debt
default — to extract those concessions was both ineffective and dangerous.
Mr. Josten said he had been on Capitol Hill every day
this week counseling compromise.
“The name calling, blame gaming — using slurs like
jihadist, terrorist, cowards, that kind of language — it does not get you to a
deal,” Mr. Josten said of the advice he is giving to Democrats and Republicans.
“The problem is everybody is in the same corner here and everybody has to try to
save some face.”
To some extent, the Chamber itself, along with other
lobbying groups, helped create the conditions for Washington’s impasse.
After the 2010 elections, the Chamber and other
business interests funneled millions of dollars into Republican redistricting
efforts around the country, helping draw overwhelmingly safe Republican
districts whose occupants — many among the most conservative House members — are
now far less vulnerable to challenges from more moderate Republicans.
“One thing about Wall Street, it is very aware of who
is working in their best interest,” he said.
But other lobbyists cautioned that while individual
Republican lawmakers may lose financial support, the business community was
unlikely to turn its back on the party over all and that donations would
continue to flow to campaign committees set up by Republican leaders in the
House, including from Wall Street.
“The reason the business community is overwhelmingly
pro-Republican is because of the policy positions generally held by the
Democratic Party,” said Dirk Van Dongen, president of the National Association
of Wholesalers-Distributors. “But there’s a lot of talk around town about the
need for Republicans to get into primaries and protect people who are being
attacked because they are only 96 percent pure.”
“I, for one, think that would be a healthy exercise,”
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