The lack of presidential and Congressional leadership last year
affected many industries, but K Street lobbying firms felt the
impact directly.
As The Hill
reports:
Washington’s lobbying corps bid good riddance to 2012 on
Tuesday, reporting steep declines in their earnings after a year of
posturing and gridlock on Capitol Hill. […]
“These guys [Congressmen] weren’t literally here,” remarked Rich
Gold, head of the public policy and regulation practice for Holland
& Knight, of a Congress that took long recesses to campaign,
including a seven-week break before the election.
Compounding the woes for K Street, another steady stream of
income — regulatory work — slowed considerably as the
administration dialed back its rulemaking during President Obama’s
reelection bid. […]
“We will not be back in the halcyon days of Obama’s first year
in office, but its definitely going to be better than year three
and year four,” Gold said.
A ceaseless regulatory state is what keeps guys like Gold in
business. I’m inspired to point to Texas’ method of governing:
part-time legislative sessions of 140
days every other year.
One of the original drafts of the Constitution specified that
the Congress “shall meet on the first Monday in December every
year,” a proposed requirement that became a
source of debate on Aug. 7, 1787.
According to notes from the convention, James Madison asked
why the Constitution specified such a minute detail. Rufus
King of Massachusetts then said he “could not think there would be
a necessity for a meeting every year. A great vice in our system
was that of legislating too much. The most numerous objects of
legislation belong to the States.”
Gouverneur Morris of Pennsylvania agreed, and argued that
it was improper to require a Congressional meeting at least once a
year. After all, “The public business might not require it.”
I’m not sure I would go that far. But if we eliminated full-time
Congressmen and Senators, the ranks of those full-time
lobbyists would surely dwindle.