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US corporations routinely bribe politicians and manipulate policy

US corporations routinely bribe politicians
*** US corporations are buying politicians and manipulating law and policy. Most people still believe that politicians represent the people and are accountable to voters, but in reality it is money not votes that count. Western democracy is a dictatorship in disguise, and the only choice for voters is between fundamentally indistinguishable representatives of the elite. ***
Hill Leaders Often Take Corporate Jets
Companies Offer Discount Flights and Gain Access
When House Majority Whip Roy Blunt (R-Mo.) left Washington last August to attend a friend's funeral in his home state and give a political speech in Ohio, he didn't wait in long security lines for a nonstop commercial flight.
Instead, he hopped aboard a waiting private jet at Dulles International Airport that belongs to the corporation that owns Cracker Barrel stores -- just one of about 30 companies with legislative interests before Congress that have provided this service to Blunt.
Blunt is not alone in enjoying frequent corporate jet travel. He and 11 other current or former House and Senate leaders -- each with exceptional power to determine the fate of legislation and regulation -- flew on corporate-owned jets at least 360 times from January 2001 to December 2004, according to a review of records by The Washington Post.
Blunt and House Majority Leader Tom DeLay (R-Tex.) are the top two users of such jets among the current leadership, together accounting for at least 140 trips during the past two election cycles -- an average of one flight every 10 days. They are followed by Senate Minority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.), Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tenn.), and House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.), who used corporate jets for at least 38, 15, and seven flights, respectively.
The use of these jets remains one of the last corporate-financed perquisites of elected office allowed under congressional ethics rules, which permit lawmakers to fly on them to fundraisers and other events despite a welter of laws meant to restrain the influence of corporations in politics.
No limits exist on the frequency of such corporate flights, even though lawmakers have an annual taxpayer-financed allowance to cover the cost of flying commercial airlines on official business.
DeLay, whose travel with lobbyists has come under particular scrutiny in the past two months, has repeatedly said that he is being unfairly singled out for practices that are common on Capitol Hill. The Post examination of travel records for House and Senate leaders makes clear that all 12 have taken at least one corporate-financed flight.
The records show that flights were provided by some of Washington's largest corporate interests, including tobacco, telecommunications, business consulting, securities, air transport, insurance, pharmaceutical, railroad and food companies. Officials at some of these firms said that they granted requests for flights in the hope of currying favor with the leaders, that lobbyists were typically onboard their flights, and that they used the opportunity to press the interests of the aircrafts' owners.
SOURCE
Washington Post, "Hill Leaders Often Take Corporate Jets", 5 May 2005.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/04/AR2005050402393.html
"Companies with considerable stakes in legislation before Congress often offer lawmakers discount flights in the hope of currying favor with the leaders, a practice permitted under House rules." -- Washington Post E-Mail Newsletter (5 May 2005)

"The Insider" mailing list article, 05 May 2005.
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