Chattanooga Times Free Press

Lobbying expenses spiked while Congress shaped tax overhaul

- BY RICHARD LARDNER

WASHINGTON — Money spent on lobbying by corporatio­ns, trade associatio­ns and special interest groups spiked during the final three months of 2017 as they battled for the biggest breaks possible in the most dramatic tax overhaul in more than 30 years.

The figures for the heavyweigh­ts are eyepopping.

The National Associatio­n of Realtors tallied $22.2 million between Oct. 1 and Dec. 31, according to newly filed disclosure reports. That’s double what the organizati­on spent in the third quarter on lobbying activities. The Business Roundtable spent $17.3 million in the fourth quarter, nearly quadruple the amount over the three previous months, and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce reported spending $16.8 million, a $3.7 million increase.

President Donald Trump swept into the White House promising to “drain the swamp” in Washington, but lobbyists continue to wield considerab­le influence and they plied their trade with vigor as Congress crafted the $1.5 trillion tax-cut package that Trump signed into law in late December.

The tax overhaul was hustled through Congress in less than two months and mostly written in private. Public Citizen, a nonprofit watchdog group, said in a Jan. 30 report that more than 4,600 lobbyists were engaged specifical­ly on the tax rewrite while several thousand more sought to influence tax policy in addition to other legislativ­e matters. That worked out to 13 lobbyists for every member of Congress.

“Really in terms of galvanizin­g the entire profession, tax bills do that like nothing else,” said Lisa Gilbert, Public Citizen’s vice president of legislativ­e affairs.

The National Associatio­n of Realtors said the millions of additional dollars in lobbying expenses were spent mostly on targeted advertisin­g in the districts or states of members of the congressio­nal tax-writing committees.

Among the group’s successes, according to a lengthy report card it put together, were preserving the exclusion for capital gains on the sale of a home and winning a 20 percent business income deduction for real estate agents and brokers who are set up as “pass-through” companies. That means they pay personal income tax on their business earnings.

The group also took credit for spinning gold from straw. An initial version of the tax bill, for example, proposed capping the mortgage interest deduction at $500,000 — a major change that the organizati­on said would have an “immediate and very negative impact” in high-cost housing markets.

The legislatio­n signed into law by Trump set the cap at a higher level, $750,000, for new loans and exempted most current mortgages from the limit. Not ideal, but better than it could have been.

The Business Roundtable, made up of the CEOs of America’s largest companies, promoted what it described as “pro-growth tax reform.” The group said the fourth-quarter spending increase reflected increased lobbying activity, paid advertisin­g and the hiring of new staff.

One of the group’s lobbyists is its president and CEO, Joshua Bolten, who held a series of high-level jobs during President George W. Bush’s administra­tion, including White House chief of staff from 2006 to 2009. In addition to its own lobbyists, the group paid outside organizati­ons nearly half a million dollars to lobby on its behalf during the last three months of 2017.

Along with cutting the corporate tax rate from 35 percent to 21 percent, the tax law grants tens of billions in tax breaks on profits that America’s richest multinatio­nal companies have kept overseas. Both moves are big victories for big business.

Trump last month highlighte­d the nearly $250 billion that Apple is repatriati­ng, saying the tech giant would invest $350 billion in the United States in the coming years. But Apple had planned to spend most of that money with its suppliers and manufactur­ers in the U.S. anyway.

Analysts have predicted that most of those overseas profits will flow into stock buybacks and dividend payments. That’s what happened the last time a one-time break on offshore profits was offered more than a decade ago.

Specialize­d organizati­ons also seized the moment. The Beer Institute spent $1.3 million on lobbying in the final quarter — a $390,000 increase — and cheered the results: two years of federal excise tax relief for America’s brewers and beer importers.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? A home is shown for sale in Roswell, Ga. Money spent on lobbying by corporatio­ns, trade associatio­ns and special interest groups spiked during the final three months of 2017 as they battled for the biggest breaks during the rewrite of the U.S. tax...
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO A home is shown for sale in Roswell, Ga. Money spent on lobbying by corporatio­ns, trade associatio­ns and special interest groups spiked during the final three months of 2017 as they battled for the biggest breaks during the rewrite of the U.S. tax...

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