Los Angeles Times

Sweet overtures from soda firms

Lobbyists are plying legislator­s with all manner of perks.

- BY SAMANTHA YOUNG

Dinners at an expensive restaurant in Maui — with ocean views. Tickets to profession­al sports games. A free screening of “Black Panther” at a Sacramento IMAX theater. And a $250,000 donation to a group that funds the governor’s travel.

That’s just a sampling of the $11.8 million that soft drink companies and their lobbyists spent at the state and local levels in the last two years in California to block proposals such as taxing sugary beverages and slapping health warnings on their drinks, a California Healthline analysis found.

“They exercise extraordin­ary influence in this building,” state Sen. Bill Monning (D-Carmel) said of the industry. “We don’t underestim­ate the power of the opposition.”

Monning doesn’t accept soda industry money — and has tried repeatedly to tax sugary beverages in California and place warning labels on packaging. He was one of the most vocal critics last year when the industry blocked cities and counties from levying soda taxes — a maneuver some lawmakers described as “extortion.”

Angered by the industry’s tactics, Monning and other lawmakers now are pushing a package of bills to clamp down on drinks they say contribute to rising rates of obesity and diabetes. Several of the measures are scheduled for a committee hearing Tuesday, including one that would tax distributo­rs of sugary drinks at 2 cents an ounce.

Connecticu­t, Massachuse­tts, New York, Rhode Island and Vermont also are considerin­g statewide taxes on sugar-sweetened beverages. At least four states, including Arkansas and West Virginia, already impose taxes on sodas, either by the fluid ounce or on gross receipts, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es.

Although it’s anybody’s guess how much the industry will spend to sway California lawmakers this year, its previous largesse indicates money will flow to nearly every Capitol officehold­er.

A California Healthline analysis found that 9 in 10 state senators and members of the Assembly, or a member of their staff, accepted a campaign contributi­on, gift or charitable donation in 2017 and 2018 from the American Beverage Assn. (or its political action committee), the Coca-Cola Co. or PepsiCo — the three largest givers in the industry.

The beverage industry, like other interest groups, spends money to influence lawmakers in several ways: It makes financial contributi­ons to their campaigns and lobbies them and their staffs, sometimes plying them with meals, events and travel. It also donates to charities in lawmakers’ names.

“They follow the playbook of the tobacco industry in protecting their products from criticism, casting doubt on the science, lobbying, working behind the scenes, funding front groups, doing all the things that industries that make potential harmful products do,” said Marion Nestle, author of “Soda Politics” and a professor emerita of food nutrition at New York University.

The beverage associatio­n and Coca-Coca did not respond to specific questions about their political giving, and PepsiCo didn’t respond at all. William Dermody Jr., an ABA vice president, argued “excessive” taxes on drinks would harm the economy.

“It’s important to inform lawmakers about the contributi­ons that our products make to the local economy, not only the millions in tax revenues we generate for the state but the wages we bolster for hundreds of thousands of California workers,” Dermody said in an email.

Big Soda is not alone in trying to influence lawmakers on the issue of sugary drinks.

The California Medical Assn. and the California Dental Assn., which represent doctors and dentists, are planning a ballot initiative to tax sugary drinks. Together they spent about $10.6 million in lobbying and campaign contributi­ons to influence a broad range of health-related legislatio­n over the last two years.

For the soda industry, 2017-18 was particular­ly expensive.

Why? As more California cities passed and proposed local taxes on sugary beverages, soda companies last year poured $8.9 million into a statewide ballot measure that would have made it more difficult for cities to levy any new tax, not just those on beverages. The money came from the American Beverage Assn. PAC, primarily funded by Coca-Cola, Pepsi and Dr Pepper Snapple Group.

Concerned that California voters would approve a higher voting threshold for all local taxes, lawmakers reluctantl­y banned local soda taxes until Jan. 1, 2031, if the industry dropped its ballot proposal.

“I don’t think they won any friends in the Legislatur­e,” said Assemblywo­man Lorena Gonzalez (D-San Diego). She received $11,000 in campaign contributi­ons from the industry in the last two years, and has voted on its side against bills to label and tax sugary drinks, citing concerns that a soda tax is regressive and would harm poor, minority communitie­s.

In 2017 and 2018, the American Beverage Assn. spent just over $1 million lobbying California policymake­rs, while PepsiCo spent $371,482 and Coca-Cola spent $352,469, according to forms filed with the California secretary of state’s office. That’s nearly 70% more than they spent in the previous two years. The bulk of the money went to lobbying firms staffed by former government employees — people with connection­s at the Capitol who know how to influence legislatio­n.

The ABA spent $379 on food for eight lawmakers in November 2017 as part of an $813 dinner tab at the upscale Humble Market Kitchin restaurant in Maui — where a steak might go for $65 and a fried fish for $57. The lawmakers were attending a legislativ­e retreat.

The associatio­n gave 11 legislativ­e staffers tickets to Sacramento Kings basketball games and paid for their food and drinks, at a cost ranging from $163 to $326 per staffer. It also shelled out at least $3,747 for at least 92 lawmakers, staff members and their guests to attend a showing of “Black Panther” in March 2018.

Asked why Assemblywo­man Sabrina Cervantes (D-Riverside) attended the movie, her spokeswoma­n said she is “supportive of the arts and celebrates diversity in cinema.”

The ABA’s biggest lobbying expense was a $250,000 payment to the California State Protocol Foundation, which funded Jerry Brown’s travel while he was governor.

Though there are limits on how much lawmakers can accept in gifts, companies also seek to gain influence by making unlimited charitable donations on a lawmaker’s behalf. These donations are known as “behested payments,” and the industry made nearly $100,000 of them in 2017 and 2018.

Last year, a Coca-Cola distributo­r in Gonzalez’s district donated $10,000 to the San Diego Food Bank in her name — a contributi­on she said she was unaware of until contacted for this article.

Sometimes, lawmakers seek out contributi­ons. When state Assemblyma­n Adam Gray (D-Merced) asked the beverage associatio­n to sponsor the annual meeting of the National Conference of State Legislatur­es, it gave $25,000 in his name. Gray, who served as California’s representa­tive to the meeting, said it was his responsibi­lity to secure sponsors, and that he asked several corporatio­ns to contribute. Those contributi­ons, he said, don’t influence his vote. For example, he said Google gave $100,000 but he voted for privacy legislatio­n the company opposed.

“If you want to support my agenda, my voting record and the things I stand for, I’m happy to take that support,” Gray said. “But it has zero role in how I represent my district or how I make decisions on public policy.”

Young is a reporter with Kaiser Health News, which publishes California Healthline, an editoriall­y independen­t service of the California Health Care Foundation. KHN is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente. California Healthline digital reporter Harriet Blair Rowan contribute­d to this report.

 ?? DON THOMPSON Associated Press ?? AT A CAPITOL news conference, state Sen. Bill Monning (D-Carmel) illustrate­s the amount of sugar in a typical soft drink while discussing a package of five bills aimed at discouragi­ng consumptio­n of sugary beverages. He doesn’t accept soda industry money.
DON THOMPSON Associated Press AT A CAPITOL news conference, state Sen. Bill Monning (D-Carmel) illustrate­s the amount of sugar in a typical soft drink while discussing a package of five bills aimed at discouragi­ng consumptio­n of sugary beverages. He doesn’t accept soda industry money.

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