Friday, May 19, 2023

Barbara Lee hits K Street to raise cash

Presented by New Venture Fund: Delivered daily, Influence gives you a comprehensive rundown and analysis of all lobby hires and news on K Street.
May 19, 2023 View in browser
 
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By Caitlin Oprysko

Presented by New Venture Fund

With help from Daniel Lippman 

K STREET FUNDRAISES FOR LEE: Rep. Barbara Lee (D-Calif.) is hitting K Street to fundraise for what is sure to be a pricey bid to succeed Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) in two years, according to an invitation obtained by PI.

— Hosts for the June 22 event include Art Collins, managing partner of theGROUP D.C., Comcast lobbyist Broderick Johnson, strategists Jotaka Eaddy and Minyon Moore and Marcus Mason of the Madison Group. Former Rep. Cedric Richmond, who was one of President Joe Biden’s top liaisons to the business community and is now an adviser at the DNC, is also listed as a host.

— The fundraiser comes as the race for Feinstein’s seat is projected to shatter spending records for a congressional primary. Tickets start at $250 to get in the door, according to an RSVP page, with different tiers of host-level privileges available for those who contribute anywhere from $1,300 — for “leaders” — to $6,600 — the maximum amount possible — to be named a “legend.”

— Lee is up against two prolific fundraisers in fellow Reps. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) and Katie Porter (D-Calif.) — both of whom swamped Lee in fundraising in the first three months of the year, NBC News reported. It also comes as questions continue to swirl around the senator’s ability to finish out her term following her return to Washington from a bout of shingles.

CHAMBER MOVES TO QUASH 14TH AMENDMENT PUSH: The U.S. Chamber of Commerce is trying to shoot down a push from Democratic lawmakers to convince Biden to override Congress and invoke the 14th Amendment rather than continue negotiating with House Speaker Kevin McCarthy and Republicans over the debt limit.

— “It is the Chamber’s view that attempting to invoke so-called ‘powers’ under the 14th Amendment would be as economically calamitous as a default triggered by a failure to lift the debt limit in a timely manner,” the Chamber’s top lobbyist, Neil Bradley wrote in a letter to Biden today.

— The warning shot from the business lobby came on the heels of entreaties from 10 Democratic senators and Vermont independent Sen. Bernie Sanders for Biden to prepare a workaround in the event that negotiations with Republicans fall apart ahead of the looming debt ceiling cliff. Those talks hit a snag earlier today, but Bradley implored the president (and his emissaries) to remain at the table. (The White House itself poured cold water on the idea earlier.)

— Bradley cast doubt on Biden’s authority to unilaterally continue issuing new debt but argued that such a move “ignores negative economic consequences that would occur if the administration attempted to issue such debt,” whose validity Bradley said would “immediately be called into question” and would lead to increased borrowing costs.

TGIF and welcome to PI. This newsletter runs on tips, so keep them coming: coprysko@politico.com. And be sure to follow me on Twitter: @caitlinoprysko.

 

A message from New Venture Fund:

Millions of Americans are being forced to pay extra just to file their taxes online. Why? Because companies like Intuit have spent millions lobbying to block a free tax filing option. Intuit rakes in billions while struggling families get stuck with the bill. American taxpayers could save time, stress, and expense with a free, public tax filing option. It’s time to get it done.

 

BUSTOS REGISTERS TO LOBBY: Former DCCC Chair Cheri Bustos has signed her first lobbying client since leaving office earlier this year. The Illinois Democrat retired in January after a decade in Congress and joined Mercury Public Affairs to co-chair their Washington office and put down roots for the firm in the Midwest.

— Bustos, who was a member of former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s leadership team as well as a member of the House Agriculture and Appropriations panels, registered to lobby at the beginning of May on behalf of the Illinois Corn Growers Association, according to newly filed disclosures.

— She and her son Nick Bustos will lobby for the group in support of a bipartisan biofuels bill that would require cars to be able to run on higher-octane fuels, which would allow for higher blends of ethanol. Cheri Bustos was the lead sponsor of a version of the bill introduced last Congress, but the measure never made it out of committee.

— The former congresswoman is still subject to a one-year “cooling off” period before she’s able to lobby her former colleagues on the Hill but told PI in an email that she’ll be providing strategy and communications support in addition to talking with “the appropriate leaders” in the Biden administration, which she is not restricted from lobbying.

THIS STORY HAS EVERYTHING:FreedomWorks, the conservative group that came to symbolize the tea party movement, is shaking up the top of its ranks after a leadership struggle involving one of D.C.’s more notorious PR shops and an animal rights advocate who briefly helped lead the organization,” POLITICO’s Hailey Fuchs reports.

— “The group, once one of the most formidable entities fighting Barack Obama’s agenda, had laid off 40 percent of its staff in March as it continued to deal with the aftermath of Republicans’ disappointing 2022 midterm cycle. It also appointed a new chief operating officer, Marty Irby, around the same time.”

— “The changes thrust the organization into a civil feud and made it the target of outside critics. And now, Irby himself is gone. The COO left the group this week after enduring a barrage of attacks from a website named FreedomWoke, which had been agitating for his dismissal by citing his record lobbying for the legislative arm of the Humane Society and his work on behalf of Animal Wellness Action.”

— “The entity behind that anti-Irby campaign is Berman and Co., a public relations firm founded by the PR executive Richard Berman, whose work for corporate interests led him to be dubbed by his critics as ‘Dr. Evil.’ Berman is no longer with the firm, but Berman and Co. confirmed its involvement.”

— “It’s fairly uncommon for PR shops to wade into specific leadership battles within non-governmental entities. But Berman and Co. has a long and acrimonious history fighting animal rights groups.” For his part, “Irby accused FreedomWoke of waging a campaign against him to distract from what he called ‘corruption within the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association.’ He argued for legislation called the Opportunities for Fairness in Farming Act that would reform the checkoff programs that provide funding for research and promotion of commodities.”

— He also defended his conservative bonafides, which the FreedomWoke campaign had sought to cast doubt on, and said he plans to launch his own lobbying and PR firm focused on the upcoming farm bill.

KNOWING ROE: The Washington Post’s Josh Dawsey and Isaac Stanley-Becker profiled Axiom Strategies founder Jeff Roe, who they write “has rapidly become a major player in the Republican political consulting world, guiding the campaigns of thousands of candidates in recent years, raking in hundreds of millions of dollars and building a lengthy list of clients” — including the super PAC backing Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ imminent presidential bid.

— The Post obtained a 36-page prospectus to potential investors in Roe’s political empire, which said the firm took $196 million in net revenue last cycle from political and corporate clients, pocketing more than $22 million in profit. Roe projected that revenues would climb to $250 million next year, with about $36 million in profit.

— According to the prospectus, “Roe said his firm is working behind the scenes to target the party’s top donors and up-and-coming leaders to secure new business, along with creating an academy for a new generation of campaign consultants. The document also says Roe has launched a project called ‘Freemont’ to quietly shape the Republican Party’s leadership in an effort to benefit Axiom financially.”

SOFTWARE LOBBY FLIES IN: The trade group representing the software industry huddled with lawmakers Wednesday to discuss how to regulate the fast-growing artificial intelligence sector following this week’s hearings on the Hill.

— Members of ​​BSA | The Software Alliance’s board of directors — which includes executives from Adobe, Salesforce, Workday, Siemens, Box, Cisco, Microsoft, Oracle, SAP and IBM, met privately with Senate Commerce Chair Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.), House Energy and Commerce leaders Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-Wash.) and Frank Pallone (D-N.J.) as well as Sen. Todd Young (R-Ind.), who is part of a bipartisan AI working group in the Senate, according to the trade group. The executives also met with senior policy staff for McCarthy, Senate Homeland Security Chair Gary Peters (D-Mich.) and Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.).

— “It’s clear that several different work streams are beginning to crystallize on AI in both the House and Senate,” Splunk Inc.’s Scott Morgan, who chairs BSA’s board, told PI in a statement, and while Morgan noted that lawmakers are working across the aisle on the issue, they are largely “in information-gathering mode, … and they are especially eager to educate themselves on the different types of AI, the ways in which AI is used, and the policy implications for consumers, different industries, and US competitiveness.”

 

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Jobs Report

SPOTTED at a reception co-hosted by Covington & Burling and Brunswick Group to celebrate the newly published treatise on drug pricing, per a tipster: Sabrina Aery of Bristol-Myers Squibb, Don May of the Federation of American Hospitals, Tanisha Carino, Charles Cote and Ninio Fetalvo of Brunswick, Rujul Desai of Covington, Greg Johnson of Horizon Government Affairs, Natalie Morris of Takeda, Protima Advani of UnitedHealth Group and John O’Brien of the National Pharmaceutical Council.

Eric Solomon has joined Ivins, Phillips & Barker as a partner in the Washington office. He was most recently senior counsel at Steptoe & Johnson, and previously served as assistant secretary for tax policy at Treasury.

Lisa Parks will be senior vice president of regulatory and scientific affairs at the Consumer Healthcare Products Association. She previously was senior vice president of regulatory policy at Greenleaf Health.

New Joint Fundraisers

Boebert Hageman Victory Fund (Reps. Lauren Boebert, Harriet Hageman, We the People Leadership PAC, 1890 PAC)

 

GET READY FOR GLOBAL TECH DAY: Join POLITICO Live as we launch our first Global Tech Day alongside London Tech Week on Thursday, June 15. Register now for continuing updates and to be a part of this momentous and program-packed day! From the blockchain, to AI, and autonomous vehicles, technology is changing how power is exercised around the world, so who will write the rules? REGISTER HERE.

 
 
New PACs

The American Patriots Committee (Super PAC)
Bet on Michigan (Super PAC)
Heal the Divide, Inc. (Super PAC)
NC FREEDOM FUND (Super PAC)

New Lobbying REGISTRATIONS

Capgov, LLC: Barc Electric Cooperative
Monument Advocacy: American Bankers Association
Mr. Dan Perrin: Ameriflex
Oxford Strategies LLC-Md: Churchill Downs Incorporated
Oxford Strategies LLC-Md: Justice Action Network
The Smith-Free Group, LLC: American Hospital Association
William Watson Group LLC: Transocean Offshore

 

DON’T MISS POLITICO’S HEALTH CARE SUMMIT: The Covid-19 pandemic helped spur innovation in health care, from the wide adoption of telemedicine, health apps and online pharmacies to mRNA vaccines. But what will the next health care innovations look like? Join POLITICO on Wednesday June 7 for our Health Care Summit to explore how tech and innovation are transforming care and the challenges ahead for access and delivery in the United States. REGISTER NOW.

 
 
New Lobbying Terminations

Envision Strategy: Appharvest Operations, Inc.
Envision Strategy: Thinkisp
Hbw Resources: Ocean Minerals LLC
Jumpstart For Young Children, Inc: Jumpstart For Young Children, Inc
Schmitz Global Partners LLP: Tzvetan Vassilev

 

A message from New Venture Fund:

Each year, Americans spend an estimated $31 billion just to file their taxes online. Why? Because tax preparation companies like Intuit have spent millions lobbying to block a free tax filing option that would be available to anyone who wants it. Intuit’s profits have skyrocketed, while families waste time and pay extra just to file their taxes online. Tax preparation companies are taking advantage of American taxpayers. In dozens of other countries, filing your taxes takes less than ten minutes and costs nothing. It’s time to save people time and money with a free, public online tax filing option.

 
 

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