From the Republic Report, a real eye-opener. Listen to these consultants (Democratic and Republican) talk about how important pro-private sector politics is as she talks to members of the for-profit education industry about how to manipulate
March 7, 2012

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From the Republic Report, a real eye-opener. Listen to these consultants (Democratic and Republican) talk about how important pro-private sector politics is as they talk to members of the for-profit education industry about how to manipulate members of Congress. Truly just as cynical as you'll always suspected, and illustrative of what's happening in every major industry, not just this one. But the for-profit colleges have, pardon the pun, done their homework, managing to salt members of both parties throughout their supporters, making it a truly bipartisan affair.

As we head into an election year, we’re going to increasingly hear that Democrats and Republicans fight like cats and dogs, that there is a civil war in Washington. This describes the state of play on some issues, but on others there is bipartisan agreement to do the wrong thing: Both parties do what the money tells them to do. How this works is subtle and often kept secret, done in rooms meant to shield policy-making while the public is distracted with electoral hoopla. Fortunately for Republic Report readers, I got access to one of these rooms, and I can explain how the money guides policy-making.

It starts with high level party functionaries paid by a rich industry, which uses the talents and connections of those party functionaries to extract government concessions. In this case, it’s the for-profit college industry, which perpetually leaves students with astronomical debt while providing poor quality education. The functionaries were former Bill Clinton advisor Doug Sosnik and Republican consultant Sara Fagen. Rather than fighting like cats and dogs, these two showed a keen sense of bipartisanship as they told leaders of these for-profit education companies how they can use their power to manipulate Congress into handing them more money.

The for-profit colleges, multi-billion dollar companies that rely on Federal grants, have collected themselves into the super-boring sounding association known as the Association for Private Sector Colleges and Universities (APSCU). Today, they held a closed-to-the-public but open-to-the-media meeting in Washington, D.C. to plot how to keep Congress from approving stricter regulations on the billions of taxpayer dollars that their corporations receive through federal student loans and grants.

The first session of the day featured a presentation by Democratic consultant Sosnik and Republican consultant Fagen. Before Sosnik and Fagen spoke, an ASPCU representative noted that Sosnik most recently worked for the Motion Pictures Association of America (MPAA) on its legislative campaigns. The MPAA was last seen trying to undermine freedom on the internet through similar political connections and campaign contributions.

Both Sosnik and Fagen delivered Power Point presentations where they laid out national polling, explaining to the audience the chances of President Obama getting re-elected. I imagine that they each care about their party winning, since it impacts the fee they can extract from corporations seeking influence. After their polling presentations were completed, the audience had a chance to ask questions. One audience member asked how the for-profit college industry can best impact Congress and the various congressional campaigns that are currently underway.

Fagen laid out a strategy for an astroturf (which means fake grassroots) campaign, saying that it’s “much better to get in front of a candidate running for office before he or she is actually in office.” She referenced the “card check issue,” the Employee Free Choice Act, a controversial bill to strengthen labor unions. Fagen noted that the retail industry engaged in anti-union astroturf operations in swing districts and that when key Democrats were elected, “they were in our corner.” She went on to note that the for-profit college industry should be on the ground in Wisconsin to get candidates for the open U.S. Senate seat to commit to being for or against their legislative agenda.

Sosnik then took to the microphone and — despite being a long-time Democrat and close advisor and friend of President Clinton — praised Fagen’s anti-union strategy, noting that she was one of the people who ran the campaign against the Employee Free Choice Act and “she was totally right about that.” Sosnik is not elected, and neither is Fagen – but their opinion matters to policy-makers. And as you’ll see, Sosnik’s cynicism about democracy is fascinating.

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