Few  people were more elated at 2:20 a.m. Wednesday morning when Mitt Romney  was declared the winner of the Republican caucuses in Iowa than a small  group of lobbyists unknown outside of the Washington Beltway. All  indications suggest that the New Hampshire primary this Tuesday will  bring similar joy.
These 15 men are leaders of what might be  called Romney’s K Street army. They are key players in the mobilization  of Washington’s $3.5 billion lobbying industry  in support of his candidacy. Romney, more than anyone else who is  running, is the favorite of the capital’s influence-wielding  establishment.
All 15 are active fundraisers for Romney. Patrick J. Durkin, who lobbies for Barclays, for example, raised $254,825, according to reports  filed by the Romney campaign. Robert Grand, of the lobbying firm Barnes  & Thornberg, raised $110,050; William Mark Simmons and David  Beightol, both of the Dutko Group, raised $69,260 and $54,200  respectively; Wayne Berman and Drew Maloney, both in the Ogilvy  Government Affairs firm, raised $101,600 and $56,750, respectively. The  list goes on.
The presence of these and other prominent Washington  players supporting the Romney campaign signals that the establishment,  at least its Republican wing, has concluded that the former  Massachusetts governor is a safe bet.
The open participation of  lobbyists in the current campaign is one more element in the collapse of  campaign-finance reform. Two waves of reform — the first in the  post-Watergate era of the mid-1970s and the second culminating in 2002  with the passage of the McCain-Feingold act, which sought to end the use  of “soft money” in campaigns — are essentially moot.
But these  reforms have been gutted by Supreme Court decisions, especially the Jan.  21, 2010 decision Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, and  by a lax Federal Election Commission. Corporate donors, labor unions and  individuals willing to write big checks are free to use their money to  favor certain candidates. If they want to keep the contributions secret  from public view, there are many opportunities for concealment.
In  the current election, contributions that would not have been possible  before Citizens United are flowing freely. In the first six months of  2011, for example, the Super PAC operating on Romney’s behalf, Restore  Our Future, reported corporate contributions  of $1 million each from Eli Publishing Inc. and F8 LLC, both based in  Provo, Utah; $250,000 from The Villages of Lake Sumter, Inc. in The  Villages, Fla.; and $100,000 from 2GIG Technologies in Lehi, Utah.
Members  of Romney’s cadre of lobbyists contacted by The Times declined to speak  on the record, but each one disavowed seeking any financial gain from  Romney’s political success. Instead, they contended that they back  Romney because they believe that he is the best candidate running. For  lobbyists, few things are more attractive to prospective clients than  having their guy in the White House.
The interests represented by  these particular Romney supporters run the gamut of national and  international corporate powerhouses.
A very abbreviated sampling  includes much of the financial sector, including the Blackstone Group,  PricewaterhouseCoopers, Visa, MasterCard, JPMorgan Chase, the Mortgage  Bankers Association, the American Bankers Association, most of the  pharmaceutical industry including Eli Lily & Co., Pfizer,  Bristol-Meyers Squibb, the Pharmaceutical Research & Manufacturers  of America, and companies like Verizon, AT&T, Walmart, Coca-Cola and  General Motors.
The ever-expanding role of lobbyists in politics  is a major victory for corporate America. Overwhelmingly, the companies  and trade associations that dominate top-dollar lobbyists’ clientele are  seeking to protect their own legislated competitive advantages,  including special tax breaks, favorable procurement rules and government  regulations that prevent new challengers from entering the marketplace.
Republicans  should be acutely aware of the dangers posed by the lobbying community.  When insurgents led by Newt Gingrich took over the House after the 1994  election, they were determined to open markets, allow free enterprise  to flourish and rid the legal and regulatory system of competitive  favoritism.
In practice, just the opposite took place. Gingrich,  and especially Tom DeLay, ceded enormous power to Washington lobbyists  in what they called the K Street Project. Loyal lobbyists were rewarded  with earmarks, leadership support for special amendments and the  delegated authority to write legislative provisions.
Shortly before he became House whip in 1995, DeLay created Project Relief,  a legislated moratorium on new regulations. He appointed Bruce Gates, a  lobbyist for the National-American Wholesale Grocers’ Association, to  run the project and Gordon Gooch, a petrochemical lobbyist, to write the  first draft of the bill. The bill was then modified by Paul C. Smith,  an automobile industry lobbyist, and by Peter Molinaro, a lobbyist for  Union Carbide.
Romney is not the only Republican candidate with strong ties to the lobbying community. One of the K Street Project’s champions in the Senate  was Rick Santorum, then a senator from Pennsylvania, now Romney’s  strongest challenger for the Republican presidential nomination, at  least right now. Santorum regularly met with lobbyists, helped formulate  a pro-business agenda and sought jobs from them for Republican  staffers. After he was defeated in 2006, Santorum went to work on K  Street as a “strategic adviser” to industry organizations and lobbying  groups, skirting the requirement that he register as a lobbyist, earning  $1.3 million dollars in the 18 month period from Jan. 1, 2010 to June  30, 2011.
The processes set in motion by the K Street Project  resulted in a pervasively corrupt Republican majority that was rejected  in 2006.
President Obama, who has claimed to be mindful of the  destructive power of the Washington-based special-interest community,  backtracked this past year when he raised no objection to the decision  of two former White House aides, Bill Burton and Sean Sweeney, to form a  pro-Obama Super PAC, Priorities USA Action, which accepts unlimited  contributions from unions and lobbyists.
Through the first half of 2011, Priorities USA Action raised a total of $3.2 million  to support Obama’s reelection, most of which came from three donors: $2  million from Jeffrey Katzenberg, C.E.O. of DreamWorks Animation;  $500,000 from the Service Employees International Union; and $500,000  from Fred Eychaner, chairman of the Chicago-based Newsweb Corporation.  These are the type of donations that the McCain-Feingold law sought to  prohibit because of their size, in the case of the individual  contributions, and because of the source, in the case of the money from  the S.E.I.U.
Smaller donors to Priorities USA Action are even more  interesting. In 2008, Obama made a highly publicized decision to refuse  contributions from lobbyists, and that commitment remains for his own  2012 campaign operation. But not so for this Super PAC, which explicitly  supports his candidacy. $5,000 donors include such registered lobbyists  as Steve Elmendorf (Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, and the Pharmaceutical  Research and Manufacturers of America), John M. Gonzalez (MasterCard,  Deutsche Bank AG, and the International Swaps and Derivatives  Association), Joel Johnson (Toyota, Ernst & Young, the American  Bankers Association, the Corrections Corporation of America, Koch  Industries), and David Castagnetti (the American Petroleum Institute).
Many  of these lobbyists are decent and knowledgeable people, and much of  what they do is essential to the warp and woof of governing.  Collectively, however, lobbyists are transforming the political ethos in  Washington. In the decade leading up to the financial collapse, 1998 to  2008, the finance, insurance and real estate industries spent a total  of $5.18 billion to influence Congress and the White House, including  $1.74 billion in campaign contributions and $3.44 billion on lobbying  fees, according to an exhaustive study by the Consumer Education Foundation.
Every  effort at reform immediately breeds exceptions that subvert the  original concept. The past four decades of on-again, off-again reform  demonstrate the continuing ingenuity of the private sector in finding  ways to influence outcomes, no matter what roadblocks it encounters.  When faced with reform, the men and women who use cash to control policy  have created novel approaches to put their money in play.
These  approaches have included unlimited and unregulated soft money  contributions to political parties to avoid limitations under election  laws enacted in 1974, and the inventive use of “advocacy” committees  under section 527 of the tax code to evade McCain-Feingold restrictions,  allowing George Soros on the left  to give $23.7 million and Bob Perry on the right to give $8.1 million  to try to tilt the election toward their favorite candidates.
In  some cases reformers created rules to control the flow of money only to  see special interests turn such rules to their advantage. The 1974  legislation gave legal sanction to political action committees, which  corporations formerly shunned because of their unclear legal status.  After 1974, corporations and trade associations, reassured that what  they were doing was fully legal, set up PACs by the hundreds.
On Dec. 31, 1974, when the Federal Election Commission began counting PACs,  there were 89 corporate PACs, 201 union PACs and 319 trade association  PACs. By the start of 2009, the most recent count, there were 1,598  corporate PACs, 272 labor PACs and 995 trade association PACs.
The  formal legalization of PACs effectively institutionalized and  legitimized what amounts to a massive system of special-interest  financing of federal campaigns. In 2008, PACs of all kinds gave a total  of $412.8 million, up from $219.9 million in 1998, with 79 percent going  to incumbent members of the House and Senate, 13 percent to  challengers, and 8 percent invested in races for open seats.
With  so much at stake in the legislative and regulatory process for  corporations, unions and members of trade associations, these interests  will not stand back from influencing elections or from pushing every  lever to affect the outcome of policy debates.
There are idealists  who believe that two recent developments raise the potential for  reform. On the conservative side, the Tea Party movement is adamantly  opposed to machinations inside the Beltway. On the liberal side, the  Occupy Wall Street movement has similarly challenged the power of the ‘1  percent,’ a constituency heavily represented by the special-interest  community, many of whom are themselves members of the 1 percent. In  Washington, the consensus is that despite these movements, little will  change.
The weaponry of the special-interest community has become  increasingly powerful. Lobbyists not only have ever greater resources at  their disposal, they are also armed with the sophisticated technology  of influence — polls, television, focus groups, computerized data banks,  micro-targeting, each of them important in itself, and devastating when  deployed in effective combinations. The net result is that the power of  the electorate relative to the power of the Washington establishment  has inexorably declined.
Thomas B. Edsall, a professor of  journalism at Columbia University, is the author of the forthcoming book  “The Age of Austerity: How Scarcity Will Remake American Politics.”