For Mr Abramoff only contrition is left: "Words will not ever be able to express my sorrow and my profound regret for my actions and mistakes," he said in court yesterday. As for the two dozen members of Congress and their aides reputedly under investigation, they can only tremble.
If Mr Abramoff spills the beans, they may soon be contemplating a similar fate. This is potentially the biggest Congressional scandal of the modern era. It is largely (though not exclusively) Republican, and may mark the beginning of the end of the party's 11-year dominance of Capitol Hill.
Lobbying per se is nothing new. The right to "petition the government for a redress of grievances" is enshrined in the first amendment of the Constitution. Back in 1913, Woodrow Wilson said Washington was "swarming with lobbyists ... you can't throw a brick in any direction without hitting one".
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americas/article336396.ece
http://www.rense.com/general69/bushw.htm
Note: http://news.independent...
http://www.rense.com/ge...

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Canada has adoped US type lobbying as our own process...just more corrupt. It is the way Ottawa works: backroom deals and ensuring Canadian citizens have no say. Many multi-nationals are heavy duty into the lobbying, but are not rquired registered. If you want to discuss the smoking policy of the RCMP with an officer on the street, you better be a registered lobbyist, or you can get arrested.<br />
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Ck it out.<br />
<a href="https://strategis.ic.gc.ca/app/ec/lrrs/guest.do;jsessionid=0000hpTJ9MWnz0wd2dT0gD9y3J7:vdd1k0er?lang=eng">https://strategis.ic.gc.ca/app/ec/lrrs/guest.do;jsessionid=0000hpTJ9MWnz0wd2dT0gD9y3J7:vdd1k0er?lang=eng</a><br />
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