mat200
IPCT Contributor
- Jan 17, 2017
- 17,002
- 28,649
Hypocrisy is becoming the key tenet of MAGA
Rand Paul .. one of the few in the game who seems to have more integrity
Hypocrisy is becoming the key tenet of MAGA
To be fair neither did Trump a few years ago
'He’s micro-managing phenomenally': How Trump grabbed all the levers in Washington
The president's one-man-show approach to policy has sidelined Congress, agencies — and a whole K Street culture.
Intel Corp. looked like a winner in the Washington lobbying game at the start of 2025.
The federal government was set to funnel more than $10 billion to the American microchip giant, thanks to a long influence campaign by the company’s executives and hired Washington hands, who spent three painstaking years lobbying Congress, federal agencies and White House advisers.
Just a few months later, when a political controversy over the CEO’s links to Chinese companies put Intel’s deal with Washington in jeopardy, the whole drama was resolved in two weeks. And this time, the company’s path ran through just one person: President Donald Trump.
The sharp change in how Intel navigated Washington is being replicated across industries in Trump’s second term — by pharmaceutical companies cutting drug pricing deals with the White House, tech giants hoping to sell regulated equipment to China and energy firms that want looser environmental and permitting restrictions.
After decades of revolving-door culture, Washington is grappling with a new normal for how influence works in the capital. POLITICO spoke with several dozen lobbyists, industry officials and public relations professionals who revealed a transformation far more disruptive than the typical churn that comes with a new administration.
In Trump 2.0, American policy influence has shifted from its previous channels — agency officials, top lawmakers and staffers on key congressional committees — to a new reality where change comes suddenly from the top.
The president and a handful of lieutenants have seized full control over policies once considered the remit of Congress and experts at agencies, including hyperspecific issues like tariff rates, high-skilled visa fees and funding freezes. Trump’s gravitational pull has forced CEOs to act as their companies’ top lobbyists, plying the president with gifts...
(Excerpt) Read more at politico.com ...
My comment: I voted for this.