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Wednesday, January 17, 2007

Dorgan’s Loyalties

We spend a lot of time on this blog questioning the loyalty of North Dakota congressmen like Byron Dorgan given that they get the majority of their campaign money (92.2% in Dorgan’s case) from out-of-state interests.  With all that money from people who are not North Dakotans making it’s way into Dorgan’s pocket just how loyal to the interests of North Dakotans does he remain?

Now we have another good reason to question Dorgan’s loyalty.  His wife is a lobbyist for the life insurance industry which staunchly opposes the lifting of the federal estate tax.  You see, in order to avoid having the estate tax ruin the family business most farmers and ranchers in North Dakota buy huge life insurance policies which can be used to pay off the estate tax when the farmer/rancher in question passes on and leaves his property and business to his next of kin.  Life insurance companies want to keep it that way, for obvious reasons, and Dorgan agrees...but not because North Dakotans want him to agree given that 85% of this state’s citizens oppose the estate tax.

Dorgan agrees probably because his wife is employed by the life insurance industry as a political lobbyist, which is something that funnels lots of life insurance industry dollars into his pockets.

When Sen. Byron L. Dorgan (D-N.D.) rose to the Senate floor last summer and passionately argued for keeping the federal estate tax, he left one person with an interest in retaining the tax unmentioned.

The multibillion-dollar life-insurance industry, which was fighting to preserve the tax because life insurers have a lucrative business selling policies and annuities to Americans for estate planning, has employed Dorgan’s wife as a lobbyist since 1999.

Democrats, with all their talk of ethics reform, haven’t planned on addressing this issue:

Democrats made ethics reform a major issue in last fall’s congressional elections, but the ethics package the House approved earlier this month didn’t address the issue and neither did the one proposed by Senate Democrats. Last week, however, Sen. David Vitter (R-La.) proposed banning spouses of senators from lobbying any part of the chamber. The lone exception is for spouses who were lobbying at least one year before their husband or wife was elected.

The Senate is scheduled to vote on the legislation as soon as today. Senate Majority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.) called Vitter and said he would support the proposal with one caveat: It should exempt spouses who are already lobbyists.

So Reid’s ok with it as long as people like Dorgan get to keep their cushy arrangements.

What’s really frustrating about Dorgan’s situation is that he gets almost no criticism for it from North Dakota’s media.  When he opposed the estate last year despite the clear wishes of North Dakota’s citizens I heard nary a peep about it from the state’s editorial pages.  And that’s sad.  Dorgan is pandering to an industry his wife lobbies for against the clear wishes of his constituency.  This isn’t rocket science, Dorgan should be raked over the coals for that kid of behavior.

But he hasn’t been.

Comments

Avatar for pomerdorgrad

Oh, I think Dorgan probably supported redistributing wealth even back when he was still on his first and second non-lobbyist wives. He’s a Democratic-Socialist, with emphasis on socialist. But you’re absolutely right—the N.D. media should have been noting his current wife’s role in every story they wrote (or more likely, picked up from the national wires) about the death tax.

Interesting thing is, Kimberly Dorgan got kicked upstairs because—from all the gossip accounts—she was a horrible lobbyist. But the insurance association couldn’t fire her for fear of retaliation from Dorgan, known for his political viciousness.

pomerdorgrad on January 17, 2007 at 11:05 am

from all the gossip accounts

good enough for me.


[W]hat you’ve just said is one of the most insanely idiotic things I have ever heard. At no point in your rambling, incoherent response were you even close to anything that could be considered a rational thought. Everyone in this room is now dumber for having listened to it. I award you no points, and may God have mercy on your soul.


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The Whistler on January 17, 2007 at 12:04 pm
Avatar for Rob B.

I can’t believe that the media has failed to capitalize on the whole “Senator Banging a lobbyist” headline. Where has the quality of yellow journelism gone.

Rob B. on January 17, 2007 at 12:44 pm
Avatar for pomerdorgrad

Hey, where do those links come from in my earlier post? “Insurance” and “taxes” get advertising links? Icky.

As for attribution, I know, I know. I should have said, “My sources tell me she’s a lousy lobbyist.”

pomerdorgrad on January 17, 2007 at 01:56 pm
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Those links are a new ad service I’m trying out.

With all the traffic around here these days I gotta do something to help pay for bandwidth and maintenance time.


When the people fear their government, there is tyranny; when the government fears the people, there is liberty.

-- Thomas Jefferson

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Rob on January 17, 2007 at 02:21 pm

Dorgan should be raked over the coals for that kid of behavior.

But he hasn’t been.

He has a quid pro quo with Nd’s media monopoly.

Kevin on January 17, 2007 at 02:23 pm
Avatar for pomerdorgrad

Yeah, I figured that’s what the links were. Still icky and contrary to the blogging ethos, where I get to pick my links, but not quite as icky as the Butthole Surfers. Perhaps you can limit them to the main posts and not the comments? (I do appreciate the bandwidth and cost dilemma.)

I actually think the criticism of the North Dakota media, if by that you mean daily reporters, is a bit unfair. N.D. reporters don’t cover the delegation’s activities in Washington; it’s not a useful expenditure of their time and a media outlet’s limited resources. The AP has a regional reporter, Mary Clare something, I think, but she has to cover the Dakotas and Minnesota from D.C. One big story—Tim Johnson’s brain damage, for example—is enough to monopolize her time.

The place where the N.D.-based media does fall short is in the campaigns, no doubt about that. A good story exploring the Conrad-Calautti-Peter Angelos triumverate would have been informative, especially if someone did a broader examination of the trial lawyers’ money running the state Democratic party.

And of course editorialists who write about the delegation should stop being such patsies and putzes. Any editorial quoting Dorgan on the death tax should have offered that explanatory context. I doubt Zaleski did.

pomerdorgrad on January 17, 2007 at 02:39 pm
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Perhaps you can limit them to the main posts and not the comments?

I’ll see what I can do.  I just implemented them recently, so I’m still tweaking.  But I have had an enormous amount of time to tweak as I’ve also been busy just trying to keep the site up and running.

Though, the links you create and the links added are different. Your links are just colored.  The ad links are underlined.

I actually think the criticism of the North Dakota media, if by that you mean daily reporters, is a bit unfair. N.D. reporters don’t cover the delegation’s activities in Washington; it’s not a useful expenditure of their time and a media outlet’s limited resources.

Fair enough.  Near the end of my post I direct most of my criticism at the state’s editorial pages, but really this is something the state’s journalists should be covering as well.  The estate tax is a big issue for North Dakotans, and the fact that Dorgan seems to be siding with his lobbyist wife over the wishes of North Dakotans is news that should be reported.


When the people fear their government, there is tyranny; when the government fears the people, there is liberty.

-- Thomas Jefferson

Rob’s recently listened-to songs:

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Rob on January 17, 2007 at 02:48 pm

Nd.’s three stooges in congress don’t have to worry about accumulating a nest egg since they will be getting a government check for the rest of their lives!

Kevin on January 19, 2007 at 12:31 pm
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