[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 60 (Wednesday, April 25, 2012)]
[House]
[Pages H2073-H2074]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
AMERICAN LEGISLATIVE EXCHANGE COUNCIL
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Georgia (Mr. Johnson) for 5 minutes.
Mr. JOHNSON of Georgia. Mr. Speaker, ladies and gentlemen, a shadowy
collection of wealthy businesses and conservative Tea Party Republican
State lawmakers is undermining our democracy.
Last week I discussed the connection between the American Legislative
Exchange Council, known as ALEC, and the proliferation of shoot first
and ask questions later legislation that supported the Trayvon Martin
case that we all know about, and other draconian criminal justice laws.
According to the New York Times:
ALEC lawmakers typically introduced more than 1,000 bills
based on model legislation each year and passed about 17
percent of them. A members-only newsletter from 1995, found
in an online archive of tobacco company documents, bluntly
characterized that success ratio as a ``good investment.''
I agree. ALEC's corporate members have gotten an outstanding return
on their investments, but it's been at yours and my expense. Due to
ALEC, the NRA, and the private for-profit prison industry, we are all
less safe and more likely to be put in jail.
The for-profit prison industry, on the other hand, has reaped huge
financial rewards from ALEC-sponsored efforts to incarcerate more
Americans and put them, as well as illegal immigrants, into this
private prison system. For
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the private prison industry, where some of the inmates are paid as low
as 2 cents an hour to produce goods that are later sold for profit,
business is booming.
But ALEC does not stop there. ALEC's corporate members are some of
the world's biggest polluters and most profitable oil companies. ALEC's
corporate bill factory has ghost-written legislation on their behalf to
combat efforts to address climate change and oppose national renewable
energy standards, among others.
In 1998, according to the Center for Media and Democracy, ALEC
belched a resolution out of its smokestack calling on the U.S. to
reject the Kyoto Protocol and banning States from regulating greenhouse
gases. ALEC's Energy, Environment, and Agriculture Task Force has since
turned out model bills criticizing the Environmental Protection Agency.
Recently, ALEC has focused on what it calls the ``EPA's regulatory
train wreck,'' seeking to frame the EPA's enforcement of the Clean Air
Act as ``higher prices, fewer jobs, and less energy.'' ALEC's dirty
supporters, like the Koch brothers--named one of the United States' top
10 air polluters in a University of Massachusetts study--began
attacking every effort to clean up the mess that they themselves have
made. Why? Because they want to continue to make more money.
ALEC is dumping its waste right here in Congress. After the Tennessee
coal ash disaster, ALEC began pushing a model resolution called
Resolution to Retain State Authority over Coal Ash as Non-Hazardous
Waste. Can you believe that? This resolution was approved by ALEC on
June 3, 2010. Just over a year later, October 14, 2011, this House
passed a bill that authorizes States to adopt and implement coal
combustion residuals permit programs.
Mr. Speaker, this is only the tip of the melting iceberg. Yes, global
warming is at work, and it is melting this iceberg that ALEC
represents.
I encourage the American people to visit the alecexposed.org Web
site, where you can view leaked ALEC documents, including model bills,
as well as a list of ALEC members. About 60 percent of the State
legislators in this country are members of ALEC.
Mr. Speaker, I'll return tomorrow with more on how corporations are
using ALEC to install their agenda in the States and in Congress,
undermining our basic rights and freedoms.
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