Hollywood and big publishers already have an alarming stranglehold over the US Trade Representative’s objectives in trade agreements, leading to extreme copyright enforcement and privacy-invading policies in trade deals like the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) agreement. But now, the White House is doing away with the remaining limits it has on lobbyists influencing federal policies.
Special interests won a federal court ruling earlier this year, where the judge in the case suggested that President Obama’s ban on registered lobbyists serving on federal advisory committees violated those lobbyists’ rights. In light of this ruling, the White House has sent a memo specifying new rules, permitting lobbyists to once again officially serve on federal agencies if they are representing a specific client (such as say, the Motion Picture Association of America).
These new relaxed rules on lobbyists mean that Hollywood will now be able to exercise their influence on US trade policy more than ever.
Since President Obama enacted the ban in 2010, only non-registered lobbyists were able to serve on theseTrade Advisory Committees. These committees currently include hundreds of legal advisors for corporations, who can log in from their own computers to view and comment on the official drafts of trade agreements. Meanwhile, Congress members are only permitted to view the text in a specific room without the ability to take notes or be accompanied by legislative aides. Public representatives are afforded even less access to negotiations than corporate representatives.