Inside ALEC's Powerful, Right-Wing Indoctrination Machine
By Alexander Zaitchik
August 20, 2012 | SALT LAKE CITY -- You won't see signs for the country's sweetest travel-club deal in the window of your local travel store. To join the American Legislative Exchange Council, your fellow citizens must first elect you to statewide office. If you win as a Republican or conservative Democrat, your ALEC state chair will approach with terms of membership you'll find generous, if not impossible to resist. A token $100 buys the opportunity to attend all-inclusive events on ALEC's busy calendar of summits, conferences, and academies, where you and your family can enjoy some of the country's finest resorts and destination hotels. Joints like Utah's Grand America, site of ALEC's just concluded national conference and proud bearer of AAA's "Five Diamond" rating.
It was
on the eve of this conference that I first glimpsed the privileges and
perks of ALEC membership. I was sitting in the Grand America's Viennese
style lobby café, pondering the primrose bush courtyard outside as a
young harpist plucked out Fur Elise, when an ALEC staffer
appeared and began placing laminated cards on the tables. She was
followed by groups of women, the wives and daughters of ALEC state
legislators and lobbyists, sitting down to enjoy a British Full Tea of
sweets, scones and jams, laid out on an elaborate spread of fine china. I
picked up one of the laminated cards and read: "Enjoy your
'ALEC-SNACKS'!" Beneath the text were the logos of Americans for
Prosperity and the American Insurance Association, two ALEC sponsors. As
ALEC snacks were served, the tables grew atwitter. "This is so nice," said the wide-eyed wife of a Virginia state representative.
Not long after, the china was taken away and the café grew busy with attendees getting down to business. A hundred or so legislators, corporate representatives, and think tank staff [2] greeted each other and ordered cocktails, filling the room with an ambient babble of right-leaning schmooze and networking. I've had to deal with those same damn unions.... We've got a few big tort reform bills in the pipe.... I'd love for you to come visit the plant .... Are you with Goldwater or Heritage now?
Not long after, the china was taken away and the café grew busy with attendees getting down to business. A hundred or so legislators, corporate representatives, and think tank staff [2] greeted each other and ordered cocktails, filling the room with an ambient babble of right-leaning schmooze and networking. I've had to deal with those same damn unions.... We've got a few big tort reform bills in the pipe.... I'd love for you to come visit the plant .... Are you with Goldwater or Heritage now?
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