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Directory Sites
Center for Responsive Politics has "a snapshot of what Big Tobacco is contributing to Congress, and who's getting the money".
www.crp.org
"They may not smoke tobacco products, but some in Congress are addicted to the industry's money." Common Cause on tobacco money in Congress: how much, who gets it, and what it buys.
www.ccsi.com
Tobacco Industry Activity in the U.S.
Reports on industry activity by state; extensive and recent reports available for Arizona, California, Colorado, Florida, Massachusetts, Missouri, Mississippi, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Texas, Washington, and Wisconsin.www.library.ucsf.edu
Center for Responsible Politics: Tobacco Tally
Shows House and Senate recipients of tobacco money for 1995-96 and 1997-98 by name; summary information from 1979 through 1998.
www.opensecrets.org
Tobacco Lobying in 1997 and 1998
Shows amounts spent by each tobacco company, both lobbying and campaign cash, for all election cycles since 1990.
www.opensecrets.org
George W. Bush: Calling for Philip Morris
Article in The Nation covers George W. Bush's tobacco connections, his record on tobacco.
www.no-smoking.org
Texans for Public Justice Lobby Watch
Reports on lobbying in the state of Texas include reports on tobacco industry activity: "Rove a Mile for a Camel", "Second-Hand Smoke", "Death Merchants Hire More Accomplices", "Philip Morris' Newest Smokers", "Health Hypocrisy", and "Tobacco Spends Big Bucks for Political Favor".
www.tpj.org
Warning: Philip Morris Wants Regulation
Independent analysis of Philip Morris's call for regulation finds ways Philip Morris's proposed regulation would protect the industry, not the customer.
www.commondreams.org
Republican National Committees
The tobacco industry is a top giver of "soft money" to both political parties, but lately Republicans have been getting about 80% of tobacco money.
www.pbs.org
Serious Money: The Top 100 Contributors
The number one contributor to political parties in 1995-96 was Philip Morris, the largest tobacco company in the world. This report lists all of the top 100 contributors.
www.crp.org
Tobacco PAC money: how it works
Report from the Center for Responsibe Politics on tobacco money taken by Congress and voting records on bills affecting the tobacco industry.
www.crp.org
Tobacco Hard & Soft Dollar Summary for the 105th Congress
From the Center for Responsive Politics: the scorecard on who among your elected representives took tobacco money.
www.opensecrets.org
Washingtonpost.com: Big Tobacco Filters Into Campaign Coffers
Many different ways an elected official can take tobacco money; this article summarizes.
washingtonpost.com
Undermining Popular Government: Tobacco Industry Political Expenditures in California, 1993-1994
Documents how the tobacco industry influences law in California.
www.ucsf.edu
Tobacco firms Dip Deep to Lobby Hard
A.P. reporting on industry lobbying.
204.27.188.70