Google Lobbying Spending Nearly Doubles, $1.34M Spending Focused on Privacy

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This past quarter, Google spent $1.34 million on Washington
lobbyists, an increase of 41% over last year’s spending during the same
period. That brings the company’s lobbying money up to $2.72 million
for the first half of 2010, according to Consumer Watchdog [1]. With all that spending, who
and what is Google trying to influence?

Recently, the company has faced mounds of criticism over privacy
issues, and it seems to be focusing its lobbying efforts on that front.
For example, Johanna Shelton, a senior policy counselor, serves as one
of Google’s lobbyists in D.C. Shelton has worked in the past with Rep.
Rich Boucher, who just this week unveiled his additions to a piece of
online privacy legislation making its rounds in the House. Boucher’s
bill specifically targeted privacy issues related to the advertising
efforts by Google and Facebook, which also ramped up its lobbying
spending in Washington.

Consumer Watchdog’s findings correspond with recent articles
discussing Google’s growing influence in Washington. Politico, for
example, recently published
[2] an article about how the search engine has grown its political
power inside the White House.

Certainly, this enormous increase in spending has only aided that
effort.


Links:
[1]
http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=xprnw.20100721.DC38453&show_article=1
[2] http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0710/39829.html

Consumer Watchdog
Consumer Watchdoghttps://consumerwatchdog.org
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