
April 25, 2007
Double-dipping
lobbyist
Look who else
a key small-business lobbyist is working for in Salem.
BY NIGEL JAQUISS
J.L. Wilson,
one of Salem's highest-profile lobbyists,
isn't who he appears to be.
For this legislative
session, Wilson has taken on clients in addition to—and in conflict with—his
employer since 1999, the powerful National Federation of Independent Business
Oregon.
As state director
of NFIB/Oregon, Wilson advocates for the state association's nearly 13,000 small businesses.
And this session, he's been a key lobbyist against Senate Bill 838, a hotly
contested renewable energy bill.
But WW
has learned that Wilson's filings with the Government Standards and Practices Commission
show him registered to lobby for more than 30 other organizations. Among them:
the Oregon Criminal Defense Lawyers Association, and Oregon PERS Retirees
Inc. whose interests diverge from the right-leaning NFIB.
"There's
a real disconnect here," says Janice Thompson, of the watchdog Oregon
Money in Politics Research Action Project.
And Wilson's
boss, California-based Daniel Markels, didn't know about Wilson's expanded client list. Markels initially
told WW that "J.L. is an employee of NFIB and he has no other
clients other than his employer." But when read a list of Wilson's non-NFIB clients, Markels said in disbelief,
"You're telling me he's a registered lobbyist for [retired] public employees?"
It's easy to
see why Wilson would make an attractive
frontman to groups trying to defeat SB 838: NFIB represents a formidable constituency.
Wilson
acknowledges that he had taken on outside work without NFIB's knowledge or
permission.
"To be honest,
this was not something I really wanted to draw attention to," says the
32-year-old Wilson, a staffer in the 1990s for former Republican House speakers
Lynn Lundquist and Lynn Snodgrass. "It was not something that I was interested
in NFIB national knowing about."
Wilson
says lobbyist Mark Nelson—who represents Industrial Customers of Northwest
Utilities, the primary opponent of the renewable-energy bill, among dozens
of other clients—hired him in March. Among Nelson's clients are ICNU and the
Oregon Restaurant Association, which also opposes the renewables bill.
Wilson
acknowledges that being registered for clients who aren't disclosed in the
Capitol Club lobbyist directory could be confusing to legislators who might
think NFIB members in their districts also oppose SB 838. He says the directory
doesn't list his non-NFIB clients because Nelson hired him after the directory's
deadline. While perhaps true, that explanation is incomplete.
First, of course,
Wilson's boss says he cannot work
for others. Second, Wilson previously did undisclosed contract work for Nelson's company,
Public Affairs Counsel during a 2004 ballot measure campaign.
While identifying
himself as NFIB's director, Wilson
worked for Nelson's company to defend the state-owned workers' comp insurer,
SAIF Corp., against a ballot measure. Wilson's
role in that 2004 campaign emerged in a subsequent secretary of state's investigation,
which has never previously been publicly reported.
Rep. Sal Esquivel
(R-Medford) says NFIB carries a lot of weight with lawmakers in Oregon,
a "state of small businesses." Esquivel, whom Wilson
lobbied on SB838, says he had no idea Wilson
represents dozens of other clients. "This is unbelievable," Esquivel
says. "I'm very disappointed."