Fresh Air - How American Lobbyists Threaten Democracy
Episode Date: August 14, 2024Casey Michel shines a light on Americans lobbying for foreign governments in Washington, in many cases representing brutally repressive regimes and countries that oppose U.S. interests. Laws requiring... registration of lobbyists and disclosure of their efforts have been little-enforced, and thus ignored by countless agents who've reaped huge profits from their work. Michel's new book is Foreign Agents.Also, Carolina Miranda reviews a YouTube documentary about the spectacular failure of a Star Wars-themed hotel in Orlando.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Support for this podcast and the following message come from the NPR Wine Club, which has generated over $1.75 million to support NPR programming.
Whether buying a few bottles or joining the club, you can learn more at nprwineclub.org slash podcast. Must be 21 or older to purchase.
This is Fresh Air. I'm Dave Davies. The Russian efforts to influence the 2016 presidential election alerted many
Americans to the vulnerability of our democratic institutions to tampering by forces from abroad.
Our guest today, investigative reporter Casey Michelle, argues in a new book that the threat
is far greater than we realize. Most of it, he says, comes from American citizens willing to
promote the interests of
brutal, undemocratic, and anti-American regimes for a price. American lobbying for foreign
governments in the U.S. isn't new, he says. He cites examples from the 19th century and from
the 1930s, when an American public relations guru made a fortune whitewashing the record of Nazi
Germany. But he argues it's far more extensive
now, and some of the players are surprising. They include not just professional lobbyists,
law firms, and publicists, but former U.S. government officials and members of Congress
from both parties, as well as universities and think tanks who accept eye-popping sums from
foreign governments. There have been laws for
years requiring registration and disclosure of these efforts, but Michel says they've been
mostly ineffective. Casey Michel is director of the Combating Kleptocracy program with the
Human Rights Foundation. He's the author of a previous book titled American Kleptocracy.
His writing has appeared in the Wall Street Journal, the Atlantic, the Washington Post, and other publications. His new book is Foreign Agents, How American
Lobbyists and Lawmakers Threaten Democracy Around the World. Well, Casey Michelle,
welcome to Fresh Air.
Casey Michelle Dave, thanks so much for having me.
You know, you tell us early in the book about a guy named Ivy Lee. This is the guy in the 1930s who blazed the trail on this
activity. He was a publicist, kind of invented modern public relations in the eyes of some.
He represented some of the corporate titans of the early 20th century who faced scandals from
their treatment of workers or environmental damage, whatever, and did his best to clean up their images.
And then he gets interested in Europe.
How does he end up associating it with Nazi Germany?
Now, Ivy Lee is probably best remembered to this day as the so-called father of the public
relations industry.
He worked in the late 19th and early 20th century, really creating the playbook for
what we now understand as public relations.
He invented the first press release.
He created the first kind of crisis management playbook for how industrialists or political figures could overcome scandals.
And he was wildly successful.
He ended up working with some of the most prominent figures in America at the turn of the 20th century,
folks like the Rockefellers, folks like Woodrow Wilson and Charles Schwab. And he really became
a celebrity unto himself, a very, very, very well-known figure and the creator of this industry.
But by the 1920s and the 1930s, he realized that he did not have to conduct business only in
America and that there were clients abroad
that were eager for his services as well. And so he took his talents abroad. He went to Rome
to work for Benito Mussolini and his new rising fascist government. He went to Moscow to
effectively whitewash the new Soviet regime, then grabbing the reins of power. And most
spectacularly and most notoriously,
he ended up in Berlin working for the new Nazi regime and selling his services to the highest
rungs of the Nazi government, then taking roots in Germany and setting the stage for the eventual
Second World War. Yeah, he worked for a private firm, really, but in fact represented the interests
of the Nazi government a lot. And as we would eventually learn, met with some of the senior officials including one meeting with Hitler.
What did he actually do for the Nazi regime?
How did he sell or try to improve their image in the United States?
He did a few things.
One of those was domestically in the United States of America.
He monitored the conversations, monitored the
media coverage of the Nazis. Again, Hitler taking power in 1933, 1934. There were still plenty of
questions, certainly plenty of concerns, but plenty of unknowns about the Nazis. And one of the things
that Lee did for his clients back in Berlin was keep them updated about what Americans were saying
about them. And he met sit-down meetings with the
highest ranks of the Nazi establishment, with Joseph Goebbels and even with Adolf Hitler
himself. And he provided talking points for them about how they could play down concerns about
anti-Semitism in the United States, about how they could recruit sympathetic journalists to their
cause, and how they could defend Hitler's rearmament and Hitler's creation
of entire stormtrooper brigades by saying these are simply patriotic Germans who wanted to make
sure to defend the fatherland. They never had any offensive or aggressive concerns or considerations
and that folks really at the end of the day shouldn't be worried about them. And even at the
10,000 foot level really shouldn't be worried about this new regime in Berlin.
Maybe they're not the most democratic we've ever seen, but certainly they won't end in disaster whatsoever.
We should at the end of the day support the Nazis.
He eventually attracts the attention of members of Congress,
and there's a hearing of the House Un-American Activities Committee,
which people will remember was active in the McCarthy era later.
What happened when Ivy Lee came to explain himself?
The conversation was initially very cordial.
But as time went on, legislators and those at the hearing that day began realizing that Lee wasn't simply some individual American gallivanting around
Berlin, meeting with private companies. He was having sit-down meetings with the highest ranks
of the Nazi establishment and acting, again, as this kind of navigator or guidepost for how the
Nazis could improve their image in the United States of America, could sell their regime to
potentially sympathetic Americans,
and beyond that, could grab power that much further in Berlin, silencing criticism,
and launch eventually the world into the Second World War.
Trevor Burrus So Ivy Lee, this publicist who made all this money, did all of this work to help and promote the image of Nazi Germany. It all came apart
really after he faced a hearing in Congress, and his
career soon came to an end. But there was a lot of outrage about it, and this in part led to the
passage of a law, the Foreign Agents Registration Act, to try and require some registration and
disclosure of these activities. It imposed some reporting requirements. It was strengthened by
Congress again in 1966, but you're right, It was never really that effective. Why not?
So this law was passed shortly after Lee's hearing, which in many ways shocked a lot of Americans that someone like Ivy Lee could be turned into a mouthpiece for a regime like the Nazis in Germany and do so in secret with other Americans not having any awareness until the
congressional hearing about what he was doing. And so legislators passed this new regulation.
It was called the Foreign Agents Registration Act or FARAB. And when that was initially passed,
that required all Americans who were working on behalf of foreign regimes, acting as effective propagandists for those regimes, they had to disclose what they were doing and who they were doing it for and how much money they were making along the way.
They had to share that information with the federal government, which would then publicize and publish that information for other Americans to look through it the problem though is you can have the most progressive piece
of pro-transparency legislation that you want on the books but if it's not enforced and if no one's
actually paying attention to it then it's hardly worth the paper that it's written on and
unfortunately for the first three quarters of a century that the foreign agents registration act
existed for for decades after the second War, it effectively kind of fell
into disuse. It was this forgotten backwater of foreign lobbying transparency requirements
that it wasn't really until the 21st century that folks realized maybe we should finally
begin paying attention and enforcing these regulations. You know, the modern era of
foreign lobbying in a way comes in the 1980s. And a key player is Paul Manafort, who's a name that people will recognize from his association with Donald Trump.
But he was a Republican operative who helped Ronald Reagan win the presidency in 1980.
And then when Reagan took office, he opened a Washington lobbying shop that was kind of a game changer.
He worked with Roger Stone and a guy
named Charlie Black. What did they do that was new and effective? What Manafort and his colleagues
were able to do in many ways was similar to Ivy Lea because in a similar way to Lee creating the
public relations industry as we know it, Manafort in the 1970s, 1980s, 1990s was creating the lobbying industry as
we now know it.
He was marrying not just the kind of traditional lobbying of having these conversations with
policymakers to push preferred policy, but he was actually creating a new paradigm in
which he was both lobbying and consulting.
That is to say, he would bring the clients that he was representing directly to policymakers in Washington. He was kind of closing this loop that had existed
earlier and making money hand over fist. He was creating new avenues, new pathways for those in
the private sector to directly access those policymakers themselves. And then when those policymakers
needed to run for reelection or needed help with fundraising, he would be able to go out of his way
to help with that as well. So he was creating this brand new playbook for how any firm, for how any
industry could directly lobby policymakers. And then beyond that, how the policymakers in Washington
and in Congress themselves could remain in power and could use those networks and could use those financing streams to help their own reelection.
So he had a firm that did political consulting.
It helped get people elected to Congress, to the Senate. office saying, hey, I've got a client here from whatever country or whatever firm that needs some
help, the lawmaker is talking to the person he depends upon for re-election. So there's this
confluence of interest or you could see it as a conflict of interest, right?
You're exactly right. He's called before a hearing and he's facing very critical questions.
And one of his questioners says, is this not simply influence peddling? At the end of the day,
Manafort looks up and says, I suppose you could call it influence peddling if you'd like, but
again, what he preferred to call it was lobbying, and again, this is how the lobbying industry in
and of itself transformed in the late 20th century, and in a certain sense, in hindsight,
it almost kind of appears surprising that someone didn't necessarily think of this earlier, how to
close these loops, how to create this kind of closed system where folks like Manafort and his colleagues could be
paid time and again for multiple services that they were providing, again, for constituents in
the private sector as well as in the public sector, kind of creating the quote-unquote
swamp as we know it. But Manafort was the one who had the vision. He was the one who had the insight.
He was the one who had the resources that at the end of the day, he could actually create or recreate the industry in his own image.
So what's interesting here is that you have him now being really effective as a lobbyist because he's also helping these people get elected.
So he can be an effective lobbyist.
The question then is who does he represent?
And of course, there are plenty of corporate and private interests.
But he ends up getting clients abroad.
And they're some of the shadiest folks in the world in a way, right?
I mean, dictatorial regimes, ones with brutal human rights records.
Do you want to pick an example and tell us about this?
Dave, you're exactly right.
Unfortunately, there are plenty of candidates to choose. I think the one that maybe encapsulates this work
is when Manafort ended up working for the regime in the Philippines, in Manila, under Ferdinand
Marcos, who was a years-long dictator, a close ally of the United States of America during the
Cold War. But by the mid-1980s, Marcos appeared to be on his last legs,
which is when Manafort stepped in. Manafort didn't technically work for Marcos alone.
He signed an agreement with a nominally private organization. But again, that was an effective
cutout for this years-long dictator himself. And what Manafort was essentially charged with
was manipulating a Filipino election
that would allow Mr. Marcos to remain in power,
effectively in perpetuity.
And Marcos, you know, he unleashes violence
on anti-regime protesters.
He does attempt, and at least initially successfully,
to steal the election
itself. But eventually, the protesters do overwhelm him, and he is forced to flee the
country. And unfortunately, that means that his wife, Imelda Marcos, had to leave her thousands
of pairs of shoes behind. So in that sense, Manafort was actually not successful in keeping
Marcos in power in perpetuity, but that gave folks a sense of what he was willing to do for the right bidder and for the right buyer.
Yeah, one detail of that story that I love is that the first contract he gets is almost a million dollars and the payment is brought to him in person by Imelda Marcos of the legendary shoe collection.
Yeah.
You know, this kind of activity does get attention eventually. I mean, others realize that there's money to be made from representing these folks and there are other lobbying shops starting to do reporting on this, including a couple of occasions where reporters posed as someone
looking for lobbying help from an odious regime to see just how far some of these regimes
would go, including one that was an effort by the satirical monthly Spy magazine to pose
as modern-day Nazis and approach a lobbyist to ask them for help promoting Nazism in Germany
nowadays,
things like maybe we can reinvade Poland.
Tell us how that worked.
Trevor Burrus Spy magazine, which in the early 1990s had
this great spread detailing all of the worst American firms that were working for some
of the worst regimes on the planet.
And one of those cases, they posed as German neo-Nazis and called up one of the most, at that time, notorious American lobbyists, a gentleman named Edward von Kloberg, who worked, again, with a range of the most heinous dictatorships around the planet, including folks like Saddam Hussein. called him up and they asked him what it would take to get him to work on behalf of and launder
the image of these German neo-Nazis, these far-right Germans that, as you mentioned,
were interested in not only seizing power in Berlin, but reinvading Poland and I'm sure many
other countries along the way. And Kloberg, and folks can read through the transcript,
was only too happy to take them on as clients. He was eager. He was excited. He was
talking about the meetings he would set up in the United States of America, including figures like
David Duke, the former head of the KKK, so on and so forth. There was absolutely no bottom for folks
like von Kloberg, and certainly there was no bottom for the industry in and of itself.
So there was some reporting that exposed the extent to which these private lobbyists would take money to promote just about anybody
doing just about anything. Did it have any positive effect? Unfortunately, it did not,
Dave. I wish I could say that it did. I think one of the most remarkable case studies from this era
that I had the chance to write about, there was another reporter, a gentleman named Ken Silverstein,
who worked at Harper's Magazine,
who again posed as a representative
of one of the most Stalinist,
totalitarian dictatorships still on the planet
in the country of Turkmenistan.
And he successfully reached out to PR firm after PR firm
to ask if they wanted to work for the Turkmen dictator.
And again, over and over and over again,
these firms all said yes. When Silverstein eventually reported this in Harper's Magazine,
I would like to think that the PR firms would have been chastened. They would have had a kind
of a come to Jesus moment realizing what they were doing. But instead, what happened is they
all closed ranks. They all in a unified voice criticized Silverstein, criticized Harper's
Magazine, and claimed that they did nothing wrong.
Certainly they were committing no crimes, but even ethically, morally, they did not see themselves doing anything incorrectly whatsoever.
And again, I think that symbolizes so much of the ethos of this industry, certainly that era that continues to this day. You know, one of the things that I learned covering politics, and this might surprise
people, but companies that do lobbying, they get to know lawmakers and they as a company
or as individuals make political contributions to the lawmakers that they're lobbies, that
this is legal, it happens all the time.
One of the things you write about is that companies that were representing foreign governments,
particularly dictatorial foreign governments where they could loot untold millions and maybe even billions from
their own national treasuries, could pay money to the lobbying companies and then they could in turn
make contributions to the elected officials and candidates in a way kind of putting foreign money into the American political
system, which is barred by campaign finance law. You're not allowed to make foreign contributions.
Tell us about this practice. Yeah, Dave, I think this is frankly one of the most shocking things
that I found on my end in putting this book together. And again, it's not that this is
illegal. The scandal really is what is legal. These foreign dictatorships have been spending
billions in recent years
on lobbyists, on these PR firms, law firms, accounting firms, consultancies, so on and so
forth. And many of these firms are then in turn donating directly to the congressional officials,
to the federal officials. And what we saw is that some of these donations come on the exact same day
that these firms are having sit-down
meetings with the officials to lobby on behalf of their foreign dictatorial clients. It is still
illegal for foreign regimes or foreign nationals to donate directly to American officials or to
American campaigns, but these firms are certainly a handy cutout. And one of the researchers that I
quote in the book said, at the end of the day, a dollar is a dollar and that money is fungible. And these firms are
certainly a very effective cutout if a foreign regime wants to mask its funding of American
officials. Right. And we should say that it is illegal for anybody to serve as a conduit for
a foreign contribution to an American candidate. But of course, as long as nobody owns up to the fact that it was a one-for-one deal,
the two legs of the transaction are technically legal, right?
That's exactly right.
And again, I think at the end of the day, the numbers do speak for themselves.
One of the firms I write about that other researchers have covered,
certainly they're donating widely to plenty of elected officials around Washington,
but they are donating twice
as much to those that they are lobbying directly on behalf of their foreign dictatorial clients.
They are donating magnitudes more to those that they are directly trying to access on behalf of
their dictatorial regimes that they represent as well. And again, I think that speaks for itself.
I'm going to take another break here. We're speaking with Casey and Michelle. His new book
is Foreign Agents, How American Lobbyists and Lawmakers Threaten Democracy Around the World.time mid-market exchange rate with no hidden fees.
Download the WISE app today or visit WISE.com. T's and C's apply.
You know, Paul Manafort, who kind of got this game going in some ways in the 1980s and kind of revolutionized lobbying,
becomes an even bigger story in the early 2000s, helping a Ukrainian politician named Viktor Yanukovych.
He was a pro-Russian politician with ties to oligarchs and mobsters who was driven from power in an uprising in 2004 after a disputed election.
And Manafort was engaged to kind of revive his career. And so he comes in and does a personal and strategic makeover,
clothes, hair, talking points, and kind of also cynically developing a political strategy based on ethnic division in the country. It actually works. And Yanukovych actually eventually becomes
president again. There's a lot of history here involving Russia's role. But what I'm interested in you telling us is how Manafort benefited exactly.
This was quite a windfall for him, wasn't it?
Yes, it was.
This was one of Manafort's, at least until 2014, one of his clearest success stories,
how he transformed this kind of clear, thuggish, would-be autocrat into someone that folks can look at as a democratizing figure,
as even a pro-Western figure that was worth electing to the highest rungs of power in Ukraine,
even though there were still obviously plenty of concerns about his pro-Kremlin leanings and his
links to oligarchs. Manafort did not do this out of the goodness of his heart. He did not do this
because he cared about Ukrainians or Ukraine's pro-Western trajectory.
He did it because he got unspeakably wealthy in the process. And we know this because of documents that have come out in Ukraine, thanks to Ukrainian investigators, and because of documents and
statements that later came out in American criminal trials. Paul Manafort made tens of millions of
dollars from his arrangement in Ukraine. He had access, again,
to the highest rungs of power in Ukraine. He had what one journalist called walk-in rights with
President Yanukovych. That is to say, he could go into the Ukrainian president's office whenever he
wanted and offer his advice. This was Manafort's closest brush with true power to that point.
And he took full advantage of it.
Yeah. Just to add a bit of color here, describe the house that Yanukovych built.
It's unfair to call it a house, Dave. This is a palace, right? This is dozens of rooms with
gilded marble staircases, a garage for a fleet of dozens of high-end cars. There is a lake outside with an actual proper galleon that is stowed there.
There is a petting zoo with ostriches and crocodiles and as memory serves, there was even
a massive nude portrait of the president. This is where so much of the money that he and his family
and friends who had looted from the Ukrainian populace, This is where that money went to, this incredibly gaudy
construct that if folks visit Ukraine, they can actually still see. And Manafort was there all
the time. There is one scene in which he is enjoying the hot tub with the then Ukrainian
president, but they're talking about the future of Ukraine. They are talking about beyond that,
how to potentially enrich themselves, their family members, and their closest friends as well, so that figures like Yanukovych can remain in power for years and years and years to a whole host of crimes including tax evasion and lying in official interviews and violation of the Foreign Agents Registration Act and all of these things, although it was ultimately pardoned by Donald Trump.
But the interesting question that's raised here is that it was actually during the Trump administration when there were actually real investigations and consequences for
people failing to register their work as foreign lobbyists. That's exactly right, Dave. This is one
of the great ironies is that it wasn't until Donald Trump was president that folks in the
United States of America not only realized how much of a threat these foreign lobbying networks
are and how much something like the Foreign Agents Registration Act should be enforced,
but realized that they could actually prosecute some of these Americans,
these American firms who had been acting for years as foot soldiers for dictatorships around the world
and had now embedded themselves firmly into the political firmament in Washington, D.C.
And so it is while Donald Trump is president
that we see the prosecution of Paul Manafort, that we see guilty pleas from figures like Mike Flynn,
who was the former national security advisor for Donald Trump, who also worked as a foreign agent
for the Turkish government. You know, we see convictions or guilty pleas for a range of other figures,
many of whom are in Trump's orbit, but not all of them. Some are Republicans, some are Democrats.
It's very much a bipartisan approach. And I think we should underline the point that this didn't
happen because Donald Trump said, hey, this is an issue I want you to focus on it. It's because
the Justice Department still had a great deal of independence and the folks there said, we got to do something about this.
We were extremely fortunate, Dave, to have an independent Department of Justice that could act in all Americans' benefit and not simply at the behest of a president.
It was because of the independent Department of Justice that we saw the ramp up of funding for investigation and for enforcement.
And again, these successes built
upon themselves. It's no surprise that during those Trump years, while we saw these prosecutions,
the registrations for foreign lobbyists in Washington skyrocketed. They went up something
like 50% over a very short period of time, allowing Americans that much more information
about what these foreign lobbying networks were actually doing in Washington and elsewhere. We need to take another break here. Let me
reintroduce you. We are speaking with Casey Mischel. His new book is Foreign Agents,
How American Lobbyists and Lawmakers Threaten Democracy Around the World.
We'll be back after this break. This is Fresh Air.
You know, it's interesting that we've talked about law firms and lobbyists and publicists that make money representing foreign governments.
This goes beyond those kinds of organizations, including some, you know, nominally charitable nonprofit organizations, some of them quite well known.
You mentioned the Clinton Foundation, for example.
I mean, do they belong in the same camp here? I describe the Clinton Foundation as well as other nonprofits to illustrate that what we
kind of traditionally understand as lobbying has transformed in the 21st century. Again,
these regimes are not going just to the PR firms or the law firms or the consultancies anymore.
They are now going to places like nonprofits, in this case,
the Clinton Foundation, because as they see it, that allows them access to policymakers in
Washington, to the highest rungs of the American political establishment. And then beyond that,
the ability for these regimes to influence and access American policy for their benefit,
because that is what it comes down to at the end of the days. These regimes trying to do whatever they can to make sure legislators in Washington pass
pro-regime policies that will allow these kleptocratic figures or authoritarian networks
or dictatorships writ large to remain in power in perpetuity.
And I will just say one thing about the Clinton Foundation.
They never registered as foreign lobbyists.
They didn't necessarily need to in terms of the actual regulations we have on the books.
But I do not think it is any surprise that the donations, the gifts, the significant contributions from authoritarian governments and dictators around the world, the millions or tens of millions of dollars donations to the Clinton Foundation all spiked when Clinton appeared the likely 2008 Democratic nominee
and then collapsed thereafter and then spiked once more when Clinton appeared the 2016
Democratic nominee and then collapsed once more. Following the chart of this, it's kind of like a
roller coaster, really. I have no doubt that these authoritarian and autocratic governments
thought that they were accessing the potential next president and getting in good graces to affect policy thereafter.
Right. So money comes rushing in from shady sources while Hillary Clinton is a potential
candidate. And I guess the important question is, is there any evidence then that the Clinton
Foundation acted to support those regimes?
There's no evidence that the foundation themselves did. Again, the foundation does wonderful work,
but when regimes like the Saudis or the Algerians or oligarchs from places like Russia or Kazakhstan
are sending millions, in some cases,
tens of millions of dollars to an organization
that has to raise red flags,
especially because of who is running that organization
and the access to power itself.
So I don't know if it's
fortunate or unfortunate. Obviously, Hillary Clinton never ended up in the White House itself.
But certainly, a case is to be made that these regimes saw an ability, saw an opening to access
who they thought was going to be the next American president. Another destination for foreign
governments donations that you write about are colleges and universities, a lot of big prestigious ones, right? I to disclose to the federal government all significant gifts
that they have received from foreign governments and from foreign sources. But similar to the
foreign lobbying sector, they spent decades not doing that whatsoever. And then beyond that,
the regulators and legislators in Washington were effectively asleep at the wheel and didn't
require universities to disclose any of this information whatsoever.
So for decades, we were effectively blind as to how foreign governments and foreign regimes
were sending millions and millions and millions of dollars to American higher education institutes,
American colleges and universities. And then beyond that, we don't know what they were doing
with that or what they were expecting from that money. And I do think it is, again, one of these
ironies of the Trump era that it wasn't until the Trump administration came to
power that we saw the very first investigation into the topic. And lo and behold, the Department
of Education looked at a handful of some of the most elite institutes in the United States,
places like Yale, places like Cornell, and a handful of others, and realized there were billions of dollars that had never been disclosed.
And again, these aren't from democratic allies, places like Canada, the United Kingdom.
These are from some of the most repressive regimes on the planet, places like China, places like Saudi Arabia, places like Qatar, so on and so on and so on,
that had just never been disclosed to the government
or to the American populace.
Is there evidence that any of these educational institutions bent their research or restricted
how those funding countries might be written about or talked about?
Yes, there is.
What we do know is some of the universities that were, for instance, receiving funding
donations or maybe
even contracts out of China, they played down rhetoric on places like Taiwan or Tibet or the
concentration camps that are being built for the Uyghur Muslim minority in China. We know that some
of the schools that accepted funding from some of the Gulf dictatorships clamped down on conversations, clamped down on resources for things like LGBT youth at those universities.
But these are only a handful of these universities when we're actually talking about hundreds and hundreds of American colleges that still haven't seen that much scrutiny whatsoever.
You know, kind of widening the lens here a bit, You know, governments do lobby other governments. You know, in Philadelphia, I covered City Hall for many years, and every mayor I covered had
hired professional lobbyists to represent the city's interests in the state capital,
Harrisburg, and in Washington. That's, of course, different from a brutal dictatorship. But,
you know, Philadelphia felt like things are going on in those places, and they need someone looking
out for their interests and getting, you know getting social service funds for people that some might regard as undeserving.
I mean there's always controversy about policy.
Is this a slippery issue?
You know, to play devil's advocate, those that are working in this space ones that are the most familiar with the contours
of policymaking, with who to access, who to communicate with, who to reach out to, who to
target, that whether their constituents and clients are domestic or whether they're foreign,
at the end of the day, these are effective navigators of the halls of power in Washington.
And isn't it beneficial to have someone or some firm like that looking out for
those who want the most effective ways of actually passing policy? I think there's an argument there.
And of course, at the end of the day, lobbying is a constitutionally protected right. The right
to petition the government for redress of grievances is right there in the First Amendment.
But this is where theory becomes practice. What we have seen at the end of the day is not simply these American firms pointing their clients to the best policymaker or the best legislator. to flood out anyone who might be opposed to those regimes, and to bury any critics with these fleets of lobbyists that they hire.
They can silence their primary opponents and their primary critics domestically
through things like state security services,
but they can silence their critics abroad as well,
in places like the United States of America,
by simply drowning them out
and allowing these
regimes to hold on to power that much longer, to immiserate their populations, to destabilize
entire countries, and to continue enriching themselves as much as they want and continue
this kind of kleptocratic carousel as long as they can.
Is there hope for more regulation?
You know, as you say, I mean, there is a right to petition the government, which means that this is speech of a kind. As they can. banning this practice necessarily, as you just mentioned, again, lobbying as a constitutionally protected right. It's not a matter of making it illegal, but it is a matter of shining a light
and requiring the disclosure of what these networks are actually doing. And again, how much
they're being paid, who are they targeting, and what are they actually doing on behalf of their
dictator clients abroad, which is what brings us back to something like the Foreign Agents
Registration Act, which was passed, again, back in the 1930s, back into the Roosevelt administration, and was one of then and remains to this day one of the most progressive pieces of legislation.
It just has to be enforced.
You know, we're about to embark on another presidential contest.
What do you think we might expect in terms of foreign activity, foreign intervention?
Well, Dave, that's a great question. I certainly expect that we'll see more things like hacking
campaigns. And certainly we've already seen evidence of that. Of course, 2016, most spectacularly with
Russia, but we've seen other countries get into that game as well. But, you know, at the end of
the day, Dave, I wouldn't be surprised if we simply see kind of a building out of the networks that already exist because these American firms, these American law firms and PR firms and consultancies that are now foreign agents, these Americans that comprise the foreign lobbying industry, they're not going anywhere anytime soon.
And they are as much a part of the American political firmament on both sides of the aisle as they
have ever been. So I would not be surprised if we see regimes and governments elsewhere signing up
more of these firms, signing up more of these Americans, and spending millions of dollars more
on these foreign lobbyists in Washington and elsewhere, trying to access those they think
will gain power or those even
after the election who have been duly elected and are looking for new policy, looking for new
ways to craft American foreign policy or American foreign aid or American military aid.
You know, these systems have been built up for years and decades. And even though we are
now paying more attention to them,
that doesn't mean they have dissipated whatsoever.
I mean, this is, again, a multibillion-dollar industry that we've only just now begun waking up to,
the threats of, the impacts of.
And I have every confidence that this industry
will continue for the foreseeable future.
Well, Casey Michelle, thank you so much for speaking with us.
Dave, thanks so much. Casey Michelle's new book is Foreign Agents, How American Lobbyists and
Lawmakers Threaten Democracy Around the World. Coming up, Carolina Miranda reviews a YouTube
documentary about the spectacular failure of a Star Wars-themed hotel in Orlando. This is Fresh Air.
One of the most talked-about documentaries of the summer isn't on Netflix,
and it's not screening in theaters.
It's a four-hour YouTube video that charts the rise and fall of a Star Wars-themed resort in Orlando, Florida.
The spectacular failure of the Star Wars Hotel, as the video is called,
digs into the disaster of this resort, which was built by the Walt Disney Company
and closed after just 18 months.
Contributor Carolina Miranda couldn't stop watching it,
and she says the video gets right what the hotel got hopelessly wrong.
I did not expect to spend four hours watching a YouTube video about a hotel that closed over a year ago.
But the spectacular failure of the Star Wars Hotel is no ordinary online video.
It's a detailed assessment of all that went wrong at the hotel, officially known as Star Wars Galactic Star Cruiser.
The video was produced by popular YouTube creator Jenny Nicholson,
and its underlying premise makes it a draw.
A young YouTuber lays bare the poor creative decisions
that led to the demise of a very expensive hotel.
That's the dirty secret behind the Galactic Star Cruiser.
It wasn't an idea conceived to explore a new frontier in immersive experiences.
It was just a lot of ideas they already had, had already promised us, so much they had already implemented.
Part of what makes the spectacular failure of the Star Wars Hotel so compelling is that it's more than a run-of-the-mill internet rant.
Nicholson makes perceptive observations about the nature of fandom and why some fans continue to defend the hotel,
even when it was clear it didn't live up to the PR.
If you book a $5,000 theme park experience and then mention it to a random co-worker,
they're probably going to be like, you're nuts. Everyone is talking about how this thing is way
too expensive and will never be worth it. So once that's out there, you now have to enjoy
this experience. Because if you go and then come home and are like, it wasn't that good, or even it was just okay, you worry
that you'll look like a fool. And to that I say, I don't think any of you guys are fools. I mean,
you were fooled in a literal sense, but that's not embarrassing. It's Disney that should be
embarrassed for taking advantage of their fans. The story begins in March 2022,
when Nicholson and her sister booked a room at the Star Wars Hotel shortly after its Ballyhooed opening.
Designed to resemble a spaceship,
the hotel included an immersive live-action component,
which made staying there like inhabiting a play for a weekend.
Guests were trained how to use lightsabers
while Jedi fighters and Imperial villains faced off in live battles.
Guests could become part of the story by joining up with one faction or another.
This experience did not come cheap.
For a two-person, two-night stay, Nicholson says she shelled out more than $6,000.
Of course, she filmed everything.
And it's clear from the moment she lands that
there are shortcomings. Arriving guests have to wait in long lines in the Florida heat because
the spaceship design doesn't include a lobby. The hotel's smartphone app, which drives some of the
action, doesn't reliably work. There is no detail that escapes Nicholson's eye. She deconstructs the limitations of the
architecture, and she punches holes in the live-action narratives. But what held my attention
over so many hours was her unorthodox presentation. Serving as backdrop to her fast-paced monologue
are dozens of stuffed animals. She also appears dressed up as an array of Star Wars characters,
including a porg. Those are the adorable puffin-like creatures that appeared in Star Wars
The Last Jedi in 2017. The cuteness is balanced by a biting wit, whether she's going after
additional fees or deconstructing the slapdash nature of the experience.
It often felt like they were doing the least. Like, we'll build pretty rooms,
but we won't put anything in them. We'll do one droid. We'll build one alien and we'll stop there.
She cleverly sums up the hotel's most glaring problem.
The Star Cruiser feels like it was designed to have just enough cool stuff to put in a TikTok.
Nicholson got her online following as co-creator of an animated parody series called Friendship is Witchcraft. And on
her YouTube channel, you'll find deep dives on subjects like the Vampire Diaries TV series.
But these aren't as long or involved as her piece on the Star Wars Hotel.
The video has proven wildly popular. At last count, it had more than 9 million views.
Nicholson brings the zeal of a fan to her video. She loves Star Wars, but she isn't blinded by her
fandom. The video ultimately serves as a clear-eyed indictment of a company that thought it could warm
up a few franchise leftovers and feed them to fans at astronomical prices.
Nicholson saw through the spin, and in a video that functions as a remarkable fusion of documentary filmmaking, cultural criticism, and kooky social media performance, she lays bare Disney's
half-baked idea.
Above all, she knows how to tell a story.
And over four entertaining hours, she reminds us of what Disney forgot,
that a good story, well told, is everything.
Carolina Miranda is a culture critic based in Los Angeles.
She reviewed the spectacular failure of the Star Wars Hotel on YouTube.
On tomorrow's show, as the Democratic National Convention approaches, we take stock of
the historic transformation of the 2024 presidential race. We'll speak with New Yorker staff writer
Evan Osnos. He's been traveling with the new Democratic ticket on its swing state tour.
I hope you can join us. To keep up with what's on the show and get highlights of our interviews,
follow us on Instagram at NPR Fresh Air's executive producer is Danny Miller.
Our technical director and engineer is Audrey Bentham.
Our interviews and reviews are produced and edited by Phyllis Myers,
Roberto Shorrock, Anne-Marie Baldonado, Sam Brigger, Lauren Krenzel,
Teresa Madden, Monique Nazareth,V. Nesper and Sabrina Seward.
Thea Challoner directed today's show.
For Terry Gross and Tanya Mosley, I'm Dave Davies.
Who's claiming power this election?
What's happening in battleground states?
And why do we still have the Electoral College?
All this month, the ThruLine podcast is asking big questions about our democracy
and going back in time to answer them.
Listen now to the ThruLine podcast from NPR.