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kaggle-ho-019236House Oversight

Document outlines how modern authoritarians hire Western political consultants and lobbyists, citing China, Russia, and other regimes

Document outlines how modern authoritarians hire Western political consultants and lobbyists, citing China, Russia, and other regimes The passage mentions a pattern of authoritarian states employing Western consultants and lobbyists, naming China and Russia as leaders. While it provides a broad claim, it lacks specific names, dates, or transactions, limiting immediate investigative steps. However, it points to a potentially valuable line of inquiry into lobbying disclosures and foreign influence, which could uncover financial flows and legal exposure for high‑profile actors. Key insights: Authoritarian regimes are hiring political consultants and lobbyists from democratic countries.; China is described as a vanguard in this practice, with multiple representatives tied to the state.; Russia, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, Turkey, Ethiopia, Venezuela, Hungary, and others are also mentioned as using K‑Street lobbyists.

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House Oversight
Reference
kaggle-ho-019236
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Summary

Document outlines how modern authoritarians hire Western political consultants and lobbyists, citing China, Russia, and other regimes The passage mentions a pattern of authoritarian states employing Western consultants and lobbyists, naming China and Russia as leaders. While it provides a broad claim, it lacks specific names, dates, or transactions, limiting immediate investigative steps. However, it points to a potentially valuable line of inquiry into lobbying disclosures and foreign influence, which could uncover financial flows and legal exposure for high‑profile actors. Key insights: Authoritarian regimes are hiring political consultants and lobbyists from democratic countries.; China is described as a vanguard in this practice, with multiple representatives tied to the state.; Russia, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, Turkey, Ethiopia, Venezuela, Hungary, and others are also mentioned as using K‑Street lobbyists.

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kagglehouse-oversightmedium-importanceforeign-influencelobbyingauthoritarianismpolitical-consultingchina

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BREAKING DOWN DEMOCRACY: Goals, Strategies, and Methods of Modern Authoritarians MAJOR DECLINES FOR INFLUENTIAL COUNTRIES OVER THE PAST 10 YEARS 0 Turkey = © = © 2 = ® N <x Change in Freedom inthe World Aggregate Score, 2007-2016 weakening of political pluralism. Russia has also moved aggressively against neighboring states where democratic institutions have emerged or where democratic movements have succeeded in ousting corrupt authoritarian leaders. ¢ The rewriting of history for political purposes is common among modern authoritarians. Again, Russia has taken the lead, with the state's asser- tion of authority over history textbooks and the process, encouraged by Putin, of reassessing the historical role of Joseph Stalin. ¢ The hiring of political consultants and lobbyists from democratic countries to represent the interests of autocracies is a growing phenome- non. China is clearly in the vanguard, with multi- ple representatives working for the state and for large economic entities closely tied to the state. But there are also K Street representatives for Russia, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, Turkey, Ethiopia, Venezuela Hungary £ @ et 2 £ @ A) remy t and practically all of the authoritarian states in the Middle East. The toxic combination of unfair elections and crude majoritarianism is spreading from modern authoritarian regimes to illiberal leaders in what are still partly democratic countries. Increasing- ly, populist politiclans—once in office—claim the right to suppress the media, civil society, and other democratic institutions by citing support from a majority of voters. The resulting changes make it more difficult for the opposi- tion to compete in future elections and can pave the way for a new authoritarian regime. An expanding cadre of politicians in democ- racies are eager to emulate or cooperate with authoritarian rulers. European parties of the nationalistic right and anticapitalist left have expressed admiration for Putin and aligned their policy goals with his. Others have praised

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