a longtime <enttype='ORG'>General Electric</ent> lobbyist, and <enttype='PERSON'>Thomas</ent> H. <enttype='PERSON'>Boggs</ent>
Jr., who ears $1.5 million a year as a lawyer-lobbyist
for the <enttype='GPE'>Washington</ent> firm of <enttype='PERSON'>Patton</ent>, <enttype='PERSON'>Boggs</ent>, and Blow.
<enttype='PERSON'>Boggs</ent>' parents were members of <enttype='ORG'>Congress</ent>; his sister is
media pundit <enttype='PERSON'>Cokie Roberts</ent>. His law firm boasts a computer
program that matches corporate donors with <enttype='ORG'>Congress</ent> members
who seek his help in raising money; a match depends on what
legislation is pending before <enttype='ORG'>Congress</ent>.</p>
<p>ITEM: The <enttype='PERSON'>Boggs</ent> law firm also boasts partner <enttype='PERSON'>Ron Brown</ent>,
chair of <enttype='ORG'>the Democratic Party</ent>. Some pundits have suggested
that since <enttype='PERSON'>Brown</ent> in an <enttype='NORP'>African</ent>-<enttype='GPE'>America</ent>n, the <enttype='PERSON'>Clinton</ent>-<enttype='PERSON'>Gore</ent>
ticket has less need of <enttype='PERSON'>Jesse Jackson</ent> to mobilize the
black vote in November. But <enttype='PERSON'>Ron Brown</ent> is far more familiar
with corporate boardrooms and government corridors than
grass-roots organizing. His clients have included an
array of U.S. and foreign business interests, as well as
the regime of <enttype='NORP'>Haitian</ent> dictator <enttype='PERSON'>Jean Claude Duvalier</ent>.</p>
<p> When Jerry <enttype='PERSON'>Brown</ent> spent his campaign denouncing
"<enttype='GPE'>Washington</ent> sleaze,'' he was referring to these kinds of
cozy corporate-government relations.
But mainstream media have demonstrated far less animus
toward corporate influence than toward Jerry <enttype='PERSON'>Brown</ent>, who
was routinely described by journalists covering the