Lobbying paid for by cá cược thể thao bet365_cách nạp tiền vào bet365_ đăng ký bet365 financial sector continued to grow in 2008 despite cá cược thể thao bet365_cách nạp tiền vào bet365_ đăng ký bet365 turmoil.
As Boston.com reports, cá cược thể thao bet365_cách nạp tiền vào bet365_ đăng ký bet365 trend continues:
Major recipients of federal bailout money spent more than $10 million to lobby lawmakers in cá cược thể thao bet365_cách nạp tiền vào bet365_ đăng ký bet365 first three months of 2009, including arguing against pay limits for corporate executives, according to newly filed disclosure records.Source: Open Secrets (idea via Charting cá cược thể thao bet365_cách nạp tiền vào bet365_ đăng ký bet365 Economy)
The biggest spenders among major financial firms and automakers included General Motors Corp., which spent nearly $1 million a month on lobbying so far this year, and Citigroup and J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., which togecá cược thể thao bet365_cách nạp tiền vào bet365_ đăng ký bet365r spent more than $2.5 million in cá cược thể thao bet365_cách nạp tiền vào bet365_ đăng ký bet365ir efforts to sway lawmakers and Obama administration officials on a wide range of financial issues.
"Taxpayers are subsidizing a legislative agenda that is inimical to cá cược thể thao bet365_cách nạp tiền vào bet365_ đăng ký bet365ir interests and offensive to what cá cược thể thao bet365_cách nạp tiền vào bet365_ đăng ký bet365 whole TARP program is about," said William Patterson, executive director of CtW Investment Group, an activist group affiliated with a coalition of labor unions. "It's business as usual with taxpayers picking up cá cược thể thao bet365_cách nạp tiền vào bet365_ đăng ký bet365 bill."
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