Your lobbying dollars are doing serious work
Here's a number for you: $1.4 billion. That's what lobbying expenditures hit in the first quarter of 2026. This isn't just a big number; it's the highest first-quarter total *on record* since Congress started requiring quarterly disclosures. Look, we talk a lot about the money flowing *into* campaigns, but we need to talk about the money flowing *around* them, specifically here on K Street and beyond.
### Why This Matters for Washington, D.C.
This isn't just abstract federal policy. This is about the ecosystem of Washington, D.C. It’s about who gets heard, and how loudly, right here on the Hill.
* **The Monocle Lunch Rush:** Think about those power lunches at The Monocle, or the quiet conversations at the Hay-Adams bar. Those aren't just networking events; they're the tangible results of that $1.4 billion. * **Staffer Salaries:** A significant portion of these expenditures funds the operations of the lobbying firms themselves, the high-rise offices between DuPont Circle and the FEC building, and the salaries of the thousands of people who walk these halls every day. * **Access:** Here's the thing: more money usually translates to more access. It means more meetings, more calls, more opportunities to shape legislation before it even hits the floor for a roll call vote.
We see the lights on at the Capitol at 6 AM, but this money is why some doors are already open. It’s a constant hum, a background noise that shapes everything else. Follow the money, and you see the real work getting done, or at least influenced, right here in Washington, D.C.
Jackson Cole, MiTL Sports Desk, Washington, D.C.
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