Screenshot of the Animal Enterprise Protection Coalition's Congressional Scorecard

Screenshot of the Animal Enterprise Protection Coalition's Congressional Scorecard

This is the second post in a series investigating the passage of the Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act.

Internal lobbying documents produced by an industry front group, revealed here for the first time, show how and why corporations snuck the Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act through Congress, with little discussion or debate.

On the surface, it might appear as if this “eco-terrorism” law–which labels non-violent civil disobedience and harming corporate profits as “terrorism”–passed Congress with substantial support: It passed the Senate by unanimous consent, and it passed the House on a voice vote.

But an anonymous source has provided me with some of the lobbying documents of the Animal Enterprise Protection Coalition, an industry front group that urged passage of the law. [The previous post in this series has more on the coalition, and how they kept corporate members "on message" with their terrorist scare-mongering. UPDATE: The AEPC website was taken down after the first post, and the link isn't working].

These documents paint a very different picture of the law’s passage, and show that supporters were very well aware of a lack of Congressional support for their bill.

Not Enough Votes

These are spreadsheets routinely used by non-profits, corporations and other advocacy groups to track how they fare on legislation. The coalition’s scorecards have rows for every member of Congress, and columns for their support of the Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act: “Yes,” “Leaning Yes,” Leaning No,” and “No.”

So how many members of Congress did the Animal Enterprise Protection Coalition believe it had on its side?


These should be treated very conservatively, of course. For one thing, most of the rows and columns are blank, and only solid “yes” votes are marked. Lobbyists might have been erring on the side of caution, which is normal, and only marking the most solid votes. Also, these are dated 9/30/06: the law had already passed the Senate, but it had not yet passed the House, so there’s a slim chance more votes might have been added in the next few days.

That being said: 4 Senators and 27 Representatives. Even with scare-mongering ads in Capitol Hill publications like the one featured above, they still didn’t have the votes they needed. With those numbers, this legislation would crash and burn on the House or Senate floor. Corporations and industry groups needed another plan.

Backdoor Schemes

Prospects for this legislation looked even more grim when the November, 2006 elections marked a shift to Democratic control of Congress. Even with so few supporters, it was the best chance these groups had in years to make sweeping expansions to “terrorism” laws. Without the votes, they needed a backdoor plan.

So in the Senate, the bill was rushed through in the middle of the night, with no discussion or debate. It passed by “unanimous consent.”

In the House, the bill was snuck through on the very first day back from Congressional recess. As members of Congress were on the National Mall breaking ground on the new MLK memorial, some lawmakers were labeling King’s tactics as “terrorism.” The Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act was passed as part of the suspension calendar, which is a procedure used to expeditiously deal with non-controversial legislation.

Six members of Congress were in the room. Only one spoke up against the legislation, Rep. Dennis Kucinich. However, Kucinich did not call for a roll call vote, a move that would have shown that there were only a handful of lawmakers in the room and stopped the passage of the bill.

That week, the procedure was also used to honor the St. Louis Cardinals for winning the World Series.


Stay tuned for part three in the series: “Mission Accomplished”? A closer look at how underground groups have responded to the Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act.

Related posts:

  • The bastion of democracy - America - should have better control of it's legal procedures than this.
    The AEPC might be proud of themselves for achieving what they set out to but in the process they wreaked shame upon an entire nation.
    Non-violent civil disobedience is not terrorism and never will be; sadly, given the law of unexpected consequences the AEPC in their actions may well be helping to validate real terrorism...
  • Sue
    "UPDATE: The AEPC website was taken down after the first post, and the link isn't working"

    Can you find a cached copy of their site, and do a screen shot?

    It should be cached for a while.

    Interesting that they took it down after your first post. I guess they're reading.

    Hi, all!
  • Wow, they did take it down.

    Don't they have anything better to do? Dollars at work!

    Watch out, someone here might save a puppy!

    This shit is like a bad Disney movie sometimes.
  • Not a comment on this post, Will, but I had to share this great headline from an email from the Center for Biological Diversity:

    "California Commission Approves Damaging Transmission Line"

    Get to it, ELF!
  • Dogstuff-
    "The bastion of democracy - America - should have better control of it’s legal procedures than this."

    Where are you living? The US is controlled by corporations. Why is this surprising to anyone? The whole role of the State is to oppress people. Without its oppression and control, it wouldn't be able to go on.

    "The AEPC might be proud of themselves for achieving what they set out to but in the process they wreaked shame upon an entire nation."

    The very concept of a nation should wreak shame upon any human being. The ideology of nationalism is an embarrassment to the human species. We should be speaking in terms of shame to this species. This culture is destroying the Earth and enslaving the living beings upon it, and we somehow give a surprised response when they oppress those who are defending it? The law protects those who are destroying the Earth, its very purpose is to keep business as usual running, it's not a surprise when laws such as these that are there to stifle dissent and resistance even more so come up. Those in power aren't just going to say "ok" to people who aren't going along with this systems exploitation of living beings nor its genocide, it's going to do all it can to destroy them.

    Those who respond to what this culture is doing are going to have to face up to the fact that their actions are always going to be illegal. Their not just going to be given a key to open up the places to liberate the animals, their not just going to be given a slap on the wrist for stopping business' from torturing living beings, and their not just going to let it go when someone is taking action against the ecocide. They will do all they can to stop anyone from taking any action against this systems progress. It is time that people stop looking at this all with such shock as if its all so new that the government is inherently oppressive. If we open our eyes, we can see that this is nothing new. If we stop pretending that it's shocking that the government is not on our side, that the corporations are not on our side, maybe we can finally start to respond appropriately to what this culture is doing to us instead of acting all shocked when the predictable happens.
  • ShiftyDevil
    Wait, let me get this straight. You people are just NOW getting pissed that the US government is passing ridiculous anti-terrorism laws? What because they finally targeted ACTUAL terrorists like ELF and ALF?

    Please, why don't you people go look up the definition of terrorist under the Patriot Act. My god, you people are losing normal, moderate people like me. At this point I laugh at your inane eco nonsense. The whole movement has lost credibility with intelligent logical people.

    It's embarrassing really.
  • Shifty, I'm guessing we never had to you to begin with.
  • Anonymous
    i dont mean to get personal on an online blog, shifty, but if being "normal" or "moderate" means supporting the humane society and denonuncing all forms of radical tactics i dont really think members of elf or alf care if they have your support or not. and trust me there are plenty of intelligent people who understand animal liberation is not going to come solely by passing legislation or by peaceful protests and that more radical and immediate action is going to be needed.
  • Lin
    Shifty, luckily for the animals, there are people in the world who don't wait for approval from the "moderates" and "normal people" in our movement to act against injustice. It is insane to me that we live in a culture so out of touch with reality that those who torture animals for a living are respected and well paid, while those who step in to remove animals from their suffering are called "terrorists".
    10 billion animals die every year at the hands of humans, and those opposed to this atrocity have fought against it without killing or seriously injuring even ONE person. Do you think that happens by accident? Does that REALLY sound like a terrorist organization to you?
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