Inside the Bar
Lawyers Can Impact Legislation
Lawyers Legislative Action Network
by George C. Brown,
State Bar executive director
 
 
LATE ONE SPRING NIGHT A FEW YEARS AGO, State Bar 
lobbyist Linda Barth and I were sitting in the Wisconsin State Senate 
gallery waiting for a State Bar bill to come up for a floor vote. Senate 
President Brian Rude (R-Coon Valley) was in the chair. It had been a 
long day near the end of a two-year-long legislative session. The 
Republicans and the Democrats had each met in caucus much of the day to 
debate the dozens of bills on the day's legislative calendar. Lobbyists 
had spent the day trying to talk with just one more senator to round up 
one more vote for the legislation they were supporting, or to prevent 
last-minute amendments or attempts to kill bills on today's calendar. 
By the time Linda and I were seated in the gallery, most everyone had 
had enough. People were tired and tense. Some lobbyists had given up and 
gone home. The rest of us, including the senators, wanted to go home as 
well.
Finally, the State Bar bill was announced. Immediately, Sen. Fred 
Risser, a liberal Democrat from Madison, stood up to offer an amendment. 
It was seconded by Sen. Bob Welch, a conservative Republican from 
Redgranite. The senators on the floor, many of them deep in murmured 
conversation about other legislation, paused at the sight of two 
political opposites leading the support for the same amendment.
After Risser and Welch completed their remarks, Sen. Chuck Chvala, 
another liberal Democrat from Madison, stood to announce his opposition 
to the amendment. When Chvala finished, Sen. Joanne Huelsman, another 
conservative Republican, though from Waukesha, stood to announce her 
opposition. The pause in the murmured conversations on the floor turned 
to muttered confusion and amused interest. Senate President Rude, gavel 
in hand, turned toward the gallery, looked straight at Linda Barth and 
me and said with a rueful smile, "This could only happen with a State 
Bar bill."
This story is about only one bill. Last session, the State Bar and 
its sections took positions on more than 200 pieces of legislation. In a 
time when the headlines are filled with how much money a business or 
association gave to a candidate's campaign, how does the State Bar - 
prohibited by the supreme court from participating in political 
campaigns or having a political action committee - impact 
legislation?
First, it is having good lobbyists - Linda Barth, Jenny Boese, and 
Cory Mason. Second, and just as importantly, we have you, State Bar 
members. Your active involvement in the legislative process through the 
State Bar's grass- roots program, the Lawyers Legislative Action Network 
(LLAN), is the key. And legislators listen. They listen for one very 
good reason. You are their constituents. They know that, as lawyers, you 
are articulate and you vote. Your occasional phone call or letter can 
make the difference in whether a legislator supports a State Bar 
position or not.
Contact Jenny Boese at (608) 250-6045 or at jboese@wisbar.org to join 
the Lawyers 
Legislative Action Network and help the State Bar and the legal 
profession make a positive impact on the legislative process.
Your involvement is important. It is valuable. It is essential.
Wisconsin 
Lawyer