Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Northrop Grumman Spent $3.6M Lobbying In 2Q

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Northrop Grumman Spent $3.6M Lobbying In 2Q

    NORTHROP GRUMMAN SPENT $3.6M LOBBYING IN 2Q

    Associated Press
    08.18.09, 03:35 PM EDT

    WASHINGTON -- Northrop Grumman Corp. spent nearly $3.6 million
    lobbying the federal government in the second quarter on a variety
    of military procurement and weapons projects, according to a recent
    disclosure form.

    The Los Angeles-based defense contractor spent $8.3 million during
    the year-ago period for lobbying work, and $2.6 million in the first
    quarter.

    Northrop lobbied for funding in the defense spending bill on dozens
    of weapons systems including the Global Hawk surveillance aircraft
    used in Iraq, the Navy's speedy, shore-hugging vessel, known as the
    Littoral Combat Ship, and the Virginia class submarine.

    The company also lobbied on a politically charged $35 billion tanker
    contract. The new planes will replace the Air Force's 50-year old
    fleet of aerial refueling tankers.

    Last year, Defense Secretary Robert Gates canceled the competition and
    called for a "cooling off" period. Northrop beat out rival Boeing (
    BA - news - people ) Co. for the deal in February, but Boeing later
    protested the award. A request for bids is expected to be released
    by September.

    Northrop also lobbied on the energy spending bill and the Coast Guard's
    Deepwater modernization program. In addition, the company lobbied
    on defense trade cooperation with the U.K. and a House resolution on
    the Armenian genocide.

    Northrop was one of six companies - five military contractors and one
    energy company - to step into a fight over whether the U.S. should
    label Turkey's slaughter of a million Armenians nearly a century ago
    as genocide. None stated their position on the resolution.

    Outside of defense, Northrop also lobbied on a bill to amend the tax
    code to extend research credit through 2010.

    Besides Congress, the nation's second largest defense contractor
    by revenue lobbied the departments Homeland Security and Energy, as
    well as the National Security Council, Coast Guard, Army, Air Force,
    and others in the April-June, according to the form filed July 20
    with the House clerk's office.

    Copyright 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material
    may not be published broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed
Working...
X