Roy E Marden
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Roy Marden was a Corporate Affairs Policy Analyst and Manager of Industry Affairs at Philip Morris Companies in New York City. He started working for Philip Morris circa 1985 and left on May 15, 2003 after 18 years of dolling out the company's grants, bribes, and donations to think-tanks and organisations who might be in a position to help them. His profile shows clearly that he was ultra-libertarian in outlook, and a devotee of their pro-corporation activies.
Until 2008, he served on the board of directors [1] at The Heartland Institute, a libertarian-conservative think-tank based in Chicago that had long been funded by the tobacco company. This was a key component of the Atlas Group network.
Contents
Documents & Timeline
The Marden profile at the Heartland Institute, |
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The Heartland site stated that his responsibilities with Philip Morris ...
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1984 Mar Copy list. Philip Morris's disinformation executives (Smoking & Health): [2] | ||
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James C. Bowling | James Botticelli | Vincent R. Clephas |
Christopher Cory | Michael A. DeMita | Ms. Jeannine Dowling |
Dale Florio | William Gamble | Paul Gibson |
Ms. Cynthia Hammett | Donald Harris | Alex Holtzman |
Ms. Elizabeth Hopkins | Michael Irish | Roy Marden |
Alan Miller | Frank Moreno | John Nelson |
Fred Newman | Ms. Diana Platts | Ms. Susan Puder |
Ernest P. Quinby | J. Bernard Robinson | Timothy Rothermel |
Frank A. Saunders | Stanley S. Scott | Ms. Mary Taylor |
Andrew Whist | Matthew Winokur | William Ruder |
Liaison to "Nonprofit" Advocacy Groups
An internal list compiled by Philip Morris of its "public policy grants" for 1995 lists some 47 organizations for which Marden was listed as a contact. [3] Most of the listed organizations were also recipients of funding from the company. Listed organizations included:
- Atlas Economic Research Foundation
- Cato Institute
- Citizens' Research Foundation, University of Southern California
- Countdown Foundation/EPA Watch
- Acton Institute for the Study of Religion and Liberty
- Alexis de Tocqueville Institute
- American Enterprise Institute
- Americans for Tax Reform
- Barry Goldwater Institute for Public Policy Research
- Business Leadership Council
- Business Roundtable
- Capital Research Center
- Center for Peace and Freedom
- Center for the Study of Popular Culture
- Citizens for a Sound Economy Foundation
- Claremont Institute
- Competitive Enterprise Institute
- Conference Board
- Consumer Alert
- Education and Research Institute
- Free Congress Foundation
- Frontiers of Freedom
- George Mason University School of Law
- Grand Central Partnership
- Grocery Manufacturers of America
- Heartland Institute
- Heritage Foundation
- Hudson Institute
- Individual Rights Foundation
- Institute for Contemporary Studies
- Institute for Justice
- Institute for Research on the Economics of Taxation
- Institute on Taxation and Economics Policy
- Instituto Cultural Ludwig von Mises
- Mackinac Center for Public Policy
- Manhattan Institute for Policy Research
- Media Institute
- Michigan State University/James Madison College
- National Association of Manufacturers
- National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc.
- National Center for Policy Analysis
- National Policy Forum
- New York Chamber of Commerce and Industry
- New York City Partnership
- Pacific Legal Foundation
- Pacific Research Center for Public Policy
- Pioneer Institute for Public Policy Research
- Progress and Freedom Foundation
- Reason Foundation
- State Policy Network
- Tax Foundation
- U.S. Chamber of Commerce
- Washington Legal Foundation
- Washington University Center for the Study of American Business
A 1995-96 performance review summary by Roy Marden, then of Philip Morris' Corporate Affairs Department, links PM to the emergence of arguments equating smoking with property rights. Marden states (in the 2nd paragraph from the bottom on the second page),
"...the rightward shift in the U.S. political climate has resulted in the reemergence of property rights as an issue under current scrutiny. As part of an intra-company task force, we are developing a strategy to apply the concept of 'takings' to the smoking ban issue in a legislative/regulatory context."
PM's application of the "property rights" strategy was to argue that smoking restrictions constitute a government "taking" of private property.
Other SourceWatch resources
External links
- 1995 Public Policy Grants (chart), Philip Morris, May 22, 1996; Bates number 2041273353/3356.
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