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In July, Smith invited lawmakers and congressional staffers to a briefing in the House Judiciary Committee hearing room titled "Professional Football: More Than a Game." An NFLPA invitation says "Mr. Smith will provide his insights on this multibillion-dollar industry and how a protracted labor dispute will affect those individuals without a voice at the bargaining table," such as small business owners and employees who depend on football. The union has argued that a lockout would cost NFL cities $150 million in lost jobs and revenue. Under Smith, the union has also ramped up lobbying spending, but it's still vastly outspent by the league. As of Sept. 30, the league had spent around $1.1 million this year to influence the federal government, more than triple the union's $340,000. And unlike the union, the NFL also has a political action committee, which made almost $600,000 in campaign donations in this year's elections, mostly to incumbents. In addition, visitor logs show that both Smith and Goodell have been to the White House to meet with staffers. Stephen Ross, director of the Penn State Institute for Sports Law, Policy and Research, said there's little chance that Congress would pass legislation that would affect the labor dispute. What's more likely is the threat of congressional involvement having some impact, he said. He also called the players' lobbying campaign part of a coordinated public relations effort. "The more members of Congress join in, that gives members of the public the impression that maybe the owners aren't doing something right, this is a little too greedy," Ross said. The NFLPA isn't the first sports union to turn to Congress for help in a labor dispute. During baseball's 1994-95 baseball strike, the players urged Congress to rescind the sport's antitrust exemption. Lawmakers proposed 15 pieces of legislation that would have eliminated or modified the exemption, but none became law at the time. Another branch of government wound up saving the 1995 season. On March 31 of that year, U.S. District Court Judge Sonia Sotomayor, now a Supreme Court justice, issued an injunction against the owners that ended the 7 1/2-month strike. ___ Online:
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