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Richard Berman is a Washington-based industry lobbyist. Through his public affairs firm Berman and Company, Berman runs several industry-funded front groups such as the Center for Consumer Freedom[1] and the Center for Union Facts[2].
Life and careerBerman grew up in New York City. His father ran gas stations and car washes, and Berman did general labor on weekends and summers while he was growing up. From 1967 to 1969, he worked as a labor law attorney for Bethlehem Steel, and from 1969 to 1972, he served as a corporate lawyer for Dana Corporation, an automotive parts company in Toledo, Ohio. From 1972 to 1974, he was employed as labor law director of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce in Washington, DC. He moved into the food and beverage industry in 1975 under the mentorship of Norman Brinker, founder and owner of the Steak & Ale chain of restaurants. Berman started a government affairs program, launched his first PAC for Brinker, and worked there until 1984. He served as executive vice president of Pillsbury Restaurant Group from 1984 to 1986. In 1986, he formed Berman and Company. His résumé includes work for Beverage Retailers Against Drunk Driving (BRADD), where he argued for "tolerance of social drinking;"[citation needed] the Minimum Wage Coalition to Save Jobs; and the Employment Policies Institute (EPI), created in 1991 to argue "the importance of minimum wage jobs for the poor and uneducated."[1] Today, Berman describes himself as a social liberal and an economic conservative. Organizations managed by Berman
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