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Attorney Profile: Legislative/Regulatory
John-Garrett Kemper
Kemper Consulting
Norfolk

READER RESOURCES
ATTORNEY PROFILES
READER REACTION

by Rita Frankenberry
for Virginia Business
December 2004

John-Garrett Kemper listened intently as delegates in the Virginia General Assembly debated in 1984 whether to raise the legal drinking age from 18 to 21. The 13-year-old was spellbound. From that moment, he knew politics would always be a part of his life.

As a page for the House of Delegates, he spent the winters of his teenage years at the state capitol. By 1988, Kemper became the assistant to the clerk of the House, a post he held during his junior and senior years in high school. “I didn’t know anything else but going up to Richmond for the winter,” says Kemper, a Norfolk native. “I got to sit on the floor of the House for a lot of the debates, so I got a good feel, at the age of 13, for how things worked. I just always thought it was great and always loved politics, and was trying to find a way to get back.”

Nine years later, Kemper did exactly that. After graduating from Hampden-Sydney College in 1993 and law school at the College of William and Mary in 1996, he joined his mother’s business, Kemper Consulting, in 1998 as vice president and counsel. Kay Kemper had started the family business two years earlier. Today, with offices in Richmond and Norfolk, it’s one of the largest lobbying firms in Virginia.

In addition to Fortune 500 clients — including Fluor Corp., Ford Motor Co., 3M, and Liberty Property Trust — it also has a good mix of local clients, including governmental agencies and trade groups such as the Retail Alliance of Hampton Roads and the Hampton Roads Maritime Association.

Helping these clients and representing them before state agencies and the assembly is the most appealing part of Kemper’s job. “Every day it’s a different issue,” he says. “Whether it’s building a road or trying to help the city get money for the cruise terminal, it’s a real neat practice. It’s satisfying because you can see the impact that you have when these projects eventually get built. And it’s nice to be able to say you contributed in some small part to making those things happen.”

On the flip side, Kemper and the firm’s eight other lobbyists protect the interests of their clients when the General Assembly or local governments consider legislation that could have an effect on their clients’ business.

Legislators say Kemper’s knowledge of the law makes him effective. Del. Clarke Hogan, a Republican representing the Virginia’s Southside, notes that Kemper has written a fair amount of legislation for the firm’s clients. “I think a lot of people see him as one of the top younger lobbyists up there,” says Hogan. “He reads the law pretty carefully and that’s relatively unique. A lot of lobbying gets done with a white sheet — a bullet-point list — and John-Garrett will do that, but he’ll also take time to really understand the legislation like a lawyer. John-Garrett is one person you can go to and say, ‘Look, what does this really mean and what are the ramifications of it?’”

Kemper’s knowledge of legislative issues means he’s rarely seen at hearings before legislative study committees. In fact, Hogan says he cannot remember the last time Kemper has appeared before a legislative committee. “People who are up a lot [before the committee] are the people who haven’t done their homework,” explains Hogan. “You’re probably facing a losing fight if you have to get up to talk about it.”
It’s no accident that Kemper is well informed. He uses the 10 months of the year when the General Assembly is not in session to research the angles of proposed legislation. During the 2004 session, more than 3,000 bills were introduced. That volume means delegates don’t have time to verify all aspects of proposed legislation.

That’s where a well-informed lobbyist lawyer comes in. “They have to know that you are credible and telling them both sides of the issue,” Kemper says. “That is the most important thing you need to do, because the moment you lose credibility with any of those 140 members over there, you’ve got problems.”


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