When you think about politically active corporations, a few obvious examples come to mind. There are defense contractors like Lockheed Martin, energy firms like Exxon Mobil Corp., and conglomerates headed by libertarian billionaires like Koch Industries. But data compiled from disclosures provided to the Office of the Clerk of the U.S. House of Representatives shows that the company spending the most money on lobbying is none of these traditional giants. Instead, it’s Google.

During the first quarter of 2015, Google spent $5.4 million lobbying the federal government, an increase of 43 percent from the same period last year, according to the data analyzed by the government transparency group MapLight.

A handful of groups spent more in the same period—in some cases considerably more—but nearly all of them were trade organizations representing various industries or the business community as a whole. The single largest spender was the titanic U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which doled out $13.8 million for lobbying purposes. The National Association of Realtors spent $7.8 million, the American Medical Association spent $6.7 million, and the U.S. Chamber Institute for Legal Reform, a Chamber of Commerce offshoot, spent $5.7 million.

The second biggest spender among individual corporations was General Electric, a firm that has long been a major political power player. Google’s rise, on the other hand, is a relatively recent phenomenon. In all of 2008, the company only spent $2.8 million on lobbying. That number has grown almost every year since. In 2014, Google shelled out $16.8 million on lobbyists.

The $5.7 million the company has spent so far this year is a single-quarter spending record, putting the search giant on track to easily shatter all of its previous spending totals.

It should be noted that these figures—representing the amount of money Google has paid lobbyists to advocate on its behalf—are separate from donations that the company has made directly to candidates, political parties, super PACs, and politically focused non-profit organizations. Since 2008, Google has spent $74.5 million on lobbying and given out an additional $10.2 million to politicians and political groups.

For much of its history, Silicon Valley has had an aversion to Washington, preferring both to be left alone to innovate and to avoid the messy tangle of partisan politics. But as companies like Google stretch their tendrils into an increasingly diverse set of economic sectors, the need to influence the thinking of America’s decision makers has become paramount.

In data provided to the Daily Dot, MapLight identified 18 different lobbying firms paid by Google in 2015. These firms include Gephardt Group Government Affairs, the lobbying shop run by former Democratic House Majority Leader Dick Gephardt, and the Podesta Group, which was founded by former Bill Clinton chief of staff, former Obama adviser, and current Hillary Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta.

Maplight’s documents also show that Google lobbied directly from its Government Relations department.

Google did disclose, at least in broad strokes, the list of issues on which it lobbied. While there may be some overlap between multiple concerns, the vast array of topics on which Google has lobbied offers a window into the enormous range of its current activities.

Competition issues related to online services

Cybersecurity

High-skilled immigration and immigration visa reform

Privacy

Copyright

FAA authorization and surface transpiration reauthorization

Immigration reform

Student data protection

Reforming the Electronic Communications Privacy Act

Human trafficking

Online privacy, including the Safe Data Act

Proposals to implement Do Not Track rules

Efforts to impose privacy laws on search engines

Patent legislation

Law regarding the use of use of sale of spectrum

Technology infrastructure

Anti-trust regulations

Aviation security

Advanced sensor-based technologies

Health IT

Health data policy

Self-driving vehicle technology

Unmanned aerial vehicle technology

Benefits of online services for small businesses

Small business advertising

Education technology

Freedom of expression issues

Global trade

Freedom of expression and free flow of information in international trade agreements

Trans-Pacific Partnership

Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership

Data localization

STEM education

Intellectual property law enforcement

DMCA limitations and exceptions

International tax reform

Openness and competition in online services and devices

Workplace policies

Government surveillance

Transparency related to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) and national security orders

FISA reform

Online consumer protection

Online child safety protection

Mobile location privacy

Data breaches

Electronic Communications Privacy Act

Email Privacy Act

Mutual Legal Assistance Treaties,

Law Enforcement Access to Data Stored Abroad Act

Regulation of online advertising

Privacy and competition issues in online advertising

Online advertising and sex trafficking

Broadband adoption and deployment

International internet governance

Online video

Open Internet access

Wind power

Telecommunications policy

Judiciary issues

United States International Trade Commission

Net neutrality

European Union regulation of the technology industry

Representatives from Google did not respond to a request for comment.

Photo by John Marino/Flickr (CC BY 2.0)

Correction: Lobbying disclosures were compiled from the Office of the Clerk of the U.S. House of Representatives.