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Politics : Formerly About Applied Materials
AMAT 256.41+1.1%Dec 19 9:30 AM EST

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To: Katherine Derbyshire who wrote (47247)5/25/2001 9:51:53 AM
From: Fred Levine  Read Replies (1) of 70976
 
OT OT OY OY

Katherine--This is in line with your political prediction. !st page in NY Times:

May 25, 2001

Power Trader Tied to Bush Finds Washington
All Ears

By LOWELL BERGMAN and JEFF GERTH

urtis Hébert Jr., Washington's top
electricity regulator, said he had barely
settled into his new job this year when he had
an unsettling telephone conversation with
Kenneth L. Lay, the head of the nation's
largest electricity trader, the Enron
Corporation.

Mr. Hébert, chairman of the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission, said that Mr. Lay, a close friend of President Bush's,
offered him a deal: If he changed his views on electricity deregulation, Enron would
continue to support him in his new job.

Mr. Hébert (pronounced A- bear) recalled that Mr. Lay prodded him to back a
national push for retail competition in the energy business and a faster pace in
opening up access to the electricity transmission grid to companies like Enron.

Mr. Hébert said he refused the offer. "I was offended," he recalled, though he said
he knew of Mr. Lay's influence in Washington and thought the refusal could put his
job in jeopardy.

Asked about the conversation, Mr. Lay praised Mr. Hébert, but recalled it
differently. "I remember him requesting" Enron's support at the White House, he said
of Mr. Hébert. Mr. Lay said he had "very possibly" discussed issues relating to the
commission's authority over access to the grid.

As to Mr. Hébert's job, Mr. Lay said he told the chairman that "the final decision on
this was going to be the president's, certainly not ours."

Though the accounts of the discussion differ, that it took place at all illustrates
Enron's considerable influence in Washington, especially at the commission, the
agency authorized to ensure fair prices in the nation's wholesale electricity and
natural gas markets, Enron's main business.

Mr. Lay has been one of Mr. Bush's largest campaign contributors, and no other
energy company gave more money to Republican causes last year than Enron.

And it appears that Mr. Hébert may soon be replaced as the commission's
chairman, according to Vice President Dick Cheney, the Bush administration's point
man on energy policy.

Mr. Lay has weighed in on candidates for other commission posts, supplying
President Bush's chief personnel adviser with a list of preferred candidates. One
Florida utility regulator who hoped for but did not receive an appointment as a
commissioner said he had been "interviewed" by Mr. Lay.

Mr. Lay also had access to the team writing the White House's energy report, which
embraces several initiatives and issues dear to Enron.

The report's recommendations include finding ways to give the federal government
more power over electricity transmission networks, a longtime goal of the company
that was spelled out in a memorandum Mr. Lay discussed during a 30-minute
meeting earlier this spring with Mr. Cheney.

Mr. Cheney's report includes much of what Mr. Lay advocated during their meeting,
documents show. Both men deny discussing commission personnel issues during
their talk. But Mr. Lay had an unusual opportunity to make his case about
candidates in writing and in person to Mr. Bush's personnel adviser, Clay Johnson.
And when Mr. Bush picked nominees to fill two vacant Republican slots on the five-
member commission, they both had the backing of Enron, as well as other
companies.

Mr. Lay is not shy about voicing his opinion or flexing his political muscle. He has
transformed the Houston-based Enron from a sleepy natural-gas company into a
$100 billion energy giant with global reach, trading electricity in all corners of the
world and owning a multibillion- dollar power project in India. He has also led the
push to deregulate the nation's electricity markets.

Senior Bush administration officials said they welcomed Mr. Lay's input but did not
always embrace it: President Bush backed away from curbing carbon-dioxide
emissions, an effort supported by Enron, which had looked to trade emission rights
as part of its energy business.

"We'll make decisions based on what we think makes sound public policy," Mr.
Cheney said in an interview, not what "Enron thinks."

The Bush-Lay bond traces back to Mr. Bush's father and involves a personal and
philosophical affinity. Moreover, Enron and its executives gave $2.4 million to
federal candidates in the last election, more than any other energy company. While
some of that went to Democrats, 72 percent went to Republicans, according to an
analysis of election records by the Center for Responsive Politics, a nonprofit group.

"He's for a lot of things we're for," said Mr. Johnson.

But when it came to deciding on nominees for the commission, Mr. Johnson said
that Mr. Lay's views were not that crucial. The two most important advisers, he
said, were Andrew Lundquist, the director of Mr. Cheney's energy task force, and
Pat Wood 3rd, the head of the Texas public utility commission.

As governor, Mr. Bush named Mr. Wood to the utility commission. This year, when
the White House filled the two Republican slots on the federal agency, Mr. Wood
was the first choice, Mr. Johnson said.

Consumer advocates and business executives praise Mr. Wood. But Mr. Lay also
had a role in promoting him. Shortly after Mr. Bush was elected governor in 1994,
Mr. Lay sent him a letter endorsing Mr. Wood as the "best qualified" person for the
Texas commission.

In all, there are five seats on the commission, two held by Republicans, two by
Democrats and one held by a chairman who serves at the pleasure of the president.
Mr. Hébert, who became a commissioner in 1997, was named chairman by Mr.
Bush in January.

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission's mandate to ensure fair prices in
wholesale electricity and natural gas markets makes it crucial to sellers like Enron as
well as consumers.

The movement toward deregulation sometimes leaves the commission caught in a
tug of war: power marketers like Enron are trying to break into markets and grids
controlled by old-line utilities, which operate under state regulation. The
commission's chairman has considerable latitude in setting its agenda.

As part of its oversight of the wholesale electricity markets, the commission ordered
several companies to refund what it considered excessively high prices this year in
California. One lesser offender named in the commission's public filings — $3.2
million, of a total of $125 million — was an Enron subsidiary in Oregon.

fred
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