| Associates of Bush Aide Say He Helped Win Contract The New York Times
 January 25, 2002
 
 By RICHARD L. BERKE
 
 WASHINGTON, Jan. 24 -
 Karl Rove, President
 Bush's top political adviser,
 recommended the Republican
 strategist Ralph Reed to the
 Enron Corporation
 for a lucrative consulting contract
 as Mr. Bush was weighing
 whether to run for president,
 close associates of Mr. Rove say.
 
 The Rove associates say the
 recommendation, which Enron
 accepted, was intended to keep
 Mr. Reed's allegiance to the Bush
 campaign without putting him on
 the Bush payroll. Mr. Bush, they
 say, was then developing his
 "compassionate conservativism"
 message and did not want to be
 linked too closely to Mr. Reed,
 who had just stepped down as
 executive director of the Christian
 Coalition, an organization of
 committed religious
 conservatives.
 
 At the same time, they say, the
 contract discouraged Mr. Reed, a
 prominent operative who was
 being courted by several other campaigns, from backing
 anyone other than Mr. Bush.
 
 Enron paid Mr. Reed $10,000 to $20,000 a month, the
 amount varying by year and the particular work, people
 familiar with the arrangement say. He was hired in
 September 1997 and worked intermittently for Enron
 until the company collapsed.
 
 In interviews today, both Mr. Rove and Mr. Reed said the
 contract with Enron had had nothing to do with the Bush
 campaign. But Mr. Rove said he had praised Mr. Reed's
 qualifications in a conversation about the job with an
 Enron lobbyist in Texas.
 
 "I think I talked to someone before Ralph got hired," Mr.
 Rove said. "But I may have talked to him afterward."
 
 "I'm a big fan of Ralph's," Mr. Rove said, "so I'm constantly
 saying positive things."
 
 But a friend of Mr. Bush recalled a discussion in July
 1997 in which Mr. Rove took credit for arranging an
 Enron job for Mr. Reed. "Karl told me explicitly of his
 concerns to take care of Ralph," this person said. "It was
 important for Karl's power position to be the guy who put
 this together for Ralph. And Bush wanted Ralph available
 to him during the presidential campaign."
 
 Mr. Rove was concerned, this person also said, that Mr.
 Reed not have a prominent public role in the campaign
 because "Ralph was so evangelical and hard right, and
 Karl thought it sent the wrong signal." Another
 Republican said: "It was basically accepted that Enron
 took care of Ralph. It's a smart way to cut campaign costs
 and tie people up" so they do not work for other
 candidates.
 
 Mr. Rove's involvement in Mr. Reed's hiring underscores
 the close association between Enron and the Bush inner
 circle.
 
 "If Karl Rove was partly responsible for him getting the job
 at Enron, it illustrates the close relations between the
 Bush political world and Enron," said Trevor Potter, a
 Republican who is a former chairman of the Federal
 Election Commission. "If it was done for the avowed reason
 to keep Reed satisfied and out of someone else's political
 camp, it illustrates what everyone in the Republican world
 has known for years: Enron has been an important source
 of political power in the party."
 
 Mr. Potter said Mr. Reed's hiring could have been a
 violation of federal election law if it turned out that "it was
 a backdoor way of getting him extra compensation for the
 time he was spending on Bush activity."
 
 Mr. Reed said he had been hired mostly to help with an
 Enron campaign in Pennsylvania to win a central role in
 the state's electricity market, which was being
 restructured. He said he had had no idea that Mr. Rove or
 anyone else had spoken on his behalf.
 
 Mr. Reed, who is now chairman of the Georgia Republican
 Party and runs a lobbying and political consulting firm
 called Century Strategies, based in Atlanta, said he had
 assumed he was being hired by Enron because he was a
 well-known political operative. "It was in every newspaper
 in America that I had started this firm," he said.
 "Everybody knew my background. Heck, my name ID was
 50 or 60 percent."
 
 Mark Palmer, a spokesman for Enron, said he had been in
 a meeting where company officials discussed hiring Mr.
 Reed or James Carville, a prominent Democratic
 strategist, for the Pennsylvania campaign. He said he had
 never been called by Mr. Rove, although he added, "Karl
 may very well have talked to someone else in the
 organization."
 
 Of Mr. Reed, Mr. Palmer said, "Ralph was a great help;
 he's such a hard-working guy."
 
 Mr. Carville said, and Mr. Palmer confirmed, that Mr.
 Carville had been interviewed by Enron in Houston but
 had turned down the job that Mr. Reed later accepted. "I
 told them that it wasn't the kind of thing I do," Mr.
 Carville said. "It was about a deregulation thing."
 
 Around the time that Mr. Reed worked out his deal with
 Enron, he made clear to the Bush team that he was
 supporting Mr. Bush for president. Mr. Reed once recalled
 that at a meeting in 1997, he told Mr. Bush, then the
 governor of Texas: "I hope you go. I hope you run. And if
 you run, I'll do everything I can to help get you elected."
 
 From then on, Mr. Reed was an unpaid consultant to the
 Bush organization, though after the race was well under
 way his firm was paid by the campaign for direct mail and
 phone banks.
 
 Mr. Reed said today that inasmuch as he had not known
 that anyone had spoken to Enron on his behalf, the
 contract could not have influenced his decision to support
 Mr. Bush. "I was a friend and strong supporter for the
 president based on my affection and high regard for him,"
 Mr. Reed said. "I was going to be supporting President
 Bush regardless."
 
 One Enron official, speaking on the condition of
 anonymity, said the company had hired Mr. Reed because
 it wanted a big name from politics.
 
 Enron also hired other prominent political consultants.
 An Enron official said Frank Luntz, a Republican pollster,
 did polling for the company before and after the 2000
 presidential campaign, gauging attitudes about
 energy-market restructuring in California, among other
 issues. Mr. Luntz said today that he worked for Enron in
 2000 on energy policy and in 1995 on environmental
 policy, but he would not be more specific.
 
 In early 2000, Mr. Reed ran into trouble with the Bush
 campaign for lobbying Mr. Bush, who was still governor,
 on behalf of the Microsoft Corporation. Mr.
 Reed terminated his work for Microsoft after officials from
 the campaign complained about it. His firm said then that
 it had been concerned about "possible misperceptions" of
 the arrangement.
 
 Mr. Rove, who sold roughly $100,000 in Enron stock last
 year, months before the company's collapse, said Mr.
 Reed was clearly on Mr. Bush's team prior to taking the
 Enron job.
 
 "Ralph Reed made it clear right from the beginning," Mr.
 Rove said, "that he wanted to be for him, and gave sound
 and solid advice in the years running up to the
 president's decision to be a candidate."
 
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