| Top G.O.P. Donors in Energy Industry Met Cheney Panel 
 The New York Times
 Page 1, The National Edition
 March 1, 2002
 
 ( Energy Companies' Access, See graph on Page A15)
 
 By DON VAN NATTA Jr. and NEELA BANERJEE
 
 WASHINGTON, Feb. 28 -
 Eighteen of the energy
 industry's top 25 financial
 contributors to the Republican
 Party advised Vice President Dick
 Cheney's national energy task
 force last year, according to
 interviews and election records.
 
 Critics of the Bush
 administration's energy policy
 have long suspected that many of
 the corporations that were invited
 to advise the White House were
 large energy concerns that had
 contributed heavily to President
 Bush's campaign and the
 Republican Party in 2000.
 
 The
 White House has refused to
 release the names of the
 companies and individuals
 consulted during the formulation
 of the administration's energy
 policy last spring. It has been
 sued for the information.
 
 But interviews and task force
 correspondence demonstrate an
 apparent correlation between
 large campaign contributions and
 access to Mr. Cheney's task force.
 Of the top 25 energy industry
 donors to the Republican Party
 before the November 2000
 election, 18 corporations sent
 executives or representatives to
 meet with Mr. Cheney, the task force chairman, or
 members of the task force and its staff. The companies
 include the Enron Corporation, the
 Southern Company, the Exelon Corporation,
 BP, the TXU Corporation,
 FirstEnergy, and Anadarko Petroleum.
 
 
 Critics of the process said that President Bush and Mr.
 Cheney were quick to respond to executives from the
 energy sector not only because of campaign contributions
 but also because they share the philosophy of the oil
 patch, where both made fortunes.
 
 "It's this bunch of guys in energy who say, `Boo! We don't
 like this,' and the Bush administration says, `Well, they
 elected us,' " said Eric Schaeffer, who was chief of
 regulatory enforcement for the Environmental Protection
 Agency until his resignation on Wednesday. "This is a
 natural alliance. The administration didn't need a lot of
 persuading."
 
 Mr. Schaeffer, who worked at the E.P.A. for 12 years,
 resigned over what he called lax enforcement of clean air
 laws.
 
 The energy task force produced a report on May 17, 2001,
 that sketched out a national energy policy that was largely
 favorable to the energy industry. The report recommended
 additional oil and gas drilling and made note of the
 nation's need to build 1,300 to 1,900 electric plants to
 meet the projected demand over the next two decades.
 Next week, the Senate begins deliberations on the Bush
 administration's energy bill, which has already been
 passed by the House.
 
 The General Accounting Office, the investigative arm of
 Congress, sued Mr. Cheney last week to force him to turn
 over lists of the executives who had advised the task force.
 A federal judge has ordered the Energy Department to
 release 7,500 pages of documents related to the task force
 under a Freedom of Information Act request by the
 Natural Resources Defense Council.
 
 The government sought to dismiss another suit today from
 Judicial Watch, a legal watchdog group here, which had
 requested thousands of pages of documents relating to
 the task force from federal agencies. A federal judge
 allowed the suit to go forward, and the group said it has
 received some of the documents.
 
 Two Congressional Democrats are trying to learn the level
 of influence that industry executives may have had on the
 White House's national energy policy.
 
 Mary Matalin, counselor to Mr. Cheney, said the task
 force also consulted with trade groups and other
 organizations, including labor unions, that did not give
 money to the Republican Party.
 
 "Not everyone who got access were contributors or
 supporters," Ms. Matalin said. "No one ever got on the
 schedule for any other reason than their expertise in the
 field of energy."
 
 But energy industry officials expressed some wonderment
 at Mr. Cheney's adamant refusal to release the list of
 executives he met with. They said meetings between
 industry officials and the White House have long been
 routine, even in Democratic administrations, and that the
 list of corporations that advised the task force was hardly
 an industry secret. Several said a list of the top financial
 supporters of the Bush-Cheney ticket would reveal some,
 if not all, of the most influential voices on energy policy.
 
 An oil industry executive suggested that as long as the
 White House withheld the list of those who talked to the
 task force, suspicion about secret agendas would tar the
 energy industry itself. "I understand philosophically why
 the vice president may be doing this," the executive said,
 "but this sure puts us in a pickle."
 
 Mr. Cheney has argued that releasing the identities of
 outside advisers on energy policy would make it
 impossible to have confidential conversations and receive
 unvarnished advice from those outside the government.
 
 More than 400 corporations and groups sought meetings
 with the energy task force last spring. About half that
 number were granted access, a group that included 158
 energy companies and corporate trade associations, 22
 labor unions, 13 environmental groups and a consumer
 organization, task force staff members have said.
 
 Some environmental groups have complained that the
 process was tilted toward industry. The leaders of many
 groups have said Mr. Cheney's office turned down their
 requests to meet with him. Instead, midlevel staff
 members from the groups met with energy task force staff
 members.
 
 The Sierra Club met with the task force before the report
 was released on May 17. Two weeks later, Carl Pope, the
 group's executive director, met again at the White House
 for 30 minutes with Mr. Cheney.
 
 (Continued)
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