| Top G.O.P. Donors in Energy Industry Met Cheney Panel 
 (Page 2 of 2)
 
 March 1, 2002
 
 
 
 "After we met with the vice
 president that time, they just
 waltzed us out on the White
 House lawn and put us in front of
 the TV cameras," Mr. Pope said.
 There were no cameras waiting
 when corporate chief executives
 and senior vice presidents met
 with the task force, he said.
 
 In interviews this week, most of
 the Republicans' top 25 corporate
 contributors from the energy
 sector confirmed their contacts
 with the administration, and in
 many cases, executives even
 provided details of the issues they
 discussed with task force
 members or the vice president.
 Many pointed out that
 companies' opinions on most
 regulatory and environmental
 issues can be found on their Web
 sites. Three of the companies
 would not comment and four said
 they did not meet with Mr.
 Cheney or his staff.
 
 The Exelon Corporation,one of
 the nation's largest electric utility
 companies, said its co-chief
 executive officers, Corbin A.
 McNeill Jr. and John W. Rowe,
 were among a group of about 75
 energy executives who met with Mr. Cheney in the Old
 Executive Office Building in March. Along with other
 Nuclear Energy Institute participants, Mr. McNeill also
 met later in the month with Karl Rove, President Bush's
 chief strategist, and Lawrence B. Lindsey, the president's
 lead economic adviser, a company spokesman said.
 
 The chairman of Ashland Petroleum, a major oil refining
 company, met with Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham
 last spring to argue the arcana of increasing pipeline
 capacity. The chairman of  BP, Lord John Browne, and
 other executives from the company, the 10th largest
 contributor to the Republican Party, met with Mr. Cheney
 and other administration officials in late February of 2001
 to discuss international issues.
 
 As part of a series of meetings organized by oil industry
 trade groups, the chairman of Anadarko Petroleum,
 Robert Allison, along with a handful of other executives,
 saw Mr. Cheney on Feb. 8, 2001. The 14th biggest donor
 to the Republican Party, Anadarko called for opening
 federal lands to greater oil and gas exploration and
 production, a cause it has championed for years.
 
 "It's our job to meet with people, and it's the job of the
 administration to gather ideas," said Teresa Wong, a
 spokeswoman for Anadarko. "Bob Allison has been
 meeting with presidential administrations, with the
 Clinton administration and others, for years."
 
 The Marathon Oil Corporation, among other oil
 companies, chose to have a trade group, the American
 Petroleum Institute, speak for it. "Our interests were
 represented by A.P.I. before the task force," a Marathon
 spokesman, Paul Weeditz, said.
 
 No energy company contributed more to the Republican
 Party than Enron: $1.7 million in individuals'
 contributions, soft money donations and contributions
 from its political action committee. Enron appeared to
 have the most access to the task force. David S.
 Addington, counsel to Mr. Cheney, said in January that
 Enron executives had six meetings with the task force in
 2001. Five were with staff members, on Feb. 22, March 7,
 April 9, Aug. 7 and Oct. 10. In the sixth meeting, on April
 17, Kenneth L. Lay, the former Enron chairman, met with
 Mr. Cheney to discuss energy policy and the California
 energy crisis.
 
 Discussions with the White House are nothing new to
 many executives in the energy industry, and companies'
 opinions on most regulatory and environmental issues are
 widely known. All of which has left the energy industry
 perplexed by the tug-of- war between Mr. Cheney and the
 Congressional accounting office.
 
 "When I talk to people in the industry or in Congress, the
 sense is, What are we going to find out, that the energy
 industry was in there talking to the task force?' " said an
 executive from one large contributor to the Republican
 Party. "I don't think there's a list out there that could be
 far afield from any list of major companies. Within the
 industry, there's this feeling like, `Don't we already know
 who was there?' "
 
 A handful of the most sizable energy industry donors to
 the Republican Party said their officers did not meet with
 the vice president or with task force staff members. Some
 executives pointed out that with an administration led by
 a former oilman that shares the priorities of the rest of the
 energy industry, there is little need for dogged lobbying.
 
 Lehman Brothers ranked as the sixth
 largest energy industry contributor to the Republican
 Party during the 1999-2000 election cycle. Lehman
 owned Peabody Energy (news/quote), the world's largest
 coal mining company, and its subsidiary, Black Beauty
 Coal, until its initial public offering last year. Peabody
 executives were among 30 or 40 industry officials briefed
 by members of the energy task force in meetings set up
 last spring by the Edison Electric Institute, the power
 industry's primary lobbying group.
 
 Frederick D. Palmer, the chief lobbyist for Peabody, said
 the company met more often with the Clinton
 administration than it does with the Bush White House
 because it needed to argue its case more often.
 
 "We're all on the supply side - the electric utilities, the
 coal companies - and the energy plan is basically a
 supply side plan, but that's not the result of back room
 deals or lobbying the vice president of the United States,"
 Mr. Palmer said. "People running the United States
 government now are from the energy industry, and they
 understand it and believe in increasing the energy
 supply, and contribution money has nothing do with it."
 
 The largest Republican donors maintain that their
 contributions did not buy them access. But they did pave
 the way for the rise of an administration that ultimately
 supported much of the agenda of the energy industry.
 "We give money to these people to have a business
 environment we want to work in," Ms. Wong of Anadarko
 said. "And the thing we're proposing is to have an increase
 in the domestic energy supply."
 
 nytimes.com
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