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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mephisto who wrote (1772)1/3/2002 4:29:24 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15516
 
Enron Is a Cancer on the Presidency
Los Angeles Times
January 2, 2002
E-mail story

By Robert Scheer:

Enron Is a Cancer on the Presidency
Finally, a reporter had the temerity to question Bush
on Friday regarding the ignominious collapse of
Enron Corp. run by Kenneth L. Lay, a Bush family
intimate and top campaign contributor. Bush
expressed concern "for the citizens of Houston who
worked for Enron who lost life savings" and added:
"It's very important for us to fully understand the
'whys' of Enron."

Sure is, but did Bush never ask "Kenny Boy"--his
nickname for Enron's chairman--what was going
on?

After all, not only was Kenny Boy one of Bush's
major contributors, but it was Lay and Enron that
Bush turned to for critical advice on how to further
exploit U.S. natural resources. The media, which
had hounded Bill Clinton on his Whitewater
connections, have allowed Bush to maintain the
fiction that his--and his father's--administration had
nothing to do with the debacle that is Enron.

Given the intense interest in the list of those who
slept over in the Clinton White House, it's odd that
no attention has been paid to Kenny Boy's
sleepover in the early years of the senior Bush's
White House.

Those early Bush years were crucial for Enron, beginning with the passage of
the 1992 Energy Policy Act, which forced the established utility companies to
carry Enron's electricity sales on their wires.

At the same time, Wendy Gramm, who served under the elder Bush as chair of
the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, allowed for an exemption in the
trading of energy derivatives, which, as the Washington Post reported, "later
became Enron's most lucrative business."

Once that was accomplished, Gramm, wife of Texas GOP Sen. Phil Gramm,
resigned from her government post to take a position on the Enron board. As
one of the members of the board's audit committee, she now is expected to be
a key figure in the lawsuits and federal investigation revolving around Enron's
collapse. Recently, the chief executive of Arthur Andersen, Enron's outside
auditor, told a congressional committee that the accounting firm had warned the
Enron audit committee of what he termed "possible illegal acts within the
company."

Wendy Gramm
is also mentioned in a bank lawsuit alleging insider trading as
having sold $276,912 in Enron stock in November 1998. Her response is that
she sold the stock to avoid the appearance of a conflict of interest, given that
her husband was chairman of the Senate Banking Committee

Yet she was still very much on the Enron board and being rewarded with future
stock options when her husband last year pushed through legislation that
exempted key elements of Enron's energy business from oversight by the
federal government. Phil Gramm had obtained $97,350 in political
contributions from Enron over the years, so perhaps he was acting on his own
instincts and not his wife's urgings. The exemption was passed over the
objection of the Clinton administration.

Wendy Gramm also directs the regulatory studies program at George Mason
University, which has received $50,000 from Enron since 1996. Her academic
institute is highly influential in arguing for deregulation, conveniently joining her
corporate and academic interests.

Unfortunately for true-believer deregulators, the Enron collapse shreds their
panacea. Surely no one, least of all Wendy Gramm, who has said she was kept
unaware of the company's chicanery in hiding debt and conducting secret
private deals to the detriment of stockholders, could argue today with a straight
face that Enron was in need of less government oversight.

The fact is that there would be no Enron as we know it were it not for
Republican-engineered changes in government regulation that permitted Enron
its meteoric growth.

It's true that the corporation had its allies among the Democrats; campaign
finance corruption and influence peddling are generally a cover-all-your-bets
bipartisan activity. But in this case, the amounts given to Democrats were puny
and late, and there's no doubt that Enron rode to power primarily on the
strength of Lay's influence with the Bush family. This fact is not mitigated by
Enron now hiring Clinton's former lawyer and various top Democratic lobbying
groups, except to note that these hired guns have no shame.

The Bush family ties to Kenny Boy Lay are just too intimate and lucrative to
ignore.

There also are at least four Enron consultants and executives who hold high
positions within the Bush White House, and some of them may be drawn into
the investigations that cannot be avoided, despite the distractions of the war on
terror.

As John Dean once famously said of the Nixon administration, there is a cancer
growing on the presidency, but in this case it's name is Enron, and it won't go
away by being ignored.

latimes.com