Bush and Democrats Disputing Ties  to Enron
               " Mr. Lay and Mr. Bush appeared to develop a warm               relationship during Mr. Bush's tenure as governor. In               April 1997, on Mr. Lay's 55th birthday, Mr. Bush sent               him a joking note: "One of the sad things about old               friends is that they seem to be getting older - just like               you! 55 years old. Wow! That is really old." 
  (For photographs of the above letter, see see the first page of today's Business Section  in New York Times) On today's business page there is a photograph of a  second letter from Lay to  W  that was dated  December 21, 1999.  Here are excerpts from that letter, Lay wrote:
   Dear George and Laura,
  Linda and I want to thank you for the 'Tejano Santa print."….."It was so thoughtful of you to send it to us, and it is a gift we will treasure"…
  (Lay concludes the letter with a handwritten note to George and Laura.)  .........................................................................................................................................
   The New York Times  January 12, 2002
                THE RELATIONSHIPS
                By RICHARD A. OPPEL Jr. and DON VAN NATTA Jr 
                      With the Justice Department                      and Congress ratcheting               up investigations into the Enron               Corporation  President Bush is seeking to play               down his relationship with               Enron's embattled chairman,               Kenneth L. Lay. But their ties are               broad and deep and go back               many years, and the relationship               has been beneficial to both. 
                In the Oval Office on Thursday,               Mr. Bush said that Mr. Lay "was a               supporter of Ann Richards in my               run in 1994" for governor of Texas               and that he first got to know Mr.               Lay after that race.
                But  Mr. Lay appears to have been               a bigger supporter of Mr. Bush in               that race, as he and his wife,               Linda, contributed $37,500 to the               Bush gubernatorial campaign -               three times the amount,               according to a database               maintained by The Dallas               Morning News, that they donated               to Ms. Richards. Mr. Lay has also               told interviewers that prior to that               election he had become "very               close" to Mr. Bush. 
                Since the two men met over a               decade ago, Mr. Lay and his               company have been the most               generous campaign donors in Mr.               Bush's political career. At the               same time, Mr. Bush was a strong               advocate of many of the issues most important to Enron,               like deregulating electricity markets and curbing large               civil jury awards.
                In all, Enron and Mr. Lay have given more than  $550,000                to Mr. Bush's various campaigns. And for the               Bush-Cheney inaugural, Enron, Mr. Lay, and the former               Enron chief executive, Jeffrey Skilling,  EACH donated               $100,000,  according to the Center for Responsive Politics.
                Last year, Mr. Lay met with Vice President Dick Cheney,               who was heading a task force on energy policy. The task               force's recommendations conformed with much of what               the company had sought in its meeting with Mr. Cheney               - but they were also positions embraced by others in               industry and government.
                With the collapse of Enron amid an accounting scandal,               Democrats are seeking to make Mr. Bush's friendship               with Mr. Lay into a political liability. The White House, in               turn, in seeking to distance the administration from both               Mr. Lay and Enron, has said that officials spurned Mr.               Lay's personal entreaties for assistance as Enron faltered               late last year.
                Backers of Mr. Bush note there has never been a showing               that Mr. Bush altered any policy solely to satisfy Mr. Lay.               And at times, Mr. Bush has taken positions adverse to               Enron, like backing away from curbing carbon dioxide               emissions, an idea backed by Enron, which sought to               generate new business through trading emissions credits.
                On Thursday, after the disclosure that the Justice               Department had created a task force to pursue a criminal               investigation of Enron,  Mr. Bush told reporters he "first               got to know" Mr. Lay after being elected governor in 1994.               In that race, Enron, Mr. Lay and other Enron executives               were significant contributors to Mr. Bush, donating a total               of $146,500 to Mr. Bush, according to Texans for Public               Justice, a group that tracks campaign contributions. 
                At the time, Mr. Lay was already serving on an advisory               body, the Governor's Business Council, that was created               by Ms. Richards. Mr. Bush said on Thursday that after he               defeated Ms. Richards he kept Mr. Lay on the advisory               panel. "I decided to leave him in place, just for the sake of               continuity." 
                Craig McDonald, director of Texans for Public Justice, said               yesterday, "President Bush's explanation of his               relationship to Enron is at best a half truth. He was in bed               with Enron before he ever held a political office." 
                Scott McClellan, a White House spokesman, challenged               that characterization last night. "The White House has               clearly noted that Mr. Lay has been a supporter," Mr.               McClellan said. "But Mr. Lay was a supporter of Ann               Richards during the 1994 race, and public campaign               records clearly reflect his support." 
                In an interview last year with The New York Times                and the PBS program "Frontline               " Mr. Lay characterized his relationship with               the Bush family as "very close," adding that the race               between Mr. Bush and Ms. Richards placed him in "a little               difficult situation."
                "I'd worked very closely with Ann Richards also, the four               years she was governor," he said in the interview. "But I               was very close to George W. and had a lot of respect for               him, had watched him over the years, particularly with               reference to dealing with his father when his father was in               the White House and some of the things he did to work for               his father, and so did support him."
                By the late 1980's,  Mr. Lay,  an economist by training, had               become a major force in Houston business and social               circles as chief executive of Enron, then primarily a               natural gas pipeline operator. He also became a               significant fund-raiser for Mr. Bush's father and was               working to bring the Bush presidential library to Houston. 
                In that time, Mr. Lay has said, he got to know the younger               Mr. Bush. "That's when I probably spent a little more               quality time with George W.," he told The Morning News.               Later, Mr. Lay was picked to head the host committee for               the 1992 Republican convention in Houston. 
                But while both Mr. Lay and Enron have historically given               far more money to Republicans, they have sought links               with prominent Democrats, too. One was President Bill               Clinton, who has golfed with Mr. Lay. Another was Ms.               Richards, who appointed Mr. Lay to her business advisory               panel. 
                "We knew at the time that he had a close relationship with               Bush," said John Fainter, who served as Ms. Richards's               chief of staff in 1993 and 1994. Mr. Lay was a good pick               for the panel, he said, because of his involvement in the               Houston civic and business community. 
                But Mr. Fainter, who runs the electric utility industry's               lobbying group in Texas, added: "To say he inherited Ken               Lay from Ann Richards, I don't agree with that. As active               as he was in his father's presidential campaign, he would               have known him." 
                Ms. Richards did not return a telephone call yesterday,               but in a written statement she confirmed that Mr. Lay               donated to her 1994 campaign and said that he did "a               very good job" while serving as chairman of the Governor's               Business Council. 
                As governor, Mr. Bush was an advocate of the issue most               important to Mr. Lay and Enron, deregulating the utility               business. Mr. Bush also appointed Patrick H. Wood III to               be chairman of the Texas Public Utility Commission, an               appointment that Mr. Lay had recommended. Mr. Wood is               now chairman of the Federal Energy Regulatory               Commission, where he oversaw and supported the               imposition last year of electricity price restraints in               California opposed by Enron and other unregulated power               companies.
                Mr. Lay and Mr. Bush appeared to develop a warm               relationship during Mr. Bush's tenure as governor. In               April 1997, on Mr. Lay's 55th birthday, Mr. Bush sent               him a joking note: "One of the sad things about old               friends is that they seem to be getting older - just like               you! 55 years old. Wow! That is really old." 
                Mr. BUSH also has done FAVORS for Mr. LAY, such as later               that year when, at Mr. Lay's request, he called TOM RIDGE,               then the governor of Pennsylvania and now the director of               Homeland Security,  to vouch for Enron , which was trying               to break in to that state's electricity markets.                But to one Enron official, Mr. Lay swaggered less after Mr.               Bush's presidential victory than some other senior Enron               executives who liked to brag about the company's ties to               the new administration.
                "Ken Lay didn't advertise his connections," the official               said, "but some of the Enron officials around him did               because they didn't have those connections."
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