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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: jlallen who wrote (227635)2/16/2002 12:17:48 PM
From: Mr. Whist  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769670
 
Newsmax alert! Newsmax alert! Post #227635 from JLA cannot be believed!

Sorry. Any story from newsmax.com has no credibility. If you continue posting from newsmax.com, I, in turn, will start posting from mediawhoresonline.com.



To: jlallen who wrote (227635)2/16/2002 12:21:20 PM
From: gao seng  Respond to of 769670
 
Global Crossing won NATO contracts, and Global Crossing will probablty be bought out by La Ka-Shing, who has ties to the Chinese Communist party (La Ka-Shing not mentioned here)

Global Crossing Was Major Player
Like Enron, Bankrupt Global Crossing Was Major Washington Donor, Lobbyist
By MARK SHERMAN
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The nation's fourth-largest bankruptcy has gotten scant attention in Washington because it occurred around the same time as the largest. But like Enron, Global Crossing Ltd. was a major player in the capital.


The fiber optics and communications company made hefty campaign contributions, lobbied Congress aggressively and cultivated relationships with the politically influential.

The 5-year-old company, which filed for bankruptcy protection last month, first appeared as a major campaign contributor in 1999 and has made nearly $3.5 million in political donations since then, according to the Center for Responsive Politics, which studies money in politics. Enron and its executives gave $2.9 million in the same period.

Lobbyists have been paid more than $4 million and Global Crossing's leaders have relationships with politicians in both parties, including two former presidents. Former Defense Secretary William Cohen sits on Global Crossing's board.

The company, based in Bermuda but run out of offices in California and New Jersey, has needed government approval for its undersea cables and its rapid acquisition of other telecommunications companies. The company also has won contracts with several agencies, foreign governments, even NATO.

``Telecommunications is a heavily regulated area,'' said Larry Makinson, the Center for Responsive Politics' executive director. ``If you're trying to do new things in that area, you're going to need some green lights from the federal government to fulfill your business plan.''

Global Crossing's campaign contributions have come in large chunks -- unregulated soft money to both parties, favoring Democrats but not to the extent that Enron directed its money to Republicans.

Lawmakers on key committees have been a focus.

One of those panels, the House Energy and Commerce Committee, has begun to examine Global's decline, said Ken Johnson, spokesman for chairman Billy Tauzin, R-La. Tauzin has received $2,000 from Global.

``We're in the very early stages of gathering information and facts,'' Johnson said. ``We're not turning a deaf ear. But obviously, most of our resources are committed to the ongoing Enron investigation.''

A second House committee may look at Global employees' retirement accounts, which were frozen as company stock took its last, steep plunge.

Even as Global's stock price was hovering just above $1 a share in December, the company's political action committee was giving $2,500 apiece to Democratic Sens. Tom Harkin of Iowa and Carl Levin of Michigan and $500 to Rep. Robert Ehrlich, R-Md.

Those contributions capped a year in which Global gave campaigns more than $700,000, most of it in soft money. In late March, Global sent $100,000 in soft money to the National Republican Congressional Committee, the campaign organization for House Republicans. A week later, the Democrats' Senate campaign fund got $25,000. In June, Democrats received $75,000 while the GOP took in $110,000.

During the presidential campaign, George W. Bush received $68,950 in Global contributions.

What did Global Crossing expect for its money? Nothing, said Rebecca Yeamans, a company spokeswoman. ``We share a strong commitment to being corporate citizens and part of that is being part of the political process,'' Yeamans said.

No one in Congress has gotten more from the company than Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., formerly the chairman and now the ranking Republican on the Senate Commerce Committee. McCain collected $31,000 from Global Crossing employees for his presidential campaign in March 1999. That same month, McCain, at the company's urging, asked the Federal Communications Commission to encourage the development of undersea cables for transmitting telecommunications signals.

McCain did not respond to requests for an interview this week. The centerpiece of his presidential campaign -- changing campaign finance law -- passed the House this week, and its supporters said accounts of Enron's Washington largess helped sway wavering lawmakers.

The company's largest payout to a lobbyist was the $2.5 million it paid Anne Bingaman, a former antitrust official in the Clinton administration.

Bingaman, the wife of Sen. Jeff Bingaman, D-N.M., said she dealt with the FCC and executive branch agencies on issues related to Global's core business: undersea fiber optic cables. ``I did not make presentations to nor lobby any members of Congress or staff,'' she said.

Global paid Bingaman in cash and stock options, she said. When she sold most of her company stock in January 2000, she posted a profit of more than $1 million, according to her husband's financial disclosure report.

Global is bidding on a defense communications contract that was initially awarded to the company and then rescinded last year amid complaints from competitors that the company may lack the ability to provide secure and fast Internet services and, in any event, should be ineligible because it is based in Bermuda. Yeamans would not describe specific lobbying efforts, but Global hired a Washington law firm to lobby on defense issues. It also added Cohen to its board last year.

And Levin, who received the December campaign contribution, is chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee.

Company founder Gary Winnick has golfed with President Clinton, an outing arranged by Terry McAuliffe, a political fund-raiser who now is chairman of the Democratic National Committee.

Winnick offered McAuliffe a chance to invest in the company early. McAuliffe invested $100,000, which blossomed into a nearly $18 million profit when he sold his stock in 1999 on the recommendation of his broker, said Jennifer Palmieri, McAuliffe's spokeswoman at the DNC.

``Winnick came to Terry through a guy they both know as a business associate. Terry just invested his money and did nothing else,'' Palmieri said. ``To try to compare it as a political analogy to Enron is just ridiculous.''

The company's other co-chairman, Lodwrick Cook, a former oil company executive, is a longtime friend and supporter of two ex-presidents -- Ronald Reagan and George Bush.

Bush received a reported $80,000 worth of Global stock options for a speech he made in Tokyo in 1997. At one point, that holding was worth $14.4 million, according to The Wall Street Journal. It is not known whether Bush sold the stock.

^------=

On the Net:

biz.yahoo.com



To: jlallen who wrote (227635)2/16/2002 3:29:29 PM
From: J_F_Shepard  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 769670
 
" unhappy Democrats have failed to find an improper Bush-Enron tie ?"

Really? Is W still saying he hardly knows Lay? Well, try the expose below.......350 pages of Lay-W communications. And we may never know how much more Jr. secreted in Daddy's presidential library.....

nytimes.com

February 16, 2002
Letters Show Bush and Lay Shared Much
By JIM YARDLEY

[A] USTIN, Tex., Feb. 15 ? In more than two dozen letters written from Kenneth L. Lay to then-Gov. George W. Bush, the former Enron (news/quote ) chairman lobbied repeatedly for his company's pet issue, electric deregulation, sought the governor's presence at Enron-related functions and sent magazine articles and personal notes.

The letters are included in 350 pages of correspondence between Enron executives and Mr. Bush when he was Texas governor, all of which suggests that Mr. Lay was involved in a variety of pressing state issues, including education, civil justice reform and electric deregulation. Mr. Lay also asked for the governor to lobby the state's Congressional delegation on federal issues important to Enron, including tax relief.

The letters, released today after open records requests, are a reminder that the relationship between Mr. Lay and Mr. Bush, which has chilled as scandal has enveloped Enron, was once close. Mr. Bush wrote Mr. Lay a teasing note about his 55th birthday. Mr. Lay twice thanked the governor for Christmas presents, including in December 1997 after Mr. Bush sent him a state Capitol ornament.

"It was a thoughtful gift and one our family will enjoy hanging on the tree every year," Mr. Lay wrote. "We want to wish you and your family a healthy, happy and prosperous 1998. Ken."

A year later, after thanking Mr. Bush for a "Tejano Santa" print for Christmas, Mr. Lay scribbled a handwritten note in the margin: "George and Laura ? Linda and I are so proud of both of you and look forward to seeing both of you in the White House. Hope you have a great Christmas with your family, Warmest Regards, Ken."

Mr. Lay's pre-eminent concern in his letters was the deregulation of the retail electricity market, a law signed by Mr. Bush in 1999. He wrote Mr. Bush several letters about the issue, including one after the 1997 legislative session, when the measure fell short of passage.

"We would have liked to have accomplished more," Mr. Lay wrote, "but realistically, the issue would not have moved nearly as far as it did without your involvement, and for that Enron is deeply grateful."

On other occasions, Mr. Lay solicited Mr. Bush to appear at a variety of functions, including twice for an annual conference promoting trade between Japan and the United States, for a gala in Houston for a Civil War musical sponsored partly by Enron as well as for the 1998 World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. Mr. Bush attended the Japan conference at least once, though he apparently declined the gala for the musical. It could not be confirmed whether he attended the Davos conference.

In April 1997, Mr. Lay wrote the governor about an upcoming meeting scheduled between Mr. Bush and an influential official from Uzbekistan. He noted that Enron had opened an office in Tashkent and was negotiating a $2 billion joint venture.

"I know you and Ambassador Safaev will have a productive meeting which will result in a friendship between Texas and Uzbekistan," Mr. Lay wrote.

Two years later, Mr. Lay wrote asking that Mr. Bush meet with the prime minister of Romania during his visit to Houston. He noted that Enron had recently finalized a joint venture gas marketing deal in the country. But a handwritten note by a staff member suggests that Mr. Bush declined to meet the official.

Scott McClellan, a White House spokesman, called the letters and other documents "old news" and said the relationship between Mr. Bush and Mr. Lay was never improper.

"The president has always acknowledged that he was a supporter," Mr. McClellan said of Mr. Lay, the man Mr. Bush once nicknamed Kenny Boy and who contributed about $600,000 to Mr. Bush's campaigns.

Mr. McClellan added, "But as governor he made decisions based on the best interests of all Texans."

The correspondence released today were taken from 1,800 boxes of documents collected during Mr. Bush's service as governor from January 1995 until December 2000. Before he became president, Mr. Bush used a new state law to designate his father's presidential library at Texas A&M University as repository for his papers as governor. This arrangement has left the status of the papers murky.

The presidential library is federally operated and does not consider itself subject to the tough open records law in Texas, which requires a response to all requests for public documents within 10 days. Officials at the Texas state archives, the usual repository for governors' papers, have expressed concerns. An opinion on the legality of the arrangement is expected in May from Attorney General John Cornyn of Texas.

Until then, the papers are being handled under an interim memorandum of understanding, which gives President Bush's lawyer, Terri Lacy, the right to know in advance which documents are being released. Before today's release, Ms. Lacy acknowledged that she had questioned whether archivists needed to release first drafts of certain documents before ultimately relenting.

"I never tried to block the release of the first drafts," she said today from Houston. "I just questioned whether it was helpful to anyone."

Also included among the documents released today were records from the Governor's Business Council, the advisory group appointed by the Texas governor. Mr. Lay, the group's chairman, was first appointed by Gov. Ann Richards, then reappointed by Mr. Bush.

In documents from 1995, Mr. Lay and other council officials raised money and worked to build public support for a reading initiative championed by Mr. Bush that later became state law.

"I know that the governor spoke to Ken Lay about the importance of providing some `outside' momentum to his initiative," one council administrator wrote in a memo.

Tom Smith, director of Public Citizen, a nonprofit consumer and government watchdog group, said he believed that Mr. Lay and other business officials supported the reading initiative because of the governor's help on other issues.

"Essentially what you see here is kind of a quid pro quo," said Mr. Smith, whose group had filed an open records request for the documents, along with several news organizations, including The New York Times (news/quote ), "where the governor helps on electric utility deregulation and tort reform, and these guys are helpful for the governor on his education reform."

Mr. McClellan said electric deregulation, tort reform and education reform all had strong bipartisan support in Texas and disputed any characterization of a deal.