Bush Did Try to Save Enron 
                                                  By Sam Parry                                                 May 29, 2002
         consortiumnews.com
                                                Since Enron Corp. plunged into bankruptcy six months ago,                                               George Bush's defenders have said the administration's refusal to                                               bail out the sinking energy trader is proof of Bush's integrity,                                               given that Enron's Chairman Kenneth Lay was one of Bush's top                                               financial backers.
                                                The story line has been that all of Ken                                               Lay’s millions couldn’t buy George W.                                               Bush. For that reason, Enron has been                                               called a financial scandal, not a political                                               scandal.
                                                Growing evidence, however, shows that this Bush-can’t-be-bought                                               story line isn’t true.
                                                It is now clear that prior to Nov. 8, when the Securities and                                               Exchange Commission delivered subpoenas to Enron, the Bush                                               administration did what it could to help Enron replenish its coffers                                               with billions of dollars. Enron desperately needed that money to                                               prevent the exposure of mounting losses hidden in off-the-books                                               partnerships, a bookkeeping black hole that was sucking Enron                                               toward bankruptcy.
                                                As Enron’s crisis worsened through the first nine months of the                                               Bush presidency, Ken Lay got Bush’s help in three principal ways:
                                                --Bush personally joined the fight against imposing caps on the                                               soaring price of electricity in California at a time when Enron was                                               artificially driving up the price of electricity by manipulating                                               supply. Bush’s rear-guard action against price caps bought Enron                                               and other energy traders extra time to gouge hundreds of millions                                               of dollars from California’s consumers.
                                                --Bush granted Lay broad influence over the administration’s                                               energy policies, including the choice of key regulators to oversee                                               Enron’s businesses. The chairman of the Federal Energy                                               Regulatory Commission was suddenly replaced in 2001 after he                                               began to delve into Enron’s complex derivative-financing schemes.
                                                --Bush had his National Security Council staff organize an                                               administration-wide campaign to pressure the Indian government                                               to accommodate Enron, which wanted to sell its generating plant                                               in Dabhol, India, for $2.3 billion. Bush administration pressure on                                               India over the Dabhol plant continued even after Sept. 11, when                                               India’s support was needed for the war on terrorism. The                                               administration’s threats against India on Enron’s behalf didn’t stop                                               until Nov. 8.
                                                On Nov. 8, Enron disclosed the formal SEC investigation and                                               admitted overstating earnings by $586 million with losses hidden                                               in off-the-books partnerships run by Enron’s Chief Financial                                               Officer Andrew Fastow. Over the next four weeks, Enron stumbled                                               toward its bankruptcy filing on Dec. 2.
                                                Kenny Who? 
                                                When the corporate wreckage was complete, the toll was                                               devastating. Investors lost tens of billions of dollars; retirees were                                               left nearly penniless; and 5,000 Enron employees were laid off.                                               Beyond that, Enron’s accounting tricks discredited its accounting                                               firm, Arthur Andersen LLP, and sent shock waves through U.S.                                               securities markets.
                                                As the accounting scandal provoked disgust across the country                                               and across party lines, the White House sought to minimize its                                               relationship with Enron. In spite of a personal acquaintance best                                               symbolized by Bush’s nickname for "Kenny Boy," Bush began to                                               act as if he barely knew Lay. On Jan. 11, Bush told reporters that                                               Lay "was a supporter of Ann Richards in my run in 1994,"                                               implying that he had gotten to know Lay as Gov. Richards’                                               holdover appointee to a Texas business council.
                                                Striking a note in personal disapproval, Bush said his sympathies                                               rested with laid-off Enron employees and small Enron investors                                               who saw their life savings wiped out. Bush said his own                                               mother-in-law lost $8,000 when Enron collapsed.
                                                The administration’s basic line of defense was that it did nothing                                               to bail out Enron. Exhibit One in this argument was the fact that                                               the administration took no substantial action to help Enron after                                               Lay sounded out senior Bush officials in late October by placing                                               calls to Commerce Secretary Donald Evans and Treasury Secretary                                               Paul O’Neill.
                                                By late October, however, it could also be argued that Enron’s                                               troubles were too advanced – and the public spotlight too intense –                                               for the administration to launch a rescue mission. News of Enron’s                                               financial difficulties already was spreading through the business                                               press and the SEC had started to investigate.
                                                In fact, the record shows that, in spite of the risk, the Treasury                                               Department did respond to Lay’s call for help. The New York Times                                               reported that Secretary O’Neill instructed Under Secretary for                                               Domestic Finance Peter Fisher to "look into the condition of                                               Enron." Fisher responded by following up with Enron President                                               Greg Whalley, speaking with him "six to eight times" over a few day                                               period in late October and early November. After the conversations,                                               perhaps recognizing the political peril, Treasury decided against                                               further support. [NYT, 1/13/02]
                                                Treasury’s efforts on Enron’s behalf in late October were not                                               unusual for the Bush administration. Far from doing nothing to                                               help Enron, news accounts and newly released documentary                                               evidence show that that prior to Enron’s death spiral, the young                                               Bush administration did what it could to support Enron’s business                                               interests.
                                                Enron’s Troubles 
                                                The Houston-based energy trader’s financial mess can be traced                                               back at least to 2000 when the long-running stock market boom                                               ended.
                                                During the boom, Enron had soared through the list of Fortune                                               500 companies to a perch at No. 7. A leader of the so-called New                                               Economy, Enron expanded beyond its core business interests in                                               natural gas pipelines, branching out into complex commodity                                               trading, which included electricity, broadband capacity and other                                               ethereal items, such as weather futures. It had investments in                                               smaller companies that operated in areas where Enron traded.
                                                The bursting of the dot-com bubble in March 2000 and the                                               collapse of the telecommunications sector put pressure on Enron                                               as it did many other companies. Even though Enron’s own stock                                               held strong, hitting an all-time high of $90 on Aug. 17, 2000, the                                               tumbling market, combined with some risky overseas energy                                               projects, left Enron with a host of poor-performing assets that were                                               a drag on the company’s growth. 
                                                To protect its image as a darling of Wall Street – and to prop up its                                               stock value – Enron began shifting more of its losing operations                                               into off-the-books partnerships given names like Raptor and                                               Chewco. Hedges were set up, supposedly to limit Enron’s potential                                               losses from equity investments, but some were themselves backed                                               by Enron stock, creating the possibility of a spiraling decline if                                               investors lost faith in Enron.
                                                Their Man Bush 
                                                Still, Enron saw a silver lining in the darkening economic clouds of                                               2000. If George W. Bush could secure the presidency, Enron                                               would have a reliable ally for its deregulatory plans at the top of                                               the U.S. government. With Bush would come other allies who                                               could staff key positions in the federal bureaucracy.
                                                Lay had reasons for optimism about his ties to Bush. Having                                               backed Bush’s father and the son’s gubernatorial run in 1994, Lay                                               was an insider’s insider. For the 2000 campaign, he was a Pioneer                                               for Bush, raising $100,000. Enron also gave the Republicans                                               $250,000 for the convention in Philadelphia and contributed $1.1                                               million in soft money to the Republican Party, more than twice                                               what it contributed to Democrats. [www.opensecrets.org] 
                                                The contributions dwarfed what was at stake for Enron. In its                                               energy trading in California alone, Enron stood to earn tens of                                               billions of dollars.
                                                Around the start of the 2000 general election campaign, the first                                               signs of suspicions also arose that Enron was trying to gain                                               windfall profits by manipulating the California energy market. In                                               August 2000, an employee with Southern California Edison sent                                               the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) a memo,                                               entitled "California Electricity Markets: Issues for Examination."                                               The memo expressed concerns that Enron and other electricity                                               providers to California’s deregulated energy market were gaming                                               the system by cutting off supply and creating phony congestion in                                               the electricity grid to run up energy prices. [Energy Daily, May 16,                                               2002]
                                                By December 2000, even while FERC  was piecing together a                                               strategy for dealing with the California crisis, recently released                                               documents now show that Enron lawyers were exchanging letters                                               about conducting just those kinds of schemes. With strategies                                               dubbed "Fat Boy," "Death Star," and "Get Shorty," Enron was                                               siphoning electricity away from areas that needed it most while                                               getting paid for phantom transfers of energy supposedly to relieve                                               transmission-line congestion. [See Washington Post, May 7, 2002]
                                                That same month, Bush nailed down his presidential victory,                                               getting five Republicans on the U.S. Supreme Court to halt vote                                               counting in Florida. Lay and his wife lent a hand there, too,                                               donating $10,000 to Bush’s Florida recount fund that helped pay                                               the Republican lawyers and other operatives who ensured that a                                               full recount of Florida’s ballots never occurred.
                                                With Bush’s victory secured, another $300,000 poured in from                                               Enron circles for the Bush-Cheney Inaugural Fund. The company,                                               then-Chief Operating Officer Jeffrey Skilling and Lay each kicked                                               in $100,000. 
                                                An Energy Plan 
                                                A grateful Bush gave Lay a major voice in shaping energy policy                                               and picking personnel. Starting in late February 2001, Lay and                                               other Enron officials took part in at least a half dozen secret                                               meetings to develop the Bush's energy plan.
                                                After one of the Enron meetings, Vice President Dick Cheney's                                               energy task force changed a draft energy proposal to include a                                               provision to boost oil and natural gas production in India. The                                               amendment was so narrow that it apparently was targeted only to                                               help Enron's troubled Dabhol power plant in India. [Washington                                               Post, Jan. 26, 2002] 
                                                Other parts of the Bush energy plan tracked closely to                                               recommendations from Enron officials. Seventeen of the energy                                               plan’s proposals were sought by and benefited Enron, according to                                               Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., ranking minority member on the                                               House Government Reform Committee. One proposal called for                                               repeal of the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935, which                                               limits the activities of utilities and hindered Enron’s potential for                                               acquisitions.
                                                Besides listening to Lay's advice, Bush put the corporation's allies                                               inside the federal government. Two top administration officials,                                               Lawrence Lindsey, the White House’s chief economic adviser, and                                               Robert Zoellick, the U.S. Trade Representative, both worked for                                               Enron, Lindsey as a consultant and Zoellick as a paid member of                                               Enron's advisory board.                                               [http://www.public-i.org/story_01_011102.htm]
                                                Bush also named Thomas E. White Jr., an 11-year veteran of                                               Enron's corporate suites, to be secretary of the Army. White had                                               run a key subsidiary, Enron Energy Services, which is now the                                               focus of allegations about accounting irregularities. 
                                                At least 14 administration officials owned stock in Enron, with                                               Undersecretary of State Charlotte Beers and chief political adviser                                               Karl Rove each reporting up to $250,000 worth of Enron stock                                               when they joined the administration.
                                                FERC Concerns 
                                                Lay exerted his influence, too, over government regulators already                                               in place. Curtis Hebert Jr., a conservative Republican and a close                                               political ally of Sen. Trent Lott of Mississippi, had been appointed                                               to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission during the Clinton                                               administration. Like Bush and Lay, Hebert was a promoter of "free                                               markets." Bush elevated Hebert to FERC chairman in January                                               2001.
                                                While a strong believer in deregulation, Hebert broke ranks with                                               Lay on two key points. Hebert was an advocate of state rights, an                                               obstacle to Enron's desire for FERC to mandate consolidation of                                               state utilities into four giant regional transmission organizations,                                               or RTOs. By quickly pushing the states into RTOs, Enron and                                               other big energy traders would have much larger markets for their                                               energy sales.
                                                Hebert told the New York Times that he got a call from Lay with a                                               proposed deal. Lay wanted Hebert to support a faster transition to                                               a national retailing structure for electricity. If he did, Enron would                                               back him, so he could keep his job.
                                                The FERC chairman said he was "offended" by the veiled threat. He                                               understood that Lay's political influence could put his job in                                               jeopardy, since Bush held the power to appoint FERC chairmen                                               and Lay had demonstrated sway over selection of administration                                               appointees. Besides supplying Bush aides with a list of preferred                                               candidates, Lay had personally interviewed one possible FERC                                               nominee.
                                                Lay offered a different account of the phone call. He said Hebert                                               was the one "requesting" Enron's support at the White House,                                               though Lay acknowledged that the pair "very possibly" discussed                                               issues involving FERC's authority over the nation's electricity grids.
                                                Lay also had reason to be suspicious of Hebert’s interest in the                                               complex derivative financing instruments that he saw among the                                               leading energy traders, including Enron. After he became                                               chairman, Hebert started an investigation into how these deals                                               worked. "One of our problems is that we do not have the expertise                                               to truly unravel the complex arbitrage activities of a company like                                               Enron," Hebert said. "We're trying to do it now, and we may have                                               some results soon." [NYT, May 25, 2001]
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