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


To: Skywatcher who wrote (274358)7/12/2002 8:36:04 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH, a recent convert to
government regulation, shamelessly signs the legislation in a
Rose Garden ceremony where Democrats are excluded, or
at least kept out of camera range. Bush’s political guru, Karl
Rove, successfully peddles the message to the American
people that the Republican Party is leading the reform of
corporate America.


Bush is struggling to right the ship of state and bring
investors back into the stock market. To do that, he’s got to
get ahead of the story that is consuming his administration.
His speech this week and his earlier press conference did
little to restore confidence, but Bush did spark a confrontation
with the Democrats over whose reform this is anyway.
Democrats are turning up the heat on the White House in a
way they haven’t dared since 9-11. California Rep. Henry
Waxman, the ranking Democrat on the Government Reform
Committee, drafted a respectfully worded letter to Bush
applauding him for his Wall Street speech exhorting CEOs to
clean up their character and ethics. But if the president is to
bridge the gap between rhetoric and action, Waxman says
individual executives must step forward to accept
responsibility.
What better way, argues Waxman, to set an example
than for Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney and Army
Secretary Thomas White to donate to charity all or a portion
of the money they gained from companies that then suffered
catastrophic losses and whose shareholders bore the brunt of
the decline? Bush’s tab would be a mere pittance compared
to the others: he received “only” $848,560 from his sale of
Harken stock. Cheney could draw from a total of $35 million.
That’s what he sold in Halliburton stock in August 2001; his
profit is computed at $18.5 million. Halliburton was trading at
$52 a share then; in the last year, the stock got down as low
as $8.60 a share. Cheney was CEO when Halliburton
changed the way it computed its earnings, which inflated the
company’s worth. By the time the Securities and Exchange
Commission forced a restatement of earnings, Cheney was
long gone. The SEC is still investigating. As for White, he
gets a break. Instead of going way back, Waxman looks only
at 2001, the year Enron collapsed and White, a top Enron
executive, was named secretary of the Army. White’s
compensation that year: $31.5 million.
Advertisement

Madam President:
Shattering the Last
Glass Ceiling
by Eleanor Clift

The White House will say this is an attack on Bush,
but Bush said this week that he wanted higher ethical
standards. Without anybody stepping forward and
demonstrating clear moral character, these are empty
words. Trust in corporations has deteriorated so
dramatically under the drumbeat of scandal that a single
speech cannot restore confidence. “One speech can help,
but it’s the actions that follow,” says Goldman Sachs’
Robert Hormats, who served in the Reagan administration.
Wall Street will be watching to see how aggressive the SEC
and the Justice Department will be in prosecuting
wrongdoing. The SEC has never been adequately funded,
and the boost in budget Bush called for in his speech is less
than the amount Republicans and Democrats in Congress
have already agreed upon.
The problem shareholders have is they see executives
retreating to their second homes and keeping their ill-gotten
gains while the lowly shareholder gets stuck with the bill.
Ken Lay, Jeffrey Skilling and Bob Fastow of Enron fame all
still have their money. “It’s almost like the children’s game
Finders Keepers, Losers Weepers,” says a Democratic
congressional investigator. “Their posture is, if you want the
money, sue us.”
This over-the-top compensation is almost beyond the
ability of ordinary people to grasp. Bernie Ebbers, the
deposed WorldCom CEO, got more than $400 million in
loans at an interest rate of just over 2 percent. The CEO of
Adelphia got $3.1 billion in loans. That’s right: billion.
“Three-point-one million I can understand,” said the
Democratic investigator. “Maybe he wanted a boat nobody
else had—but what do you buy with $3.1 billion?”

This is the kind of sweetheart deal that Bush wants
banned, and rightly so. The problem for Bush is how do you
preach on these issues if questions are raised about your own
past. By testily inviting reporters to look at anything they
want in his financial past—”There’s no there there,” Bush
said in his press conference this week—he legitimized a
re-examination of his record.
“He did the equivalent of Gary Hart’s ‘Follow me’,”
says Joe Lockhart, President Clinton’s former press
secretary, referring to Senator Hart’s call to journalists in the
early days of his quest for the 1988 Democratic presidential
nomination. (Reporters who took Hart up on his offer
discovered the actress Donna Rice on his lap on a yacht
called the Monkey Business; front-runner Hart’s campaign
collapsed.)
Thursday’s New York Times revealed that Bush had
received two preferential loans of the kind he now proposes
banning while he was on the Harken board. From the
perspective of someone who managed a lot of scandal,
Lockhart says the story would have been a footnote if the
White House had put it out instead of letting the New York
Times have a scoop.
The loans Bush got were proper at the time; they just
look bad. Here’s what he did: Bush sold his failing oil
company to Harken, which put him on its board and gave him
the loans that helped launch his next career as owner of the
Texas Rangers. Bush managed to sell off his Harken stock
just ahead of the bad news that drove down the stock price.
His perceived success as a businessman plus his family name
helped him swing a deal for public taxpayer money to build
the stadium that would house the team he bought—and make
him a rich man.
Republicans find solace in Bush’s continued high poll
ratings and warn that if Democrats make this a crisis of
confidence about Bush, there will be a backlash just like the
one in 1998 that benefited Clinton and the Democrats after
the relentless attacks waged by the GOP. IF there is a
parallel, it’s this: What Clinton did for marital infidelity, Bush
is doing for corporate responsibility. That’s the Republicans’
nightmare scenario.

© 2002 Newsweek, Inc.
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