SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Rascal who wrote (277161)7/17/2002 6:30:09 PM
From: Frederick Smart  Respond to of 769667
 
Pile on.....

nytimes.com
=5a

Steps to Wealth

July 16, 2002
By PAUL KRUGMAN

Why are George W. Bush's business dealings relevant? Given
that his aides tout his "character," the public deserves to
know that he became wealthy entirely through patronage and
connections. But more important, those dealings foreshadow
many characteristics of his administration, such as its
obsession with secrecy and its intermingling of public
policy with private interest.

As the unanswered questions about Harken Energy pile up -
what's in those documents the White House won't release?
Who was the mystery buyer of Mr. Bush's stock? - let me now
turn to how Mr. Bush, who got by with a lot of help from
his friends in the 1980's, became wealthy in the 1990's. He
invested $606,000 as part of a syndicate that bought the
Texas Rangers baseball team in 1989 - borrowing the money
and repaying the loan with the proceeds from his Harken
stock sale - then saw that grow to $14.9 million over the
next nine years. What made his investment so successful?

First, the city of Arlington built the Rangers a new
stadium, on terms extraordinarily favorable to Mr. Bush's
syndicate, eventually subsidizing Mr. Bush and his partners
with more than $150 million in taxpayer money. The city was
obliged to raise taxes substantially as a result. Soon
after the stadium was completed, Mr. Bush ran successfully
for governor of Texas on the theme of self-reliance rather
than reliance on government.

Mr. Bush's syndicate eventually resold the Rangers, for
triple the original price. The price-is-no-object buyer was
a deal maker named Tom Hicks. And thereby hangs a tale.

The University of Texas, though a state institution, has a
large endowment. As governor, Mr. Bush changed the rules
governing that endowment, eliminating the requirements to
disclose "all details concerning the investments made and
income realized," and to have "a well-recognized
performance measurement service" assess investment results.
That is, government officials no longer had to tell the
public what they were doing with public money, or allow an
independent performance assessment. Then Mr. Bush
"privatized" (his term) $9 billion in university assets,
transferring them to a nonprofit corporation known as
Utimco that could make investment decisions behind closed
doors.

In effect, the money was put under the control of Utimco's
chairman: Tom Hicks. Under his direction, at least $450
million was invested in private funds managed by Mr.
Hicks's business associates and major Republican Party
donors. The managers of such funds earn big fees. Due to
Mr. Bush's change in the rules, these investments were
hidden from public view; an employee of Utimco who alerted
university auditors was summarily fired. Even now, it's
hard to find out how these investments turned out, though
they seem to have done quite badly.

Eventually Mr. Hicks's investment style created a public
furor, and he did not seek to retain his position at Utimco
when his term expired in 1999.

One last item: Mr. Bush, who put up 1.8 percent of the
Rangers syndicate's original capital, was entitled to about
$2.3 million from that sale. But his partners voluntarily
gave up some of their share, and Mr. Bush received 12
percent of the proceeds - $14.9 million. So a group of
businessmen, presumably with some interest in government
decisions, gave a sitting governor a $12 million gift.
Shouldn't that have raised a few eyebrows?

All of this showed Mr. Bush's characteristic style. First
there's the penchant for secrecy, for denying the public
information about decisions taken in its name. So it's no
surprise that the proposed Homeland Security Department
will be exempt from the Freedom of Information Act and from
whistle-blower protection.

Then there's the conversion of institutions traditionally
insulated from politics into tools for rewarding your
friends and reinforcing your political control. Yesterday
the University of Texas endowment; today the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission; tomorrow those Social Security
"personal accounts"?

Finally, there's the indifference to conflicts of interest.
In Austin, Governor Bush saw nothing wrong with profiting
personally from a deal with Tom Hicks; in Washington, he
sees nothing wrong with having the Pentagon sign what look
like sweetheart deals with Dick Cheney's former employer
Halliburton.

So the style of a future Bush administration was easily
predictable, given Mr. Bush's career history.

nytimes.com
=5a

c0a65412706a77

============

119293!!



To: Rascal who wrote (277161)7/18/2002 3:17:06 PM
From: Elmer Flugum  Respond to of 769667
 
Excellent article Rascal....feeding at the public trough and calling it free enterprise!