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


To: Ann Corrigan who wrote (421224)7/1/2003 1:36:18 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Robert Scheer:
Blame Bush in State Fiscal Crisis
The other day a woman asked me to sign a petition
calling for the recall of California Gov. Gray Davis.
Why, I asked. Because he bankrupted the state, she
said. When I begged to differ that it was the Bush
administration and its buddies at companies like Enron
that had put the state into an economic tailspin, she
said she was being paid according to the number of
petitions signed and didn't really care. But voters
should care because Davis is being used as a fall guy
for problems that are beyond his control.

Remember Enron and those other scandals that cost
folks their jobs and their 401(k) savings? They were a
result of deregulation, the mantra of the Republicans.
Deregulation was most disastrous for California's
energy market, in which a crisis cost jobs and threw
the world's fifth-largest economy into long-term disruption. This was not the
normal workings of the market but the result of market manipulation by officials
of Enron and other energy companies, some of whom are on their way to trial.

Still out cruising the boulevards is our president's once close friend, Kenneth
"Kenny Boy" Lay. A major contributor to Bush family political campaigns and
former Enron chief executive, Lay invented the energy trading game. It was made
possible by his successful lobbying for the 1992 Energy Policy Act, signed into
law by the elder Bush. That law allowed a minor Texas company to mushroom
into the world's largest energy titan before it went poof.

Daddy Bush also tended to Enron's rise by appointing Wendy L. Gramm to head
the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which promptly exempted
electricity trading from the regulatory oversight covering other commodities.
Gramm went on to serve on Enron's board of directors and its so-called auditing
committee. Her husband, Phil Gramm, then a GOP senator from Texas, later
pushed through legislation further deregulating the industry.

When the younger Bush ran for president, he turned to Lay, who became the
single biggest contributor to Bush's campaign. George W. returned the favor
big-time by appointing to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission members
who looked the other way when Enron and its fellow swindler companies were
fleecing California. These appointees insisted that California's problems were of
its own making and would have to be solved without the imposition of the
wholesale energy price caps that would have saved taxpayers from a crushing
burden.

Vice President Dick Cheney emerged from secret meetings with Enron
executives and stated that the administration considered wholesale price caps a
"mistake" because "there isn't anything that can be done short-term to produce
more kilowatts this summer." Either Cheney was lying or his Enron buddies were
lying to him because, at the time, Enron was routing electricity from California to
sell at a higher price in Oregon. Federal price controls would have prevented
Enron and the other companies from playing one state against another.

It is disingenuous for California Republicans to now blame Davis rather than their
man Bush for the state's economic problems. Only last week, the
Republican-dominated FERC banned Enron from selling electricity as
punishment for having severely distorted Western energy markets. Enron and 60
other companies were ordered to show why they should not be forced to return
their illegally gained profits.

FERC at the same time said California must honor $12 billion in long-term
contracts written under duress with the same companies that were gaming the
market. The contradiction was acknowledged by commission Chairman Patrick
H. Wood III: "I guess people could go, 'Gosh, these are the same parties that
show up in those other [market-gaming] cases.' "

Duh! No kidding. They are being rewarded for scamming the state, which
contributed to the budget crisis, and schoolchildren will have to pay the price.

Californians provide much more to the federal government in taxes than they get
back in services. The feds should bail out the states, which cannot indulge in the
red-ink financing that has become a specialty of the Bush administration.

It is absurd to blame current difficulties on any state's governor, Republican or
Democrat. It is the Bush administration that has mismanaged a successful
economy inherited from Bill Clinton. It is the Bush administration that should bear
responsibility for the difficulties being experienced by state governments — and it
should at least help California as much as it is helping our newest state, Iraq.
CC