What Ken Lay could tell us, Part 2:
Lay could tell us exactly how lucrative the revolving door has been for Baker -- the man who, for decades, has been the Bush family's political consigliere. Sources at Enron told me that Baker demanded huge sums of money for his work. In one case, an Enron subsidiary had sought an oil concession in India. The project's managers wanted Baker to call a certain minister on their behalf, but learned that it would cost them $500,000 for the contract and $500,000 for the phone call, according to a former Enron employee who worked on the deal. Enron didn't use Baker on that deal, but he did work on several Enron projects. Baker has trouble remembering how much he was paid. A few months ago, he told Texas Monthly that he was given a "base fee" and a chance to collect a "success fee" but that he "never got a success fee." Surely Lay could refresh Baker's memory.
Lay could tell us why Enron needed a lobbyist like Gillespie. In 2000, Enron paid Gillespie's firm, Quinn, Gillespie & Associates, $700,000 to lobby the White House on the ongoing energy crisis in California. As with Baker, Lay could explain whether Gillespie -- who is now one of Bush's lead attack dogs at the Republican National Committee -- earned his keep. Or Lay might tell us that Gillespie was just another in a string of hires made to appease the powers that be in the Republican Party.
Lay might discuss why Enron was so eager to fly the Bushes around the country. In 2000, Enron provided jet service to the Bush campaign on an ongoing basis. The company's fleet of six jets had already been made available to George H.W. and Barbara Bush whenever they wanted to fly to Kennebunkport, Maine, and other destinations. But the key use of Enron jets came during the Florida recount, when Enron provided jets to the Bush campaign on four occasions.
Lay could detail the cost of all those airplane trips. (The campaign reimbursed Enron about $73,000 for use of the planes, but the actual cost was far greater than that.) More important, he could explain exactly what he hoped to get in return for all that air taxi work.
Perhaps the most intriguing information Lay could impart involves his meetings with Cheney and his energy task force in early 2001. Last month, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that a lower court should decide how much Cheney must disclose about the meetings that took place prior to the release of the National Energy Policy Development Group's final report, "Reliable, Affordable, and Environmentally Sound Energy for America's Future." That report, released in mid-May of 2001, contains a number of provisions favorable to Enron. For instance, the report recommended the creation of a national electricity grid, a move that would have allowed Enron to trade electric power more readily in all regions of the country. The report also promoted legislation to create a market-based program for trading of pollution credits. When the report was released, Enron was one of the biggest traders of pollution credits in the world. (In early 2001, the company paid the Environmental Protection Agency more than $21 million for pollution credits in sulfur dioxide. Enron bought 45 times more credits than any other company participating in the auction.)
Or better still, what might Lay tell us about the California energy crisis? Some may recall that Lay had a private meeting with Cheney on April 17, 2001, to talk about the state's energy markets, which were reeling from skyrocketing power prices. During the meeting, Lay told Cheney that the federal government should not impose any restrictions on the markets. His memo to Cheney said that "the administration should reject any attempt to re-regulate wholesale power markets by adopting price caps." Even temporary price restrictions, the memo argued, "will be detrimental to power markets and will discourage private investment."
Cheney immediately began parroting Lay's argument. The day after the meeting, Cheney mocked the idea of price caps during an interview with a reporter from the Los Angeles Times, saying caps would provide only "short-term political relief for the politicians." He also said they would discourage investment, a matter Cheney called "the basic fundamental problem."
Today we know that one of the fundamental problems with the California energy crisis was that traders from Enron and other energy companies were manipulating power prices at their whim -- and that they liked to joke about how they were taking money from those "poor grandmothers in California." Lay could tell us when he first learned that his traders were making huge profits by scamming California's gas and electricity markets.
Finally, Lay could tell us what a White House sleepover is like -- the quality of the sheets, if you get room service, all that stuff. He got that rare privilege during the first Bush administration, when the elder Bush was working hand-in-glove with Lay to give the energy business more tax breaks. Now that Lay has been indicted, he doesn't have to worry about being invited back to the White House anytime soon.
Come on, Ken, spill the beans. You'll feel better afterward. Confession soothes the soul.
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